Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT

2K posts

Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT banner
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT

Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT

@FredShinn

Clinician * Mentor * Business Coach - Bringing Wellness, Weight-loss and Functional Nutrition to Physical Therapy via an Integrated Model

Hilton Head Island, SC Bergabung Haziran 2009
1.2K Mengikuti355 Pengikut
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Catholic Arena
Catholic Arena@CatholicArena·
🚨 Pope Leo XIV has delivered a hard hitting speech to EU leaders, calling out the 'rejection of the Christian inspiration of the founding fathers of the EU' He also said that Europe is facing 'DRASTIC STERILITY' because 'too many have been deprived of the right to be born' and 'because there has been a failure to pass on the material and cultural tools that young people need to face the future'
Catholic Arena tweet media
English
125
1.1K
6.2K
102.1K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
John Stossel
John Stossel@JohnStossel·
It's the 20th Anniversary of Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth." NONE of his scary predictions have come true. Mt. Kilimanjaro still has snow and Glacier National Park still has glaciers. Here's why we are not doomed:
English
1.1K
15.9K
57.8K
1.1M
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Patrick Byrne
Patrick Byrne@PatrickByrne·
Well THIS seems like important information I wish I had known earlier. And the tweet is beautifully written, explaining the science with clarity. If you have two minutes to spare, read this.
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005

A neurobiologist at Columbia spent 30 years proving that the gut has its own brain, and the day he finally published the book that named it, almost every psychiatrist in America stopped returning his calls. His name is Michael Gershon. He runs the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York, and the field he built from the ground up is called neurogastroenterology in short brain-gut axis. The book that announced it to the world was published in 1998, and the title alone tells you everything about what he was up against. He called it The Second Brain. The claim sounded like science fiction in the 1990s. Gershon was saying that the human gut contains its own fully functional nervous system, with around 100 million neurons embedded in the walls of the alimentary canal, which is the nine-meter tube running from your esophagus to your anus. That is more neurons than your entire spinal cord, and more than your entire peripheral nervous system put together. The gut was not just digesting food. It was running its own intelligence, with its own reflexes, its own memory, and its own way of deciding what to do without asking the brain in your head for permission. The medical establishment treated this as borderline heretical when he first started publishing it. The brain was supposed to be the command center. Everything else was supposed to be the periphery. A second brain in the belly did not fit the architecture anyone had been taught. Then the data started piling up, and it was impossible to argue with. The first finding that broke the old model was about serotonin. You might have heard Andrew Huberman talking about it on his podcasts. Serotonin is the neurotransmitter associated with mood, well-being, sleep, and depression. Every antidepressant on the market targets it. The assumption for decades was that serotonin was a brain chemical, produced in the brain, regulated in the brain, and responsible for what happened inside the brain. Gershon's lab showed that 90 to 95 percent of the body's serotonin is not produced in the brain at all. It is produced in the gut, by specialized cells called enterochromaffin cells embedded in the intestinal lining. Your stomach and intestines are the largest serotonin factory in the human body, and the brain in your skull is producing only a tiny fraction of what is circulating below your neck. The second finding was even harder to swallow. The vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve in the body, running from the base of the brain down through the neck, the chest, and into the abdomen, where it branches into the gut. For most of the 20th century, doctors assumed the vagus was the brain's way of giving orders to the digestive system, in the same way the brain gives orders to the rest of the body. The actual measurements showed almost the opposite. Roughly 90 percent of the fibers in the vagus nerve are carrying signals upward, from the gut to the brain, and only a small fraction are carrying signals downward. Your gut is sending nine times more information to your head than your head is sending to your gut. The bandwidth is wildly asymmetrical, and almost all of it is going in a direction the medical textbooks had quietly been wrong about for decades. The implication of those two findings together is what changed psychiatry. If most of your serotonin is being produced in your gut, and most of the information flowing through your vagus nerve is moving from your gut to your brain, then your mood is being shaped from the bottom up far more than it is being directed from the top down. The feeling of dread before a difficult meeting. The sudden clarity after a good meal. The low-grade anxiety that will not go away no matter how much you talk through it. All of it is downstream of signals that started below your diaphragm. A 2019 study at McMaster University put the final piece in place. Researchers gave mice oral antidepressants and watched what happened. The drugs activated the vagus nerve from the gut side, and the gut-to-brain signaling was what produced the antidepressant effect. When they cut the vagus nerve and tried the same drugs, the antidepressant effect disappeared completely. The drug was not working on the brain directly. It was working on the gut, and the gut was working on the brain. The follow-up research on the microbiome made the connection even tighter. Mice raised in completely sterile environments with no gut bacteria produced about 60 percent less serotonin in their intestines than normal mice. When the bacteria were reintroduced, serotonin production returned to normal. The trillions of microorganisms living in your digestive tract are not passengers. They are running the factory that makes the chemical your antidepressant is trying to manipulate. The most haunting line from Gershon's interviews is the one I keep coming back to. He said the second brain does not do philosophy or poetry, and it cannot help you write a novel. But it is the brain that decides whether you wake up in the morning feeling like the day is full of possibility or feeling like something is wrong before anything has even happened. The mood you assume your conscious mind is generating from your thoughts is mostly being generated underneath you, by a nervous system you cannot feel and cannot consciously access, in an organ you have spent your entire life thinking about as a digestion machine. The decision your gut makes about how you are going to feel arrives in your head a fraction of a second before your brain catches up to it. The conscious thought is the explanation your mind invents for a verdict that has already been reached somewhere lower. You did not feel uneasy because you were thinking dark thoughts. You started thinking dark thoughts because your gut was already uneasy.

English
48
393
1.5K
200.1K
Millie Marconi
Millie Marconi@MillieMarconnni·
Every Olympic endurance coach in the world now tapes their athletes' mouths shut at night because a Swedish lab proved in 1995 that the nose produces a gas the mouth cannot, and that single gas determines whether your blood absorbs 100% of the oxygen you inhale or only 82%. The gas is nitric oxide. The lab was the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. The discovery was published in Nature Medicine that same year, and it quietly rewrote everything respiratory physiology thought it knew about why humans have a nose in the first place. Here is what they actually found. The empty air-filled cavities inside your skull, the ones anatomy textbooks called evolutionary leftovers for a hundred years, are not empty and not useless. The lining of those sinuses contains an enzyme called inducible nitric oxide synthase. It runs continuously. It produces large amounts of nitric oxide gas. That gas sits in your nasal cavity at concentrations hundreds of times higher than anywhere else in your body. The Karolinska team measured it. Air leaving the nose contains roughly 56 parts per billion of nitric oxide. Air leaving the mouth contains 14. Air leaving the trachea, below both, contains 6. The nose is the only factory. Then they ran the experiment that changed sports medicine. When you inhale through your nose, that nitric oxide rides the airstream down into your lungs. It hits the small blood vessels surrounding your alveoli and forces them to dilate. More blood flows past more oxygen, and more oxygen crosses into your bloodstream. The exact figure they measured was an 18% increase in arterial oxygen uptake compared to mouth breathing the same air. Same lungs. Same oxygen in the room. Same heart rate. One nostril of difference and your blood is carrying nearly a fifth more fuel. The reverse is what should haunt anyone who mouth breathes at night. Mouth breathing bypasses the sinuses entirely. The nitric oxide never enters the lungs. Pulmonary blood vessels stay constricted. Less oxygen crosses into the blood. The heart has to pump harder to deliver the same oxygen to the same tissues. A 2008 review in the Anatomical Record showed mouth breathers develop measurably higher pulmonary artery pressure over time, simply because the gas designed to lower it never arrives. There is a second finding most people miss. Nitric oxide is antimicrobial. It directly inhibits the replication of viruses and bacteria in the upper airway. During the COVID pandemic, researchers in the European Journal of Pharmacology proposed that habitual mouth breathers were getting hit harder partly because they had bypassed the body's first chemical line of defense. The nose was not just a filter. It was a chemical weapons factory aimed at every pathogen trying to reach the lungs. The implication is the part that should change how you sleep tonight. Your body built a free 18% oxygen upgrade and a free antiviral system into the same organ. Both only activate when air passes through your nose. Both shut off the moment your mouth opens. Half the adult population sleeps with their mouth open and has no idea they are running their lungs at 82% capacity for a third of their life. The fix costs nothing. A strip of tape across the lips at night. That is the entire intervention. The most expensive thing in human performance is the oxygen you already paid for and never absorbed.
Millie Marconi tweet media
English
41
286
1.7K
225.3K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Electroverse
Electroverse@Electroversenet·
A new study analyzed daily temperatures from 992 long-running weather stations across 29 countries covering the years 1899 to 2024. Then it compared those temperatures to cumulative human CO2 emissions. They don't match. From 1899 to 1940, the planet warmed at a rate of 0.022 C per year, even though emissions were low. Then from 1941 to 1982, temperatures cooled, despite CO2 emissions more than tripling. From 1983 to 2024, warming returned, but slower than before, at a rate of 0.017 C per year, even as emissions rose 8.6 times higher than during the earlier warming phase. As the author concludes, "These findings challenge the conventional assumption that human-induced CO2 is the primary driver of global warming."
English
148
2.1K
4.7K
107.4K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
MAZE
MAZE@mazemoore·
2016. Guy McPherson (a climate change expert, scientist, and professor from the University of Arizona) says that there will not be any humans on the planet by 2026 due to the effects of climate change. Trust the scientists. 😜🤣
English
3.4K
9.5K
29.9K
927.6K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT@FredShinn·
And all were born in the absurdity of the French Revolution which ultimately failed to correctly define good and evil, time and place. The narrow mindedness and prejudice of the French Revolution which determined all that was and is must be evil for only the revolutionary is not corrupted by the past nor present. It’s incumbent only upon the revolutionary to project the good.
English
0
0
0
73
Brivael Le Pogam
Brivael Le Pogam@brivael·
Je veux présenter mes excuses, au nom des Français, pour avoir enfanté la French Theory (qui a enfanté la pire des merdes idéologiques : le wokisme). Nous avons donné au monde Descartes, Pascal, Tocqueville. Et puis, dans les ruines intellectuelles de l'après-68, nous avons donné Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze. Trois hommes brillants qui ont fabriqué, dans l'élégance de notre langue, l'arme idéologique qui paralyse aujourd'hui l'Occident. Il faut comprendre ce qu'ils ont fait. Foucault a enseigné que la vérité n'existe pas, qu'il n'y a que des rapports de pouvoir déguisés en savoir. Que la science, la raison, la justice, l'institution médicale, l'école, la prison, la sexualité, tout n'est qu'une mise en scène de la domination. Derrida a enseigné que les textes n'ont pas de sens stable, que tout signifiant glisse, que toute lecture est une trahison, que l'auteur est mort et que le lecteur règne. Deleuze a enseigné qu'il fallait préférer le rhizome à l'arbre, le nomade au sédentaire, le désir à la loi, le devenir à l'être, la différence à l'identité. Pris isolément, ce sont des thèses discutables. Combinées, exportées, vulgarisées, elles forment un système. Et ce système est un poison. Car voici ce qui s'est passé. Ces textes, illisibles en France, ont traversé l'Atlantique. Les départements de Yale, de Berkeley, de Columbia les ont absorbés dans les années 80. Ils y ont trouvé un terreau qui n'existait pas chez nous : le puritanisme américain, sa culpabilité raciale, son obsession identitaire. La French Theory s'est mariée à ce substrat, et l'enfant de ce mariage s'appelle le wokisme. Judith Butler lit Foucault et invente le genre performatif. Edward Said lit Foucault et invente le post-colonialisme académique. Kimberlé Crenshaw hérite du cadre et invente l'intersectionnalité. À chaque étape, la matrice est française : il n'y a pas de vérité, il n'y a que du pouvoir, donc toute hiérarchie est suspecte, toute institution est oppressive, toute norme est violence, toute identité est construite donc négociable, toute majorité est coupable. Voilà comment trois philosophes parisiens, qui n'ont probablement jamais imaginé leurs conséquences pratiques, ont fourni le logiciel d'exploitation à une génération entière d'activistes, de bureaucrates universitaires, de DRH, de journalistes, de législateurs. Voilà comment on a obtenu une civilisation qui ne sait plus dire si une femme est une femme, si sa propre histoire mérite d'être défendue, si le mérite existe, si la vérité se distingue de l'opinion. C'est de la merde pour une raison simple, et il faut la dire calmement. Une civilisation se tient debout sur trois piliers : la croyance qu'il existe une vérité accessible à la raison, la croyance qu'il existe un bien distinct du mal, la croyance qu'il existe un héritage à transmettre. La French Theory a entrepris de dynamiter les trois. Pas par méchanceté. Par jeu intellectuel, par fascination du soupçon, par haine de la bourgeoisie qui les avait nourris. Mais le résultat est là. Une génération entière a appris à déconstruire et n'a jamais appris à construire. Une génération entière sait soupçonner et ne sait plus admirer. Une génération entière voit le pouvoir partout et la beauté nulle part. Je m'excuse parce que nous, Français, avons une responsabilité particulière. C'est notre langue, nos universités, nos éditeurs, notre prestige qui ont donné à ce nihilisme son emballage chic. Sans la légitimité de la Sorbonne et de Vincennes, ces idées n'auraient jamais traversé l'océan. Nous avons exporté le doute comme d'autres exportent des armes. Ce qui se construit maintenant, en silicon valley, dans les labos d'IA, dans les startups, dans les ateliers, dans tous les lieux où des gens fabriquent encore des choses au lieu de les déconstruire, c'est la réponse. Une civilisation se reconstruit par les bâtisseurs, pas par les commentateurs. Par ceux qui croient que la vérité existe et qu'elle vaut qu'on s'y consacre. Par ceux qui assument une hiérarchie du beau, du vrai, du bon, et qui n'ont pas honte de la transmettre. Alors pardon. Et au travail.
Français
4.1K
20.8K
71.1K
55.2M
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT@FredShinn·
That was a bit of a gotcha question, yet unnecessary question to gain insight into her perspective. I don’t think there was anybody in the room that thought she would or could answer that question. I doubt she is an idiot, she has a different perspective. Now it does seem that her jurisprudence does it rise to the standard of the others on the court or maybe some of those that came before her.
English
0
0
0
13
MaryF75
MaryF75@F75Mary·
@FredShinn @EricLDaugh Yes - it was disgusting & heart 💔breaking. . & We all saw ‘Right’ thru their evil ways - too bad the same treatment didn’t happen to that 🤡idiot who can’t define ‘what a woman is?’ 🤬🙏🇺🇸God 🙏help us🇺🇸🙏
English
1
0
1
29
Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 NOW: SCOTUS Justice Clarence Thomas is being praised nationwide for EMBODYING the PURE AMERICAN DREAM after becoming the 2nd-longest serving Supreme Court Justice in history God bless this patriot! 🇺🇸 🙏🏻 “It followed that Catholic schools had to be better than public schools. So he sent my brother and me to one.” “Remember now, I'm seven years old. My brother is six. And he says to us, You are going to go to school every day!” “And if you are sick, you're still going. And if you die, you will go. I will take your body for three days to make sure you're not faking.” “And he meant it. I mean, the thing about it is, it's one thing if somebody says it and you think they're exaggerating. He wasn't that kind of guy.” “The Catholic schools were very orderly. My brother used to say, When you walked in there, you could hear a gnat tiptoeing across cotton. It was segregated.” “The nuns didn't much appreciate the fact that blacks were treated that way. They were mostly Irish nuns. And they were outspoken, too.” “Oh, God, I love it. They were on our side from day one.” 👏🏻 HE WORKED HARD, HE EARNED IT H/t @MarkPaoletta
English
418
5.6K
25.6K
275.9K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT@FredShinn·
Does anybody “deserve to be mistreated?” And why must we so often see perspective as bias. It seems to me that whatever his opinions are he looks for a rational and historical legal basis that formulates those opinions. Ruth Bader Ginsburg did the very same thing, but from a different perspective…I just think that’s what we ask our judiciary to do.
English
0
0
0
46
𝑳💫𝑪
𝑳💫𝑪@Locaneee·
@FredShinn @EricLDaugh Bud the man is bought and paid for by the GOP. Literally admitted to accepting luxury gifts from top GOP donors. He deserved to be mistreated for all the bias shit he got going respectfully.
English
1
0
1
35
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT@FredShinn·
As a fellow Catholic, and Brother in Christ, I couldn't agree with you more on most points. All-in-all, I think Leo has been balanced but this episode is a clearly out of character from what I have seen so far with him. As a church we have more emergent needs, and this need not be the primary focus of the Pope. There are far bigger issues to draw attention to. Keep the Faith!
English
1
0
4
3.1K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Jesús Enrique Rosas
Jesús Enrique Rosas@Knesix·
So the Pope met with David Axelrod last week. David Axelrod. Obama's campaign architect. A man who is not Catholic, has never met a pope before, and whose entire career has been engineering political narratives for the American left. And then, by pure coincidence, the Pope immediately started lobbing shots at the Trump administration, and three US Cardinals popped up on 60 Minutes doing the same thing. All organically, I'm sure. I'm a practicing Catholic. I need you to understand that part. But in my opinion, Trump has all the right to lash out at him. Maybe you'll disagree, but in the end, Trump talks like Trump. Water is wet. I'm talking about MY Church being run like a DNC satellite office but with a golden throne. This is the same Vatican that watched governments padlock churches during COVID and said nothing. That let Biden take communion while funding abortion and said nothing. That fired Bishop Strickland for defending actual Church doctrine. That removed Bishop Fernández in Puerto Rico for defending religious exemptions THE CATECHISM ITSELF supports. But somehow Trump is the threat to human dignity. Pope Francis was bad. Leo has turned out to be worse. Francis at least was vague about his politics. Leo went and hired the consulting firm. The man has ignored the slaughter of Christians across Nigeria, the Sahel, India, Syria, Bangladesh, Pakistan. Hundreds of believers murdered, churches burned, pastors kidnapped. His response? Platitudes about dialogue. OF COURSE he won't even name who's doing the killing. But he'll fly across continents to make interfaith gestures the week after his people coordinated a media hit on a sitting US president. The weaponization of belief is obvious. You get the Pope to pick a fight with Trump, and suddenly millions of conservative Catholics have to choose between their faith and their vote.
Jesús Enrique Rosas tweet media
English
6K
25.5K
65.1K
2.3M
Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
Did you know C.S. Lewis predicted the modern obsession with “being nice” would destroy the soul? In The Abolition of Man, Lewis argues that when a society stops believing in objective virtue, it doesn’t become tolerant… it becomes manipulable. He calls the result “men without chests.” People with appetites and intellects, but no courage, no honor, no trained moral instincts. They can calculate everything and defend nothing. Lewis saw that once we reject inherited moral law, we don’t become free. We become raw material… easily shaped by propaganda, pleasure, and fear. Modern man prides himself on compassion while quietly surrendering every standard that once gave compassion meaning. Lewis’s insight is brutal: a civilization that educates clever cowards will eventually be ruled by tyrants or technicians. Because when nothing is worth dying for, everything becomes negotiable… including human dignity.
Athenaeum Book Club tweet media
English
785
9.1K
27K
1.2M
Thomas Sowell Quotes
Thomas Sowell Quotes@ThomasSowell·
Charlie Kirk was such a wonderful person.
English
3
13
169
13.5K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Catholic Arena
Catholic Arena@CatholicArena·
Baseball legend Babe Ruth was a Catholic who wrote this letter about Communion, Confession and the Miraculous Medal: “In December, 1946, I was in French Hospital, New York, facing a serious operation. Paul Carey, one of my oldest and closest friends, was by my bed one night. - They’re going to operate in the morning, Babe, Paul said. -Don’t you think you ought to put your house in order? -I didn’t dodge the long, challenging look in his eyes. I knew what he meant. For the first time, I realized that death might strike me out. I nodded, and Paul got up, called in a chaplain, and I made a full confession. -I’ll return in the morning and give you Holy Communion, the chaplain said, -But you don’t have to fast. -I’ll fast, I said. I didn’t have even a drop of water. -As I lay in bed that evening, I thought to myself what a comforting feeling to be free from fear and worries. I now could simply turn them over to God. Later on, my wife brought in a letter from a little kid in Jersey City. ‘Dear Babe,’ he wrote, ‘Everybody in the seventh grade class is pulling and praying for you. I am enclosing a medal, which if you wear will make you better. Your pal—Mike Quinlan. P.S. I know this will be your 61st homer. You’ll hit it.’ -I asked them to pin the Miraculous Medal to my pyjama coat. I’ve worn the medal constantly ever since. I’ll wear it to my grave.”
Catholic Arena tweet media
English
76
1.5K
8.7K
219.4K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Saint Adaugoijele ✝️
Saint Adaugoijele ✝️@JustAdaugoijele·
The rare photographs taken of "Miracle of the Sun" and Our Lady's apparition in Fatima Portugal on October 13th,1917,
English
7
315
1.9K
27.4K
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
Fred L. Shinn, MS, PT me-retweet
🧬Maxpein🧬
🧬Maxpein🧬@maximumpain333·
The most dangerous lie in human history isn’t about food. It isn’t about medicine. It is about sleep. For 200,000 years, humans did not sleep 8 hours. That number was invented in 1938 by a mattress company called Simmons Beautyrest. Before that campaign, the average human slept in two shifts. Historians call it “Biphasic Sleep.” You would sleep for 4 hours, wake up for 2, then sleep for another 4. During that 2-hour window, people would pray, have s*x, write, think, and connect with their families. Some of the greatest works in human history were created in that sacred middle window. Shakespeare wrote most of his plays between 1AM and 3AM during his second wake period. Mozart composed entire symphonies in what he called “The God Hours.” Then the Industrial Revolution needed workers on a fixed schedule. You cannot run a factory on biphasic sleep. So they hired a psychologist named Dr. Nathaniel Kleitman to “prove” that 8 consecutive hours was the biological standard. He faked the studies. He was funded entirely by the mattress industry. And the medical establishment adopted his research without question because it aligned with the factory model. They turned the most creative 2 hours of human consciousness into a “sleep disorder.” They called it “Insomnia.” They medicated it. They gaslight an entire generation that 8 hours of continuous sleep was healthy. They pathologized the exact window of consciousness that produced some of the greatest art, music, and literature in human history. You are not an insomniac. You are experiencing the most natural form of human consciousness. And a mattress company convinced you it was a disease. Stop medicating your genius. Wake up at 2AM. Write the thing. The “God Hours” are calling. ✨🙌🏾💫 © Andre Gonzalves
🧬Maxpein🧬 tweet media
English
2.1K
9.1K
31.9K
4.5M