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Never Give Health Advice

January 16, 2014 by Amir Aribokill Leave a Comment

Health Advice

Offering someone health advice is like telling someone their religion is wrong these days. Of course, everyone is a health expert. They watch Dr. Oz or get some quirky advice from a family doctor and feel like they’ve got it all figured out. Try and question this and you’ll see the person’s fangs showing in no time.

My own immediate family has lost respect for me because of this. My father has gout, high blood pressure and a number of other smaller issues. My brother has heart problems and my sister has skin problems. Through careful and proper research I’ve been able to narrow down the root of all their problems. Now, they don’t even want to talk to me anymore because they’re offended that I gave them advice.

The Bike Shed Effect

There’s a phenomenon called the “Bike Shed Effect”. A term I’ve picked up from Tim Ferriss’ 4 Hour Body. Ask someone how to build a bike shed and you’ll get a ton of ideas, even if they’ve never built one. Ask someone to build a nuclear plant and you’ll get no feedback.

To sum it up in a nutshell, the greater the difficulty seems for a given task, the less likely people are to participate. Health and nutrition seem simple enough for people to guess about. After all, you have a shi’t load of information to pull out of a hat and personalize.

Health Advice Makes Enemies

Anytime I’ve given anyone nutritional advice or any tips on improving their health, they look at me like I’m attacking them. “Thanks, but this is what works for me” is usually where the dismissive behavior starts. If I try to question how they’ve gather their information or try to back up my information with science, I’d probably be deleted from their facebook the next day.

Giving health advice is like questioning someone’s political views these days. Health is a hard science and people don’t realize that. Too many people out there don’t practice effective problem solving. It isn’t their fault because our school system doesn’t stress the scientific method of problem solving outside of dissecting frogs and science fairs.

Health is a science. There is no room for emotions, passion or opinions. Personal experiences and observations are reckless tools to form a conclusion from. People have a lot of trouble researching health because there is so much information out there that they don’t know what to believe. They tend to believe whatever they like at the end of the day.

The way to avoid this is to pick up on what makes a study credible or not. This way, people can find consistency out of all the confusion and something solid will finally emerge.

Do yourself a favor and be careful who you offer advice to. I’ve learned to just tell people what I do and if they want to know, they’ll ask. Nothing good will come out of offering advice to a non-responsive recipient.

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Filed Under: Habits & Lifestyle Design, Society & Environment Tagged With: Diet, Exercise, Food, habit, habits of change, health, health advice, healthy, help, motivational, paradigm, science, society, strength, training

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Life With Amir

Professional writer, researcher, autodidact and avid problem solver.
I focus on actionable lifestyle architecture. To put it simply, I’m a health & lifestyle coach. I started this journey as a personal one to help my friends and family. My dedication to science and behavioral biology has greatly improved the quality of my life and those who are close to me.
I'm here to take it a step futher and share it with even more people.
Improving the quality of your life can be a difficult thing, but it all boils down to habits and the building blocks behind them.
I'm big on the right way to do research because I truly believe that’s the foundation for any success story. Being able to sift through information and systematically narrow down the most valid is a skill in its own.

Everyone wants to make more money, look better, feel better and make others feel better, but it isn't easy.

Motivation and will power aren't enough. It starts with the right habits and the right habits start with the right tools.

Thankfully I've spent years refining the techniques behind these principles. Join me on this journey to improve your health and the quality of your life. I want to share what I’ve learned and share the methods I use to narrow down the truth in pursuit of personal success. Read More…

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