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Ask HN: How do you design experiments on yourself? (health, energy, learning)
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13 points
by vicek22
1479 days ago
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How do you design, track, and measure experiments you decide to do on yourself? Examples of experiments:
- Reduce my workouts from three 1h workouts to two 1.5h workouts.
- Start taking magnesium supplements for better sleep.
- Try intermittent fasting.
- Start writing tests first (TDD). I wonder whether there is a good resource or your anecdote about how to try the "scientific method" on yourself. It seems that some people are better at applying it than others. I think Tim Ferris has been the main person I would think about in this context. |
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- number of calories ingested and the micro/macronutrients
- number of sleep hour
- monitor heart rate
- monitor heart rate variability
- number of hours doing sports
- blood test results
- waist size
- number of steps per day
- ...
It helps me to understand my body's reaction better. For example, I did around 9 hours of sport per week (strength, running, hiking) for the last couple of weeks. I didn't change my calories ingested. I feel hungrier, and I need to do more naps, even if I sleep 8 hours per night. Also, my heart rate variability is lower than usual. It might mean that I overtrain and I risk injury. My body does not adapt yet to this training intensity.
But sometimes, it's harder to understand what has driven the results. I started to take Omega 3. But at the same time, I also started to run more. We know that running more impacts your heart rate; it decreases bpm. But it's also the case with Omega 3. So in my case, it is complicated to know if sports have a more significant impact on my heart rate or if it is Omega 3. Both also take time to have effect.