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Identically Different: Why You Can Change Your Genes (Tim Spector, 2012)
“Ninety per cent of elite Kenyan runners come from the same tiny area of the Rift Valley near a small town called Eldoret and belong to the same tribe, the Kalenjin.
However, unexpectedly, they were actually not generally related to each other, but did have a few unusual environmental factors in common.
They lived at altitude all their lives, which increased the number of red blood cells circulating oxygen naturally.
They also ran to school every day in their school uniforms – an average of eight to ten miles a day.
So again by the age of 18 they had accumulated vast hours of running, which felt natural for them.
At the time a US car bumper sticker read ‘Give our athletes a chance – donate school buses to Kenya’.
Haile Gebrselassie, the world record holder in the marathon and perhaps the greatest distance runner ever, was not Kenyan – he was Ethiopian.
Although he too ran to school from the age of five, despite his skin colour his genes, like most of his countrymen’s, are much more similar to Europeans’ than to Kenyans’.
While we are readily biased by the colour of someone’s skin when predicting their physical or intellectual abilities, surprisingly skin colour is controlled by just a handful of genes, and is a poor guide to the other 25,000 underneath.
Indeed there is more genetic diversity in one small area of Africa than there is in the whole of Europe. (…)
Over 35 years ago a nearforgotten study looked at 61 pairs of twin schoolgirls and found a clear genetic influence on motivation – so the genes for this trait could be the most important genes of all.
The pro-training camp often forget that by only looking retrospectively at the successes you don’t see how they have been slowly selected for this trait.
Nor can you see all the others who gave up years before, demotivated.
More often than not one of the parents had the same steely determination, even if they never practised the same skill.
So the key motivation factor is again likely to be a mix of genes and environment.
What happened to the offspring of the cohort of medal-winning Kenyan athletes of the 70s and 80s? Well, the trophy cupboards were bare in the 1990s.
The genes on their own were not enough, and the next generation didn’t produce any prodigies or win any medals at all.
Perhaps because the medal-winning family had prospered, the drive and hunger to succeed was now gone.
Or perhaps the fame and riches meant they no longer had to run to school every day?”
Finally finished my book, Diet Myths by Tim Spector
There's a lot of info in there, I took notes, maybe I'll share some when less seizurey.
But it is interesting how the food advice sort of comes out. So many others are about stopping eating a food or a whole food group, or obsessively eating a certain superfood, but my main takeaway is to eat a greater variety of stuff - explore all the fruits, vegetables, nuts, etc - the diversity helps your gut microbiome which helps your health. Also avoid junk food and cut down the amount of meat, but I'm not focused on 'you can't eat this anymore' (he doesn't ban anything per se), but 'try eating aaaaalllll of the things, explore'. It's like an adventure. I'm feeding all the little microbes in my gastric system and seeing what they like :3
And even if it isn't as solid as he makes out, replacing the other shit I snack on with healthy stuff is bound to be better
Oh, also: 'use more calories than you take in' is bullshit, everyone's bodies reacting the same is bullshit... there's a lot of science as to why, but too seizurey rn.
Also 1 in 4 Russian men die from alcohol before the age of 55, wtf.
OH, also, one of the last parts is basically calling for social action against our shitty governments that incentivise the growing and use of stuff for food that is making us ill in the first place (antibiotics, weedkiller, masses of unhealthy crops, etc). Respect, mr scientist, respect.
Garlic has a strong tradition in Mediterranean countries as a cold remedy. I once tried a Tuscan remedy for cold prevention. At the first symptoms you take three cloves of raw garlic and a full bottle of Chianti. The results were amazing. The next day I woke with garlic breath, a bad hangover and the predictable cold symptoms. I later was told that I should have taken it before getting the cold.
Tim Spector, The Diet Myth, p.185.
Spoon‑Fed: Why Almost Everything We’ve Been Told About Food Is Wrong (Tim Spector, 2020)
“As we gain a better understanding of the different components of food and how they interact together, some calorie-content estimates are emerging as inaccurate or outright wrong.
Walnuts, for example, spent years with their calorie content inflated by 20 per cent on food packaging until it was discovered that much of the fat they contain is not released when we eat them.
Almonds have been similarly over-estimated in calorie content by about 31 per cent.
Another good example of this is corn: how the body uses and stores the energy gained from a food as difficult to digest as corn on the cob is very different to how it uses energy from corn bread or from cornflakes processed by superheating, pressurising and roasting.
Yet the simplistic calorie intake theory treats the energy gained from each as the same.
We also now know that the way that food is cooked alters its structure and therefore how much energy it provides — so a raw beef-steak tartare will provide fewer calories than a bloody burger cooked rare, which will provide less than a well-done charred one. (…)
To confuse things further, foods interact, and their calorific content varies when mixed, so the rate of energy released from a cheese sandwich, for example, may be different from the value of the bread and cheese measured separately.
Even more importantly, the ultra-processed nature of modern food generally means that the complex structure of the plant and animal cells is destroyed, turning it into a nutritionally empty mush that our body can process abnormally rapidly.”
Identically Different: Why You Can Change Your Genes (Tim Spector, 2012)
“After the fall of the Ceausescu communist regime in 1989, the West was able to see the wider legacy of his policy.
In 1966, a year after Nicolae Ceausescu came to power, Romanian State Decree No. 770 declared abortion illegal for any woman under 45 who had not yet produced four children.
In 1989, in pursuit of a larger workforce, this was increased to five. Birth control was virtually unavailable, except for those with access to the black market.
The result, because of the poverty and lack of space: an orphan population of over 120,000.
When Western doctors entered the orphanages a few years later they were shocked not only at the filth and health of the kids but at the standards of care and apathy of the staff.
They were casually chatting, laughing and smoking in the corridors while the babies literally rotted in their rows of cots behind closed doors.
They estimated that each baby got only about six minutes of stimulation per day.
Toys were not allowed, as the few they had caused fights between the older children and so were only brought out for visitors. (…)
When they assessed behaviours at follow-up for up to 15 years, although there were a few severely disturbed children, most had improved.
However, on average they still showed persistent problems with attachment, inattention, overactivity and autistic-like behaviour.
The study suggested that the first six months of deprivation were the most crucial, with longer durations of misery strangely not making them any worse.
Most of the major physical problems and most of the cognitive deficits had actually resolved fully with good nutrition and stimulation.
Oddly they found no significant increases in the risk of other problems such as emotional difficulties, peer relationships or conduct problems.
Also 20 per cent were found at age four to 15 to be completely unaffected in any domain whatsoever – suggesting that some children were incredibly resistant to the most appalling of conditions, and that environmental determinism is no more absolute than genetic.
The data pose many questions. Why should some children be affected so much more than others? Why could some stay normal?
Other studies found that the brains of these deprived children showed abnormal metabolism based on PET (positron emission tomography) scans in many parts of the brain responsible for emotions and empathy.
But why would only some parts of the brain and some emotions be damaged?”
Spoon‑Fed: Why Almost Everything We’ve Been Told About Food Is Wrong (Tim Spector, 2020)
“Thanks to the downmarket image of processed foods, most fruits and vegetables are surprisingly affordable when frozen or canned; frozen berries, for example, are two-thirds cheaper than their fresh equivalents.
Yet freezing is a great way of preserving the micronutrients found in fruits and vegetables.
Most vegetables and some fruits are blanched in hot water for several minutes before freezing to deactivate enzymes that may cause unfavourable changes in colour, smell, flavour and nutritional value.
They contain comparable micronutrients to their fresh equivalents, and peas, if frozen quickly, even retain more vitamin C.
Most forms of precooked canned pulses or beans are cheap and usually more nutritious than dry varieties, which may have been sitting in a storeroom too long.
Meanwhile, people may look down on canned tomatoes as inferior compared to peeled fresh varieties, but there is little nutritional difference, and many canned oily fish are similarly good value and healthy.
Canned salmon actually contains more calcium than fresh salmon as the canning process softens the small fish bones, a rich source of calcium, making them edible.”
Currently #reading: The Diet Myth: The Real Science Behind What We Eat, by Tim Spector.
Must confess I started this a few days ago but didn’t want to admit to it until I’d seen how it was going. The title was off-putting: too redolent of faddy “lose weight without trying!” books. But I’m loving it so far: absolutely fascinating, and will undoubtedly change my eating habits.
It’s also currently available on Kindle for 99p. Buy! Buy! Buy!