In NYC, friendships run along subway lines.
Beach Day
Somewhere along the way, Jess and I picked up the nicknames Cheddar Bunny and Mighty Mouse for each other. Which led to an unexpectedly discovered ‘talent’: drawing third-grade-level cartoons of a Bunny and Mouse adventuring in the world.
Previously, these masterworks have been mostly in colored pencil, but with a recent purchase of an Apple Pencil for work, it appears I’m branching into the digital medium. 🙃
💪🏻🐭❤️🧀🐰
Depressing fact of the day I just learned: I’m older than ciabatta bread.
Predictable, but still kind of terrifying: Russian trolls helped fuel the anti-vaccination movement.
Hit the Hay
As ever, the Composite research, coding, and field-testing continues. And, in an interesting confluence of events, I stumbled across a research paper today that perfectly lines up with something I’ve recently experienced anecdotally in my own life.
For a while, I’ve been playing with biometric data sources that track fatigue and training status, so the Composite algorithm can square a theoretically ideal workout plan (heavy back squats today at 85% of my max) with the ever-changing reality of day-to-day life (I’m feeling run-down this morning, slept terribly, and think I might be coming down with a cold – better reduce the weight of those squats). And, actually, I’ve been making a bunch of progress on that front, measuring things like daily increase / decrease in grip strength (using a device called a dynamometer, which research shows correlates well with central nervous system fatigue), and tracking heart rate variability (using the excellent HRV4Training app to collect similarly research-backed data).
But, thus far, though I’d wanted to track sleep, too, most of the iPhone apps I’d found to do so were pretty much garbage. Though they all kicked out impressive-looking visualizations, they were often demonstrably incorrect – apps would show me deep in REM sleep when I knew I’d actually been awake and headed to the bathroom to pee.
So, on a friends recommendation, I bit the bullet, downloaded the Apple Watch app AutoSleep, and figured out an early-evening charging schedule that let me wear my watch to bed rather than just charging it overnight. And, in short, AutoSleep is pretty amazing – both in the detail it provides, and the accuracy with which it does so. Even if I end up just passing out for a nap on the couch without meaning to midday, the app somehow accurately senses when I do, and kicks out a ton of related data about the siesta.
From my first month of AutoSleep, however, I made an unhappy discovery: I sleep much less each night than I’d previously thought. Before, I would have said that I get 7 to 7 1/2 hours nightly. But, it turns out, that’s how long I spend in bed, trying to sleep; I’m actually out cold for only 85-90% of that time – more like 6 or 6 1/2 hours – once I factor in falling asleep, and waking for random small pockets throughout the night.
Even so, it turns out I may still be doing better than most. As I mentioned, I found a study this morning which estimates most people only really sleep about 80% of the time they’re trying to do so. Getting 7 1/2 hours of shuteye therefore probably requires shooting for a whopping 9.
If you want an accurate sense of how much sleep you really get yourself, and you happen to own an Apple Watch, I’d suggest you, too, download AutoSleep and check things out. And, if you don’t, but are serious about sleep for performance and health, you should probably assume you’re not too far from the rest of us, and add some substantial padding to your sleep time, Netflix be damned.
My favorite health science Twitter account. (And a bit of background for those not nerdy enough to be in on the joke.)
Large twin study shows exercising regularly boosts income 14-17%.
Che Avventura
I love Manhattan, but our Little Italy is touristy garbage. For the real deal, you’ll need to head up to Arthur Ave in the Bronx.
Head to Tino’s Deli, Casa Della Mozzarella, or Mike’s in the Arthur Ave Retail Market for a sandwich that will change your life:
Buy handmade pasta at Borgatti’s, the city’s best cannoli at Artuso’s, and fresh bread at Madonia:
Or eat dinner at Zero Otto Nove for truly excellent pizza and red-sauce standbys, paired with always delicious and much more interesting nightly specials:
It’s a short walk from Fordham station on the Metro North, or a slightly longer (but still totally manageable) one from the Fordham stops on the D or 4 subways.
However you get there, it’s worth the trip. Vi auguro buon appetito!
Satire * Godwin’s Law = amazing.
Classy
As I mentioned previously, I recently started testing Composite with clients in the real world. Which has gotten off to an excellent start. Enough so, in fact, that I’m already putting the pieces in place to start doing small-group classes there by the start of next month.
Fortuitously, Jess is off in North Carolina for the weekend, celebrating a belated Mother’s Day with her mom, sister, and two adorable nieces. And though I’m sad not to spend the weekend with her – because every day is way more excellent when I’m by her side – I’m also grateful for the 72 hours of nonstop work time.
So, while the rest of the world is barbecuing and enjoying the pre-summer sun, I’m on lockdown indoors, brainstorming and planning and coding away. And I’m totally thrilled.