{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "You know how I said the thing was I was really dependent on blood sugar to avoid torpor but I had to factor in the energy to...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/674219233701478400/", "html": "<p><a class=\"tumblr_blog\" href=\"/post/674057669874745344/\" target=\"_blank\">kontextmaschine</a>:</p><blockquote><p>You know how I said the thing was I was really dependent on blood sugar to avoid torpor but I had to factor in the energy to digest food when I topped up? I just had a Korean meal, all spicy cabbage and beef, and I am <i>dying</i>. No wonder those guys were so &ldquo;COVID Zero&rdquo;.</p></blockquote>\n<blockquote class=\"npf_indented\"><p><a class=\"tumblelog\" href=\"https://tmblr.co/MCEpvfklL2pX6R2rMIjkxeA\" target=\"_blank\">@argumate</a> <b>said:</b> man that is just not how this works, not how anything works</p></blockquote><p>Ok fair, I fear I might know just enough about this to get it pretty wrong, so in the interests of documentation let&rsquo;s retreat a step</p><p>So when I originally felt the fatigue come on it was so strong I had trouble breathing, so I retreated to my bed, consciously inflated my lungs for a while, and fell asleep.</p><p>When I woke up I could, by emphatic breathing, work up enough energy to roll over, grab my phone, and think up and post maybe two sentences at a time.</p><p>Eventually with hyperventilation I was able to work up enough energy to stumble to the kitchen, eat some fries with sweet ketchup, and grab some candy.</p><p>I realized after the eating I had even more energy, which lasted longer than the breathing but did dissipate.</p><p>I realized &ldquo;I can briefly boost energy by hyperoxygenating or raising blood sugar, but even both together don&rsquo;t return me to normal&rdquo; suggested some deficiency with aerobic energy production</p><p>I had some creatine monohydrate on hand. It&rsquo;s a nutritional supplement, naturally produced by the body, that enables anaerobic energy generation from stored fat. This was the honest stuff the steroid gains behind the &lsquo;98 Sosa-McGwire home run race got publicly attributed to \u2013 where steroids mean that for doing say 10 reps of a weight you&rsquo;ll get the benefit of 20, creatine will help a guy who normally faltered at 16 or 17 reps tap reserves to actually do 20.</p><p>So I thought let&rsquo;s try some of that, if aerobic generation isn&rsquo;t working, to ramp up to compensate.</p><p>And that worked as hoped! But eventually it wears down, and gravity feels stronger and I move more roughly as my alignment and &ldquo;helper&rdquo; muscles falter and my breathing grows labored.</p><p>At first I needed around 20g/day, now I&rsquo;m down to about 5g every 16 hours</p><p>Blood sugar also remains as a constraint, as my creatine &ldquo;charge&rdquo; runs down often I realize I just haven&rsquo;t eaten too and with that addressed I go back from &ldquo;feels like an hour to more creatine&rdquo; to &ldquo;feels like I had some maybe 3 hours ago&rdquo;.</p><p>Sugary things \u2013 candy, soda, sugarcane juice \u2013 provide a rapid felt boost up but one that starts to dissipate in 10min. Dried pineapple and candied pecans aren&rsquo;t quite as rapid but last longer; bread like from baguettes longer still.</p><p>This matches what I understand of simple sugars and their conversion from starch. Eating other food, including meats, vegetables, and spices, seems to incur an additional energy burden (as tangibly distinct from an energy <i>shortfall</i>!) and leaves me somewhat sluggish for 5-20 minutes after eating, with both more processing and less cooking adding to the effect </p>"}