Author Archive

Because They Want To Live Like That

October 20, 2025

The early gatherings of Jesus followers grew in numbers and influence because people around them saw the way they lived and wished to live like that. They saw people kind and generous. When plagues rolled through the cities, they saw Jesus followers out ministering to the sick and grieving.

I picked up this thought from an Arnold Schwarzenegger newsletter, “When your actions consistently align with your principles, you don’t need to convince anyone of who you are. You become the evidence. That’s why the most powerful teachers rarely lecture; they live in a way that makes people want to follow. Integrity isn’t built in speeches — it’s built in habits, sacrifices, and how you treat others.”

I write this and convict myself. At what points to I embody my principles of peace and justice and being kind and generous? And at what points do I fall short? How can I do better?

Perhaps you need to ask these of yourself.

PSA On Lead in Protein Powder Hype

October 17, 2025

While I’m in Public Service Announcement mode—and concerned with how someone searching for a viral headline in their reporting can distort science try this one on. I’ve seen many similar misuses of science in search of viral headlines over the past 20 years. It is disheartening.

Consumer Reports just released an “investigation” into lead in protein powder. They concluded that there is an unsafe amount—based upon their own internal standard safe levels.

I am not shocked. A little story. I was a member of a Technical Committee of the engineering society ASHRAE. At one meeting, an “investigator” from Consumer Reports attended to talk about research into a product under our jurisdiction. I remember the conversation and the looks that passed around the table among the engineers in attendance. The CR guy said, “Here is the conclusion I’ve made about the product. The testing will begin next week.”

I’ve never read a word from that organization since. 

I’m not surprised that they butchered a so-called investigation into protein powder. I have no idea what the chip is on their shoulder, but the organization should just fold up in my opinion.

Here are a couple of science-backed rebuttals to the story. And a word of warning about jumping into belief based upon hyped headlines.

These quotes are a reply to hype about lead in protein powder in Arnold’s Pump Club Newsletter. The link takes you to a web site where you can check another response that goes deeper into the science.

But when you ask what’s actually being compared—to what, at what dose, and in whom—you begin to see the full picture. The difference between fear and understanding often comes down to asking one more question.

Take the recent Consumer Reports article we covered yesterday about “dangerous” levels of lead in protein powders. The headline spread everywhere: Protein Powder Contains Toxic Lead. Social media lit up. Every major news outlet covered it and took the information at face value. People lost their minds, got worried about lead poisoning, and threw away their supplements. 

That’s not being dramatic. People were genuinely worried. 

But, as we discussed yesterday, here’s what most stories left out:

Consumer Reports based its claim on a misleading safety threshold of just 0.5 micrograms of lead per day. That number is not a federal standard; it’s an ultra-conservative internal benchmark with no clinical evidence that it represents harm.

The FDA’s actual guidance for lead in foods is actually many multiples higher. 

Common foods like spinach, strawberries, apples, carrots, and chocolate naturally contain trace amounts of lead from soil, sometimes more than the protein powders being criticized.

When you put those numbers in context, the danger looks a lot different. The protein powders weren’t unsafe; the problem was a misleading definition of “safe.”

And that’s what made it so frustrating. There are many issues you could point out in the supplement industry. This just wasn’t one, and it created unnecessary panic because of a lack of context.

There’s another response on this blog.

Wondering About AI? Scared? Don’t Be.

October 17, 2025

This post is a bit off my main topics, bit I thought it perhaps relevant to many of you. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its derivatives Generative AI, aka Large Language Models (LLM)—which is a real thing—, and hyped buzz words superintelligence and artificial general intelligence—not real things— are all over the news with loads of hype. Over at my technology blog The Manufacturing Connection, I try to get behind the hype diving into real-world applications (in manufacturing, of course).

Those of you who might have your mental and emotional equilibrium knocked a bit off center by the AI hype might find something in the tips I just shared. Consider this as a Public Service Announcement.

I’ve published a podcast both on my podcast app (available in Apple, Overcast, or wherever you download them) and on YouTube. You can subscribe on any.

Why pursue AI? As a tool to help entrepreneurs add value to their companies. The appropriate roll out entails organizing small “pirate ships” empowered to experiment and implement with a budget and air cover. Many concerns about AI’s impact on employment and organization are over blown. History shows that new technology winds up creating more jobs than it destroys. This podcast is sponsored by Inductive Automation.

Humans have developed and used technology for millennia. It has provided longer and better lives. It has also created great destruction (check out current photos from Gaza). It’s up to humans to decide how to use it.

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The Less I Know

October 16, 2025

George Bernard Shaw said, “The trouble with this world is that the ignorant are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.”

A later interpretation of Shaw is the Dunning- Krueger Effect—the less you know about a subject, the more certain you will be that you are correct.

Jesus once said, “Unless you change and develop minds like children, you will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven.” This thought exists in many wisdom traditions. It’s called more simply (and I like simply) “beginners’ mind.”

Unless we empty our minds and soak up learning like children, we become fixed in our beliefs. And these beliefs could, and probably will, be completely wrong.

Journeying on the path to deeper learning, we will encounter friends and acquaintances who have not progressed beyond the beliefs and opinions of childhood. Certainly there exists a small, but thriving, online community that continues to believe the earth is flat.

Encountering such people, which we will daily, our only real response is compassion. Arguing is counterproductive only leading to strained relationships. Acquiescing is not being true to ourselves. Compassion, reflecting the frequent response of Jesus, becomes the way to health.

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How To Be A Good Person

October 15, 2025

Do something good.

Repeat.

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Making A Good Run

October 14, 2025

When you go skiing, the goal isn’t making it to the bottom once. What you really want is to make it a great day of many runs until the sun sets.

Similarly with life. It’s not just making it to the end. Or to make it to the end with the most toys. It’s making many runs until the sun sets.

And no matter who you are reading this, you have a few more runs before the sun sets. Get back on the lift and head back up.

Sleep—The Long Game

October 13, 2025

What stories do you tell yourself when trying to find better sleep. We’ve been told way too often about how beneficial good sleep is. And to get 6-8 good hours of sleep every night.

I’ve been a fan of Kevin Meyer, who writes at Evolving Excellence, for years through his honest and insightful manufacturing and Lean Thinking writing. He’s retired and pursuing new avenues of thinking.

He had told himself the story that a glass of wine before bed would be relaxing and slide him into deep sleep.

Not so.

He eliminated alcohol for 3-4 hours before bedtime immediately realizing a sleep improvement.

My wife needs almost total darkness for optimum sleep. I don’t think that I notice. Meyer invested in a quality sleep mask creating a dark environment. It helped him.

I am a creature of routine. Intentionally. I am in bed plus/minus 15 minutes of 10 pm and up at 5:30 am unless we’re at a concert or traveling. Consistent timing helps the body prepare for both sleep and wake. The only times I use an alarm are when I have an early car to the airport.

We sometimes have a light snack about 2 hours prior to bed time. Meyer also found ceasing eating 2 hours or more prior to bed to be helpful.

I have taken a number of supplements for years. I have not yet taken magnesium l-threonate for relaxation and sleep. Meyer finds the research is compelling with his personal results aligning with the clinical findings.

Explore Stillness

October 10, 2025

All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone.—Blaise Pascal

The Swiss psychologist Carl Jung told the story of a therapy session with a man who came to him for treatment. “What you need to do,” Jung instructed him, “is to go home and sit alone in your study for an hour every day.” 

The man returned complaining that the therapy did not help. “What did you do?” inquired Jung. “Well, I sat for a while, then I got up and looked out the window thinking of the landscaping, then I got my violin and played for a while, then I wrote a note to my daughter.” Jung told him, “I instructed you to sit still. Just sit still for an hour.” The man was unable to sit still.

People often think of meditation of some sort of exotic experience that only a certain weird set of humans can access.

That is not so. Zen teacher Henry Shukman, explains, “Meditation is exploring what it means to be still.”

Our minds are marvelous creatures for inventing excuses for avoiding things we should do. There are ways around almost everything. You don’t need Jung’s one hour. You don’t even need Shukman’s basic 10 minutes. Rolling out of bed five minutes earlier to spend even that precious five minutes alone and quiet can work wonders. Think of it as an exploration into stillness.

Embracing the Cold

October 9, 2025

Sometimes in the winter when the outside temperature is below 20 F, I pull on an appropriate coat heading outside for a walk. 

I find myself tensed up as if to fight off the cold. Then I remember that my coat is rated for this temperature. I relax my shoulders. Shake my arms. Embrace the joy of a brisk winter walk.

We find ourselves at times in life tensed. Our shoulders tight. Hands in a fist. Perhaps leaning forward. Perhaps abdomen tight.

Then we inhale deeply. Shrug and drop our shoulders. Move our arms. Allow the belly to expand and contract with breath.

We relax into our day.

Four Useful Tips For Living a Full Life

October 8, 2025

I’ve written about these tips for a few years. Axios Finish Line recently published these in a succinct format. Check them out. Where are you on top of it? Where can you improve?

These four steps — all available for free — will help you thrive, personally and professionally:

🤖 AI yourself. Starting today, learn how to use ChatGPT, Grok or any free or premium LLM to optimize your personal obligations and professional work. AI will make you exponentially more efficient and more capable. Soon, AI inequality — the gap between proficient AI users and the rest — will be the defining characteristic of success vs. struggle at work, especially for those newly entering the workforce. Replace social media or gaming time with AI practice. It’s more fun and useful.

🧠 Bionicize your brain. Social media algorithms are controlling more and more of our brains, often pumping nonsense or anxiety into them. Few of us are powerful enough to resist the algorithmic addictiveness. But, if you unplug your brain from social media and fill it instead with high-quality information — available via podcasts, books, YouTube, Axios, Substack and more — you’ll flourish.

🥦 Optimize you. Almost every expert who studies any dimension of mental and physical health comes to the exact same conclusions. So listen to them. Eat real, healthy, protein-packed foods. Purge fake and ultra-processed garbage. Exercise daily, even if it’s just a walk. Lift some weights. Sleep 7+ hours. Make and keep real, human friendships. Minimize booze and screen time. Do all of this, all free, and you’ll be in the top 5% for setting yourself up to lengthen your healthspan.

😇 Be moral. Another free, easy, life-changing hack: Take the time to read, listen to, and think about values you want to live by. What are your personal red lines about how you treat yourself and others? That is your compass, your morality. Set it, or you’ll get lost. Read, pray, meditate, study those you admire. Form your own personal moral structure — then reinforce it, and lean on it when tough times hit.