That sound like you found a risk-aversive way of applying these rules.
I don’t generally think that expecting the worst is a bad strategy. But that doesn’t preclude from making the best out of it.
Also, genuinely random health stuff has a lot to do with it. Prioritizing networking and changing routines does help relative to what it’d have been otherwise, but environmental constraints still keep the absolute effect below human average.
That sound like you found a risk-aversive way of applying these rules. I don’t generally think that expecting the worst is a bad strategy. But that doesn’t preclude from making the best out of it.
Also, genuinely random health stuff has a lot to do with it. Prioritizing networking and changing routines does help relative to what it’d have been otherwise, but environmental constraints still keep the absolute effect below human average.