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641 points sohkamyung | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.275s | source
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taneq ◴[] No.43102820[source]
The human body (like most fit organisms) is antifragile. It needs to be challenged. In this context, people who think "ooh that hurts I'll never do that again" and carefully avoid discomfort find that, by middle age, they can't do anything, and everything hurts. Meanwhile people who think "ooh that hurts, I'd better practise it until it doesn't" are still fully functional into old age because they push their bodies in the right way, and so their bodies stay strong.

Don't get me wrong, the latter group still hurt. Getting old sucks. But their bodies work.

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1. Doxin ◴[] No.43157110[source]
This sort of thing starts at a WAY younger age than people imagine too. I'm 30 and used to not be able to stand up from sitting on the ground without grunting and effort.

Got a dog. Sit on the floor to play with him all the time. Can now stand up from sitting on the ground without effort or grunting or using my arms to push myself up.