Adam Hansmann
100 posts

Adam Hansmann
@TheAuthletic
Co-Founder of @TheAthletic.


What if the “Cry It Out” sleep training (aka extinction-based sleep training) has contributed to mental health issues in young people? In some ways, it’s the most insane thing to do to a child (and is based on incredibly poor science). For centuries, families co-slept without issues, but in modern times, it has become increasingly taboo… why? How can repeated emotional non-response to a baby be healthy? What does it do to their stress calibration, attachment expectations, and self-regulation? How does it play out in their long term relationships and social connections? I’ve read the studies and they are poorly designed and weakly supported. Yet, we have an entire generation of parents that blindly follow this insane protocol without reviewing the data themselves. To be fair, the data supporting co-sleeping is weak as well, but it has centuries of precedent so I feel much more comfortable supporting that than a new approach that was largely instituted since the 1920s. For some context, in the 20th century, behaviorist John Watson (1928), interested in making psychology a hard science, took up the crusade against affection as president of the American Psychological Association. He applied the paradigm of behaviorism to childrearing, warning about the dangers of “too much mother love”. The 20th century was the time when “science" was assumed to know better than mothers, grandmothers, and families about how to raise a child. Too much kindness to a baby would result in a whiney, dependent, failed human being. A government pamphlet from the time recommended that "mothering meant holding the baby quietly, in tranquility-inducing positions" and that "the mother should stop immediately if her arms feel tired" because "the baby is never to inconvenience the adult." A baby older than six months "should be taught to sit silently in the crib; otherwise, he might need to be constantly watched and entertained by the mother, a serious waste of time." The truth is the opposite. We now know that ignoring a child raising cortisol levels and hurts trust and attachment. Yet, every young parent I know today has been brainwashed to let their child cry in silence. It’s truly wild.

A reminder to cold weather BIG teams, this point forward. When you come to LA to play the Trojans 1. Enjoy the weather. 2 You will be soundly beaten 3. Understand this is the new normal. Rinse and repeat. #FightOn

FINAL Notre Dame 34 USC 24 How anyone would want this series to end is beyond me. Peak college football.

FanDuel has agreed to pay the Jaguars approximately $5 million to compensate for the nearly $20 million that an-ex team employee stole from the team and then lost at the sportsbook, sources familiar with the agreement told ESPN. By @Xuan_Thai, @DVNJr espn.com/nfl/story/_/id…








I have a theory that most major sports leagues have been figured out. NFL, Tennis, NHL, etc. They are optimized now. Most fans don't see it. But the game has been solved. Take the NBA for example. It is mostly played at the perimeter or up close. The same thing happened with Baseball. The game began just being all about strikeouts and home-runs. So the game spiraled into 3-4 hour play time and fans started to hate it. So they introduced a pitching clock. And it worked. the game finishes quicker. But that doesn't mean the gameplay is not optimized. If we look at the stats, it is the same game as last year or the year before with the same amount of strikeouts, home runs and hits. It's still optimized. But the game finishes faster.













