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Relax, Dammit!
Relax, Dammit!: A User's Guide to the Age of Anxiety | Timothy Caulfield
5 posts | 3 read | 8 to read
An entertaining and practical guide to getting through the day with less stress and better health, from the host of the hit TV series A User's Guide to Cheating Death. We make a ridiculous number of decisions every day--possibly even thousands. We make decisions about when to wake up, how to brush our teeth, what to have for breakfast, how to get our kids to school, the amount of coffee to drink, and on and on. Making so many decisions is tough. It can cause stock analysts to perform progressively worse over the course of a day. It can lead us to make poor decisions about the food we eat--the more brain fatigue we experience, the more junk food we consume. And the more deliberate the decision--that is, the more we need to think about it--the more fatiguing the process. There are many social forces at work that make how and what we choose an unnecessarily anxious process. But it doesn't have to be. In Relax, Dammit!, health policy expert Timothy Caulfield takes us through a regular day--from the moment we wake up to when we go to sleep--and shows the underlying science behind our actions and habits. What he reveals is that we make decisions that are based, to a lesser or greater extent, on misinformation. Whether he's studying cell phone use, bike commuting, or raw-milk cheese consumption, Caulfield shows that many of the things we believe to be healthier, safer, or just better, simply aren't. With solid grounding in current and reliable scientific findings, the author points to a less stressful way forward--which means we can all afford to relax a lot more. Insightful, sometimes controversial, and always entertaining, Relax, Dammit! is a surprising and liberating guide to modern life.
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review
rabbitprincess
Pickpick

Conversational writing style and an interesting structure (a single day) make this an easy read for a weekend afternoon. I liked how Caulfield gave examples of language in studies that indicate they are observational and do not demonstrate causation.
#ShutdownReadathon book 3

14 likes1 stack add
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rabbitprincess
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Open workspaces, designed to encourage collaboration, have been shown to have the opposite effect: in a 2018 study, face-to-face interactions decreased 70%. “Open architecture appeared to trigger a natural human response to socially withdraw from officemates and interact instead over email and [instant messaging.” I would also add open offices spread colds more effectively than ideas 🤧😷

MsMelissa I hate open office spaces. Some of us don‘t like looking at others while we work! Mind you, since I‘m now working from home indefinitely this may not be an issue 😂 4y
rabbitprincess @Book_Fiend_Melissa I hate them too! I don‘t like the idea that someone could be watching me, and I get easily visually distracted. Also I tend to telegraph my emotions about what I am reading, whether by facial expression or by swears 😂 4y
CaramelLunacy I hate them as it always seems everyone is shouting down the phone and you can't hear your own call or concentrate at all... 4y
rabbitprincess @CaramelLunacy Agreed! And if you‘re working some place with offices in multiple cities, most of your collaboration is likely to be over the phone rather than with the people in your office. 4y
29 likes1 stack add4 comments
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rabbitprincess
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I like Caulfield‘s style, writing haikus about vitamins. The third one made me LOL.

Science is ignored.
Still they push, for the money.
Look! Expensive pee.

😂😂😂😂

KVanRead 🤣 4y
Lcsmcat 😂😂 4y
28 likes2 comments
blurb
rabbitprincess
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Thanks to @CaffeineAndCandy for sharing the news about the #ShutdownReadathon hosted by @Squidget . I am also in this shutdown (from 26 December 2020 to 23 January 2021), and reading is definitely in my plans! 😉

CaffeineAndCandy 👍😊 4y
DieAReader @rabbitprincess @CaffeineAndCandy Glad you‘re both joining!!🥳📚 4y
31 likes3 comments
review
Lindy
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Pickpick

Edmonton author & university professor Timothy Caulfield has been researching the science of health for years. His latest book is approachable as always, addressing the decisions we make every day, such as: Does it make a difference if we floss our teeth? Is coffee bad for us? Will we be more fit if we choose a standing desk instead of sitting? Entertaining, enlightening & sometimes controversial. #Audiobook read by Jeremy Arthur. 🇨🇦

rabbitprincess I have this out from the library right now! Glad you liked it. 4y
Lindy @rabbitprincess Lots of food for thought. I especially liked his advice on how to evaluate news reports about health research. 4y
Suet624 so does it make a difference if I floss? And what about coffee? 4y
Lindy @Suet624 Apparently there‘s not much to support the value of flossing. And coffee‘s okay. 4y
44 likes6 stack adds4 comments