Not necessarily valueless. You would be more healthy.
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on May 19, 2020, 05:16:13 PMNot necessarily valueless. You would be more healthy.for what greater purposewhat good is health if i have to be miserable every day to obtain it anyway
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on May 19, 2020, 05:15:32 PMQuote from: Fedorekd on May 18, 2020, 01:24:53 PMstill writing my dissertationless than two weeks lefttwo weeks until i am freeWhat's your focus of study?my degree is in computer science, the diss itself is about using neural networks to automatically judge the quality of manta ray images, and then using that to see how different aspects of quality influence the performance of manta ray identification algorithms
Quote from: Fedorekd on May 18, 2020, 01:24:53 PMstill writing my dissertationless than two weeks lefttwo weeks until i am freeWhat's your focus of study?
still writing my dissertationless than two weeks lefttwo weeks until i am free
After a while it wouldn't make you miserable though.
Quote from: Verbatim on May 19, 2020, 05:36:03 PMQuote from: Mmmmm Napalm on May 19, 2020, 05:16:13 PMNot necessarily valueless. You would be more healthy.for what greater purposewhat good is health if i have to be miserable every day to obtain it anywayThe mind is a part of the body just like everything else, so it follows that your health affects it just like everything else. "Working out" is a vague concept, anyway, and I'd say most of the happiness that comes from it is closer to satisfaction from making progress on a goal. Exhausted and satisfied can be a good mixture, I think.
basically, the way i see it, the years you're adding to your life by exercising are being spent... exercising. so from my perspective, it all just seems like a senseless waste of time, so i can't even feel relieved when it's overthere's little difference to me between a man who dies at 60, never having taken care of himself, and a man who dies at 80, because he spent 20 of those years taking care of himself—the former individual just went through less trouble and tedium in his life, frankly
The way I see it, that's all entirely dependent on how much you put into exercising. If you're spending let's say one hour a day for a year exercising and that gives you another ten years, I think most of us would say that's a pretty good deal considering all that exercising a year is 15 days total that you're trading for ten years. Of course I know fuck all about all that considering my exercise is just whatever is demanded of me physically at work and being out of work for two months I'm sure I've gained ten pounds just sitting on my ass playing Persona and shitposting.
I presume that in this context "manta ray" refers to the animal itself rather than something specifically related to computer science?
i'll admit, thoughif someone were to ask me, "how does it feel to have a six pack?"it'll be EXTREMELY satisfying to be able to say, "like shit. it wasn't worth the effort at all. stop wasting your life on bullshit like this"no one's ever said that before in history, so i might as well try to be the first to do it, because it's the truth, and so long as people continue to doubt me, i'm determined to prove it—no matter how miserable it makes me
I mean, you would literally feel physically better. Losing 70lbs has made my whole life better. Being fit isn't just a vanity project, it will actually improve your mood and well-being.
Quote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 05:51:23 AMI mean, you would literally feel physically better. Losing 70lbs has made my whole life better. Being fit isn't just a vanity project, it will actually improve your mood and well-being.and in a matter of time, i'll be able to refute this
Quote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 06:34:58 AMQuote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 05:51:23 AMI mean, you would literally feel physically better. Losing 70lbs has made my whole life better. Being fit isn't just a vanity project, it will actually improve your mood and well-being.and in a matter of time, i'll be able to refute thisthat is 100% an assumption, and I think you realize that
I don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.
Quote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster up
Quote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?
Quote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:31:48 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?i'm saying it's a sign of lower intelligence if you don't actively try to put the mental at the forefrontyou're not your body
Quote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 07:00:54 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 06:34:58 AMQuote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 05:51:23 AMI mean, you would literally feel physically better. Losing 70lbs has made my whole life better. Being fit isn't just a vanity project, it will actually improve your mood and well-being.and in a matter of time, i'll be able to refute thisthat is 100% an assumption, and I think you realize thatsend me to hell for all eternity if i'm wrong, because i'm supremely confident about this assumptionyou felt better because you wanted to lose that weight, and you pulled it off—like you said, it was a vanity projecteven if i had one whit of confidence gained from my fitness, i would do everything in my power to suppress, stifle, stymie, frustrate, or block those feelings, because it's completely illogical to get any level of confidence boost from something so fucking worthless and stupidi may be thousands of dollars in debt because i have no marketable talents whatsoever, and i'm depressed as fuck constantly because everything (everything) sucks—but at least i have big muscles!what a fucking joke. yeah, you'll see how happy i am all righti can't wait to show you how fucking happy this will make me
Quote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:34:00 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:31:48 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?i'm saying it's a sign of lower intelligence if you don't actively try to put the mental at the forefrontyou're not your bodyOkay but that doesn't negate the fact that if you are physically un-well your mental well being will be negatively impacted.
The type of well being I'm talking about has nothing to do with ego, and it's fairly well established that eating a healthy, balanced diet (not extreme weight loss diets like keto) and exercising regularly has a positive correlation with good mental health. Not to mention, your body itself will actually feel better too, and you'll notice. In studies of depression, anxiety, and even schizophrenia, symptoms become less severe when healthy habits are cultivated.
Quote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:34:00 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:31:48 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?i'm saying it's a sign of lower intelligence if you don't actively try to put the mental at the forefrontyou're not your bodydo you really think that the health of your body will have absolutely no effect on your hormones or the chemistry of your brain, or are you just convinced that you alone have learned how to completely separate your consciousness from your physical mind and can overpower the factors that determine how your brain is going to function
Quote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:41:18 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:34:00 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:31:48 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?i'm saying it's a sign of lower intelligence if you don't actively try to put the mental at the forefrontyou're not your bodyOkay but that doesn't negate the fact that if you are physically un-well your mental well being will be negatively impacted.not if you have other things going for you that are more importanteither way, this is about physical wellness making you happier, not the inverseobviously, if you're morbidly obese or have a terminal illness or something extreme like that, then you have a point
Your mental state can be negatively affected simply by having too much or too little of certain vitamins, or just having a poor gut micro-biome. You don't have to have a chronic condition. If fact research over the last few years has shown that depression and diet are often linked, and even just taking probiotics has helped people just as well as taking anti-depressants.If you just don't take care of your body at all, then it won't be able to function properly. You'll have greater levels of pain, increased fatigue, imbalanced hormones, a myriad of various issues that aren't going to be overcome until you actually start to take care of your body.
Quote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 07:46:35 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:34:00 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:31:48 AMQuote from: Verbatim on May 20, 2020, 07:17:35 AMQuote from: Aether on May 20, 2020, 07:10:50 AMI don't see how someone can be physically unhealthy and it not affect their mental health in a negative way. Physical and mental health are very interdependent. My personal experience with this fact is very visceral.this is a graver insult to the intelligence of humanity than i could ever personally muster upWhat, are you trying to say that the two things aren't interdependent?i'm saying it's a sign of lower intelligence if you don't actively try to put the mental at the forefrontyou're not your bodydo you really think that the health of your body will have absolutely no effect on your hormones or the chemistry of your brain, or are you just convinced that you alone have learned how to completely separate your consciousness from your physical mind and can overpower the factors that determine how your brain is going to functioni mean, it's not that hard—all you have to do is acknowledge whether your brain chemistry is doing something logicaleating, for example, tends to elevate my mood—but it's not for any good reason; i hate eating, and i hate that i have to do it to survive. so from a purely logical standpoint, it actually pisses me off that i have to eat. i'm not going to allow my brain to trick me into thinking that i actually enjoy eating, just because it's trying to prevent me from starving.i already know not to starve myself. i don't need my brain chemistry's help on that, but that's the only reason why it's rewarding me—because if i don't eat, i'll die, and my brain really doesn't want that to happen, even if it logically wouldn't be such a big deal.so eating improves my mood in a strictly biological sense, but logically, because i'm capable of introspection, i don't actually feel any better about myself. and i shouldn't. all i'm doing is eating. i haven't done anything valuable.do you get it now
I actually laughed.
lmao people get schizophrenia because they're weak willed broIf u had Verbatim's force of will psychosis would just go awaymodern studies seem to point toward dopamine?dopamine inhibitors are an effective treatment of schizophrenia and other psychoses?no dude they're just not organizing their brains well enoughif they were smarter they wouldn't have such disorganized minds
Quote from: Solonoid on May 20, 2020, 08:13:02 AMI actually laughed.i mean yeah, it's pretty funny that i have to explain this stuffdo you need your biological impulses to tell you when to eat, or do you think you can you figure that out yourself