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    Nuclear Peating

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Bioenergetics Discussion
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    • engineerE Offline
      engineer
      last edited by engineer

      One of Ray Peat's most important recommendations to those following bioenergetics is to regularly measure yourself. Most commonly, this is body temperature and heart rate. Lab tests are also useful but less important because blood levels often do not match tissue levels for the things that matter most (hormones) but are still useful for what mostly lives in the blood, like cholesterol. Then, as a result of these measurements, you can adjust nearly in real time using the theory of perceive, think, act.

      Unless someone can demonstrate the scientific invalidity of the methods used to diagnose hypothyroidism up to 1945, then they constitute the best present evidence for evaluating hypothyroidism, because all of the blood tests that have been used since 1950 have been shown to be, at best, very crude and conceptually inappropriate methods.

      Another interesting point is how Peat focused much of his career on the so-called "reproductive aging." Basically, the idea is that the reproductive system is a good indicator of metabolic health because it's sensitive to numerous factors like thyroid, PUFAs, vitamins, sex hormones, glucose oxidation, almost if not everything. One big problem here is how it's often hard to quantify how healthy you are in this aspect. In women, you have ovulation and other obvious indicators like that. But in men, aside from the obvious symptoms of a metabolic issue like ED, which is limited in how much it can reveal and can be totally absent despite a metabolic disorder, gauging reproductive health is limited to lab tests and subjective feelings.

      Well, as it turns out, I think I've found a way to do one of those lab tests at home. The size, quantity, and motility of sperm reflect input factors like LH/FSH, estrogen, and overall gonadal function. It turns out that to assess this all you need is a phase contrast microscope and cheap commodity consumables like plastic sample slides. This kind of microscope uses a neat optical trick invented in the 1930s and actually won its inventor the Nobel Prize. As a result, they're basically a commodity, albeit one that costs about $1000 to get started with.

      91f4e8dc-0a76-4031-bd78-0c4cc72650e7-image.png

      So why do such a thing? Aside from the body temperature and heart rate and subjective feelings, most of us don't get blood tests very often, usually on the order of yearly to every several months, and if you're dedicated, every month. But a phase contrast microscope would let you quantitatively monitor another metabolic factor on the order of every couple days. If you're like me then this sounds awesome especially if you are a recovering victim of keto dieting. I have already found a good looking used microscope on eBay and am almost ready to pull the trigger.

      I'm calling it Nuclear Peating because it's "going nuclear" with the Peat philosophy of perceive, think, act.

      C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • engineerE Offline
        engineer
        last edited by

        Update:

        I've ordered the microscope and a special F to X mount adapter for my Fujifilm camera to get "awesome" photos with.

        NomanarchN alfredoolivasA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • NomanarchN Offline
          Nomanarch @engineer
          last edited by

          @engineer poast sperm slides here

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • alfredoolivasA Offline
            alfredoolivas @engineer
            last edited by

            @engineer record the volume of each load you eject too plz

            alfredoolivasA engineerE 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • alfredoolivasA Offline
              alfredoolivas @alfredoolivas
              last edited by

              And please freeze each load, to preserve your godly neck genetics for humanity.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • C Offline
                CrumblingCookie @engineer
                last edited by CrumblingCookie

                @engineer said in Nuclear Peating:

                a phase contrast microscope would let you quantitatively monitor another metabolic factor on the order of every couple days

                These changes however will be a reflection of what influenced metabolism up to 3 months ago. Depending on which phase of development or maturation had been affected. Tracking and evaluation of any influencing factors requires consideration of the delay and a lot of longitudinal data.

                For the quantitative measurements you can probably get an AI programmed to recognize numbers and motility etc. from short video clips. No need to rasterize and manually count. Could be little effort for valuable long-term data.

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                • engineerE Offline
                  engineer @alfredoolivas
                  last edited by

                  @alfredoolivas said in Nuclear Peating:

                  @engineer record the volume of each load you eject too plz

                  I did try this recently with a measuring cup and got... 8mL? Apparently this is a lot?

                  alfredoolivasA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • alfredoolivasA Offline
                    alfredoolivas @engineer
                    last edited by

                    @engineer yeah you are shooting ROPES

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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