athletics
Athletics and fitness are the essential ingredients for your body to live a long and healthy life.
Turning the Ephemeral into the Concrete
Some experiences feel real while they are happening and unreal almost immediately afterward. A conversation that sparks clarity, a realization that reframes a problem, a moment where scattered thoughts suddenly align. In the moment, there is a sense that something solid has been grasped. But without capture, that solidity dissolves. What remains is a faint impression, detached from the reasoning that made it meaningful. The experience was real, but it left no durable trace.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast4 days ago in Longevity
The Doctor Who Prescribes Walking 🚶‍♀️
THE PRESCRIPTION NOBODY FILLS 💊 Dr. Sarah Mitchell has been practicing internal medicine for twenty-two years and she has stopped prescribing medication as her first intervention for the majority of her patients, not because she is anti-medication but because she has observed over two decades of clinical practice that a daily thirty-minute walk produces equivalent or superior outcomes to pharmaceutical intervention for mild to moderate depression, anxiety, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, chronic pain, insomnia, and cognitive decline, and that patients who adopt walking as their primary health intervention require fewer medications, have fewer hospitalizations, report higher quality of life, and live longer than patients who rely primarily on pharmaceutical management of the same conditions 🏥
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Longevity
The Island
What Ikaria's Centenarians Know That Modern Medicine Doesn't THE ISLAND THAT BAFFLED SCIENTISTS 🔬 On the tiny Greek island of Ikaria, located in the Aegean Sea with a population of approximately eight thousand people, residents are four times more likely to reach age ninety than Americans, they experience dementia at one-fifth the rate of the Western world, they have dramatically lower rates of cancer and heart disease, and they remain physically active and socially engaged into their nineties and beyond, and when researchers from the University of Athens first studied this phenomenon in the early 2000s they expected to find some genetic anomaly or miraculous dietary component that explained the extraordinary longevity, but instead they found something far more interesting and far more applicable to the rest of the world: the Ikarians were not doing anything medically remarkable but rather were living in a way that modern Western civilization has systematically abandoned 🌊
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Longevity
Shinrin-Yoku
How Walking Among Trees Heals Your Body and Mind in Ways Medicine Cannot THE PRESCRIPTION THAT GROWS ON TREES In 1982, the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries introduced the practice of shinrin-yoku, literally meaning forest bath, as a formal component of Japan's national health program, recommending that citizens spend time walking slowly and mindfully in forested areas as a preventive health measure, and what might have seemed like quaint nature worship was actually based on emerging research showing that exposure to forest environments produces measurable physiological changes including reduced cortisol levels, lowered blood pressure, decreased heart rate, enhanced immune function, and improved mood, effects that are so consistent and so significant that Japanese physicians now prescribe forest bathing as a complement to conventional medical treatment for conditions including hypertension, anxiety, depression, and immune dysfunction, and the growing body of research supporting these effects has made forest bathing one of the most compelling examples of traditional wisdom being validated by modern science.
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Longevity
9 Secrets to Build Iron-Clad Discipline
THE DISCIPLINE MYTH NOBODY TALKS ABOUT The biggest lie the self-improvement industry sells is that discipline is about willpower and forcing yourself to do hard things through sheer mental toughness, when neuroscience research consistently shows that people with the strongest discipline actually use the least willpower because they have designed their environments, habits, and identity in ways that make desired behaviors automatic rather than requiring constant conscious effort. The Navy SEALs, Olympic athletes, and Fortune 500 CEOs who appear to have superhuman discipline are not gritting their teeth through every workout and every early morning, they have built systems that make discipline feel natural and inevitable rather than forced and painful, and understanding these systems is the difference between people who maintain discipline for decades and people who burn out after two weeks of white-knuckling through habits they hate.
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Longevity
‎8 WAYS TO READ SOMEONE'S CHARACTER
Simple signs that reveal who a person truly is Understanding someone’s character isn’t about judging quickly—it’s about observing patterns over time. People reveal who they are through their actions, choices, and how they treat others, especially when there’s nothing to gain. If you pay attention to the right signals, you can get a clear sense of a person’s values and intentions.
By The Curious Writer7 days ago in Longevity
Strong, Not Small
For decades, women have been told that fitness is about shrinking—smaller waist, lower number on the scale, less space taken up. But modern health science and real-world experience say something different: strength is one of the most powerful tools a woman can build, not just for appearance, but for long-term health, independence, and confidence.
By The Curious Writer7 days ago in Longevity
How To Beat Addiction
Beating addiction isn’t about a single trick—it’s a process of rebuilding control, habits, and support around your life. It’s hard, but it’s very possible, and people do it every day. Here’s a clear, grounded way to approach it:
By The Curious Writer7 days ago in Longevity
Having Value in a World That Doesn’t Pay for It
There is a particular kind of frustration that does not come from failure, but from misalignment. It arises when a person knows they are contributing something real, something valuable, and yet finds that value does not translate into stability, recognition, or material support. The work matters. The insight matters. The care is genuine. And still, the world responds with indifference. This disconnect is not imaginary, and it cuts deeper than simple disappointment because it challenges the assumption that value and reward naturally converge.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast9 days ago in Longevity
Visibility, Timing, and Readiness
Visibility is often treated as a reward, something earned through talent, effort, or persistence. It is framed as the natural next step once someone has something worthwhile to offer. But visibility is not neutral, and it is not automatically benevolent. Being seen amplifies everything at once: strengths, weaknesses, unfinished edges, unresolved wounds, and untested convictions. Once that amplification begins, there is no way to selectively mute what is not ready.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast12 days ago in Longevity



