It's interesting because I can't distinguish between a mental boost and a 
physical boost, from exercise, especially.  It's mostly true of other boosts 
(from drugs like caffeine, or the "adrenaline" surge of a good argument).  But 
mental/physical seem slightly more distinct under the influence of the other 
boosts.  Exercise boosts seem equally somatic and cognitive.  But this could 
easily be some sort of illusion where a physical boost swamps the mental, or 
vice versa (e.g. with alcohol on board, you *think* your body is doing what you 
told it to, but it's not).

Tiredness is, oddly to me, orthogonal to the physical boost.  The orthogonality 
doesn't show up in running because (I think) that's just a very repetitive 
action that decouples your conscious and autonomic awareness.  So, after 
*running* for an hour, tiredness = no physical boost.  But after an hour of 
good calisthenics, tiredness = physical boost.  It's unclear to me how 
"aerobic" calisthenics is, though.  Yeah, you breathe hard.  But it's very 
controlled breathing.  When running [†], I have some control over breathing.  
But it's mostly just to breathe as much as possible without letting my body get 
into an "out of breath" state.  (I.e. breathe deep and paced to the speed of 
the run, jog, cross country, sprints).  With calisthenics, the breathing 
regimen changes depending on the thing you're trying to do.

I speculate that the physical boost has something to do with the stabilizer 
muscles, which are heavily used in calisthencs.  I sprint and jog on very 
uniform surfaces (track, street).  But I "cross country" on irregular surfaces, 
to whatever extent I can ... grass, parks, trails, etc.  So, my speculation 
might be testable.  Is a runner more "energized" after a cross country run than 
a street run?

[†] This is from memory.  I quit running a couple of years ago to focus on 
weights and calisthenics.

On 1/10/19 10:30 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> I’d say the mental boost (from exercise) doesn’t kick-in until 45 minutes of 
> sustained, reasonably-intense aerobic effort for me, and improves from there 
> up until the point I get physically tired.  The mania passes in about an 
> hour.   This is probably not just energy from the liver since I work out at 
> night.   If for some reason I have to mental work all night, only a moderate 
> amount of caffeine in addition will do that.   The combo is almost like a new 
> day.

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

Reply via email to