We shouldn’t select our fitness gurus for whether they’re of our tribe, we should select our fitness gurus for the effectiveness and truth of what they teach.
On that basis, do you have any reasons beyond “it’s nerdy!” for recommending this website over any number of other ones, many of which are very good? If it’s the gimmicky motivational approaches, I think LessWrong has that down pat—loads of us play HabitRPG and I’m pretty sure Beeminder’s founders were some of our own.
Edit: For some reason my links ate themselves and the text between them so I took them out.
You are right, but much of the fitness game is motivation, and we are tribal organisms. Being part of a community to which one relates, that pushes you to be better, is a huge benefit.
Maybe this is a solved problem, but I think there might be at least one person here with whom it resonates, and to whom it could provide substantial value.
In general what this community is about is having good arguments for doing what you do. As such it usually makes sense if a person who advocates some practices makes the case for the practice instead of simply posting a link.
In this case, did you follow that program? What results did you get?
I’m not especially impressed with Steve Kamb as a fitness guru. He has a writing style I find accessible, and doesn’t seem to mind covering introductory material, which are pluses, but not outstanding in the fitness world. The gimmicky motivational approaches probably work for some people, but I find them silly.
I’ve found the forums to be a very valuable resource, though. Lots of knowledgeable people whose brains you can pick, and a structure for social support/accountability, which can be scarce in meatspace.
We shouldn’t select our fitness gurus for whether they’re of our tribe, we should select our fitness gurus for the effectiveness and truth of what they teach.
On that basis, do you have any reasons beyond “it’s nerdy!” for recommending this website over any number of other ones, many of which are very good? If it’s the gimmicky motivational approaches, I think LessWrong has that down pat—loads of us play HabitRPG and I’m pretty sure Beeminder’s founders were some of our own.
Edit: For some reason my links ate themselves and the text between them so I took them out.
You are right, but much of the fitness game is motivation, and we are tribal organisms. Being part of a community to which one relates, that pushes you to be better, is a huge benefit.
Maybe this is a solved problem, but I think there might be at least one person here with whom it resonates, and to whom it could provide substantial value.
In general what this community is about is having good arguments for doing what you do. As such it usually makes sense if a person who advocates some practices makes the case for the practice instead of simply posting a link.
In this case, did you follow that program? What results did you get?
I’m not especially impressed with Steve Kamb as a fitness guru. He has a writing style I find accessible, and doesn’t seem to mind covering introductory material, which are pluses, but not outstanding in the fitness world. The gimmicky motivational approaches probably work for some people, but I find them silly.
I’ve found the forums to be a very valuable resource, though. Lots of knowledgeable people whose brains you can pick, and a structure for social support/accountability, which can be scarce in meatspace.