Skip to content
Andrew Tobias
Andrew Tobias

Money and Other Subjects

  • Home
  • Books
  • Videos
  • Bio
  • Archives
  • Links
  • Me-Mail
Andrew Tobias
Andrew Tobias

Money and Other Subjects

Stand Up For Your Health

May 5, 2010March 17, 2017

Tom Anthony: “Now Business Week is covering this with some more details on the biological mechanisms involved.”

☞ In part:

. . . Sitting is a public-health risk. And exercising doesn’t offset it. “People need to understand that the qualitative mechanisms of sitting are completely different from walking or exercising,” says University of Missouri microbiologist Marc Hamilton. “Sitting too much is not the same as exercising too little. They do completely different things to the body.”

In a 2005 article in Science magazine, James A. Levine, an obesity specialist at the Mayo Clinic, pinpointed why, despite similar diets, some people are fat and others aren’t. “We found that people with obesity have a natural predisposition to be attracted to the chair, and that’s true even after obese people lose weight,” he says. “What fascinates me is that humans evolved over 1.5 million years entirely on the ability to walk and move. And literally 150 years ago, 90% of human endeavor was still agricultural. In a tiny speck of time we’ve become chair-sentenced,” Levine says.

Hamilton, like many sitting researchers, doesn’t own an office chair. “If you’re standing around and puttering, you recruit specialized muscles designed for postural support that never tire,” he says. “They’re unique in that the nervous system recruits them for low-intensity activity and they’re very rich in enzymes.” One enzyme, lipoprotein lipase, grabs fat and cholesterol from the blood, burning the fat into energy while shifting the cholesterol from LDL (the bad kind) to HDL (the healthy kind). When you sit, the muscles are relaxed, and enzyme activity drops by 90% to 95%, leaving fat to camp out in the bloodstream. Within a couple hours of sitting, healthy cholesterol plummets by 20%.

The data back him up. Older people who move around have half the mortality rate of their peers. Frequent TV and Web surfers (sitters) have higher rates of hypertension, obesity, high blood triglycerides, low HDL cholesterol, and high blood sugar, regardless of weight. Lean people, on average, stand for two hours longer than their counterparts.

☞ Which tipped me over the edge. In the interest of good health – how else to justify it? – I have gone completely crazy and, “believe it or not,” acquired this little beauty. It is supposed to arrive between nine and ten this morning. I am bathed in guilt but overwhelmed with anticipation. There may or may not be columns the rest of the week.

Post navigation

← Paper Profits: Row With The Flow
$87,000 In Taxpayer Funds For THIS Expert? →

Quote of the Day

"There are two ideas of government. There are those who believe that, if you will only legislate to make the well-to-do prosperous, their prosperity will leak through on those below. The Democratic idea, however, has been that if you legislate to make the masses prosperous, their prosperity will find its way up through every class which rests upon them."

William Jennings Bryan, 1896

Subscribe

 Advice

The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need

"So full of tips and angles that only a booby or a billionaire could not benefit." -- The New York Times

Help

MYM Emergency?

Too Much Junk?

Tax Questions?

Ask Less

Recent Posts

  • Billions! How This Column Got Started. But first . . .

    March 6, 2026
  • A.I.: An Upbeat View

    March 5, 2026
  • Mr. Popularity

    March 3, 2026
  • Save Money: Give Me $100

    March 3, 2026
  • Two Things Can Be True At The Same Time

    March 2, 2026
  • Operation Epstein Fury

    February 28, 2026
  • Of Freedom And Pedophilia

    February 28, 2026
  • The Intelligence Explosion

    February 26, 2026
  • Bursting With Things To Share . . .

    February 26, 2026
  • Defying Putin's Puppet

    February 23, 2026
Andrew Tobias Books
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
©2026 Andrew Tobias - All Rights Reserved | Website: Whirled Pixels | Author Photo: Tony Adams