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Why Nutrition Advice Changes Every Decade (and Why That's Not Always Bad)
If you've been anywhere near health news for the last few decades, you've probably felt that specific kind of exhausted cynicism that sets in after the tenth time the rules change. Fat is bad. No wait, fat is fine. Carbs are the enemy. Actually, it's sugar. Eggs will destroy your heart. Eggs are a superfood now. Butter is terrible. Butter is back. At some point you just want to throw your hands up and eat a cheeseburger out of spite. I get it. But I think that frustration, as

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6 min read


"Correlation Doesn't Imply Causation" - You Know the Phrase, but Do You Actually Get It?
A deeper look at why the gap between research and headlines keeps costing us. Almost everyone who's ever been in a science-adjacent conversation has heard it: "correlation doesn't imply causation." It gets dropped like a trump card. Someone cites a study, someone else says the phrase, everyone nods, and the conversation moves on. But here's the thing; knowing the phrase and actually understanding what it means in practice are completely different things. And the ways this mis

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4 min read


The Ultimate Guide to Progressive Overload (Without Getting Injured)
Progressive overload is one of those concepts that most people think they understand, and then promptly misapply. The basic idea is simple enough: give your body a slightly harder challenge than it's used to, it adapts, you repeat, and over time you get stronger, more muscular, and more capable. Easy, right? Well, the "without getting injured" part is where things get really interesting, because avoiding injury isn't just about being careful. It's about understanding why over

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3 min read


Where the Cold Exposure Data Is Actually Weak
Cold plunges have had quite the glow-up over the past decade. What used to be the domain of Scandinavian athletes and masochistic weekend warriors has become a mainstream wellness ritual, complete with influencer endorsements, purpose-built tubs, and a library of podcast episodes where someone inevitably credits ice baths with transforming their life. And look, some of the enthusiasm is warranted. There's real, interesting biology happening when you submerge yourself in cold

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7 min read


Chronotypes and Performance Optimization: Working With Your Biology, Not Against It
Most people are at least vaguely familiar with the idea that some of us are morning people and some of us are night owls. But the science of chronotypes runs considerably deeper than personal preference or habit, and the implications for how we structure our cognitive work, physical training, and even social lives are more specific and actionable than most people realize. Let's dig into what's actually going on under the hood, and more importantly, what you can do with that k

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7 min read


Biomarkers That Actually Matter vs. Expensive Noise
The Problem With Testing Everything More Data Doesn't Mean Better Health There's a billion-dollar industry built on a simple and deeply appealing idea: the more you know about your body, the healthier you can be. And look, I get it. When you're handed a report with 80 values and your name on the top, it feels like personalized, cutting-edge medicine. It feels like you're ahead of the curve. But here's the uncomfortable truth - most of it is noise. That's not me being cynical

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6 min read


Calories Aren’t the Only Variable: Why Food Structure Changes Metabolic Reality
Most people who get serious about nutrition eventually land in the same place: track your calories, hit your protein, balance your fats and carbs, and your body will follow. And honestly, that framework works, until it doesn't. The real issue is that calories and macros only tell you what's in food chemically. They say nothing about how it's physically built. And your body doesn't digest chemistry on a spreadsheet, it digests structure. What that means in practice is that two

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3 min read


Your DNA Isn't a Diet Plan, But Parts of It Actually Are
A clear-eyed look at which genetic variants genuinely change how you should eat, and which ones are mostly marketing. The pitch is irresistible: spit in a tube, send it off, and get back a personalized roadmap telling you exactly what to eat, what to avoid, and which supplements your unique genetic code supposedly demands. Precision nutrition at the DNA level. It sounds incredible, and honestly, part of it actually is real. The problem is that the marketing has sprinted about

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7 min read


Preventative Medicine: Why It’s Talked About More Than It’s Practiced
We Keep Talking About Preventative Medicine. So Why Aren't We Actually Doing It? Prevention is the future of healthcare. At least, that's what every conference keynote, public health campaign, and wellness brand wants you to believe. And honestly? They're not wrong. The science is clear, preventing disease beats treating it, almost every time. So why does the average healthcare system still behave like it didn't get the memo? The answer is less about ignorance and more about

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3 min read


Are You Actually Fit? The 5 Types of Fitness Most People Ignore
Fitness Is Way More Than Strength and Cardio - Here's What You're Probably Missing. I'll be honest, for a long time, I thought fitness was pretty straightforward. Can you lift something heavy? Can you run without dying? Do you look like you work out? Check those boxes and you're good, right? Not even close. The more I've learned about how the body actually works, the more I've realized that most of us, even the ones who train consistently, are quietly neglecting entire catego

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3 min read


You're Probably Not Overtrained - You're Just Not Recovering
The fitness world throws around "overtraining" like it explains everything. But there's a real difference between being run down and your body actually breaking down - and it matters. We've Normalised Being Wrecked Somewhere along the line, feeling terrible became a badge of honour in fitness culture. You're always tired? Grinding. Constantly sore? Dedicated. Can't sleep, irritable, performing worse every week? Clearly, you're just working hard. But here's the thing, there's

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6 min read


Personalized Nutrition - Hype vs Emerging Science
We've All Been Sold a Dream The pitch is irresistible: forget generic food pyramids and one-size-fits-all diet advice. Your DNA, your gut bacteria, your glucose tracker, they all hold the secret to the perfect diet, custom-built for your body. In a world where personalized medicine is becoming a real thing, why wouldn't personalized nutrition be right around the corner? Here's the honest answer: the science is genuinely exciting, but what's being sold to most people right no

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5 min read


The Most Boring Workouts You Can Do Are Probably the Best Thing for Your Long-Term Health
Why the Most “Boring” Cardio Might Be the Most Powerful Longevity Tool We Have Intensity Is Overrated (At Least for Longevity) We've been sold on the idea that a good workout has to hurt. The harder you push, the more you're doing for your health, right? The fitness world rewards the dramatic: interval sprints, max-effort classes, anything that leaves you gasping on the floor. It feels like progress because it feels like suffering. But here's the uncomfortable truth: when sci

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6 min read


I Think We've Been Wrong About Fatigue, It's Not In Your Head, It's In Your Cells
Fatigue Is More Than Just Being Tired I'll be honest: for a long time, I think the medical world got fatigue badly wrong. We've had a habit of slapping a psychological label on anything we couldn't easily explain; "stress," "depression," "deconditioning." And for millions of people dealing with crushing, relentless exhaustion, that dismissal has done real damage. But research over the last decade or so has been quietly building a much more compelling case. What if chronic fat

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5 min read


Meditation Didn't Rewire My Brain - Life Did
On neuroplasticity, and why we've been giving meditation way too much credit The "Just Meditate" Myth If you've spent any time in wellness spaces online, you've probably heard it: meditation rewires your brain. And sure, there's truth to that. But somewhere along the way, we started treating meditation like it was the only thing capable of changing how our brains work, as if sitting quietly for twenty minutes a day is the singular key to mental transformation. I think that's

wellquestly
4 min read
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