I have been using my Oura ring coming up to a year now, and have quite enjoyed the experience. I have had a smartwatch earlier that tracked stuff, but the Oura is far more passive and gives a better sense of general wellbeing, without focusing on exercise. I have used it to improve my sleep a little, which wasn't hard given the only way was up from where I was, as well as monitoring my general activity, as well as workouts when I remember to log them. My Heart Rate Variability (HRV) has improved slightly over the year, but even though it is "unique" to the individual as to what high and low may be, I don't think mine is very good. Me resting heart rate is also terrible, as the lowest it gets is around 60 BPM towards the end of my sleep.

Last night I was writing about how "hard it is" to get people outside these days, whereas it used to just be a necessary part of life. While I was writing it, I was wondering when it first really became possible to just stay at home and not leave the house at all, like the character in The Whale who was morbidly obese, ordering all he needed from home. Now, it is pretty simple in many western countries, since pretty much everything can be obtained through the internet, at almost any time of day or night. And I think as a result of this, more people are presenting with neurological disturbances like social anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive Disorders and agoraphobia.
But while these should only be a tiny sliver of any population, the fact is that there are a bundle of issues that are proving time and time again, that we aren't a healthy population. And one of the reasons I see for this is that we are not getting outside enough, which not only affects our own health, but also the social health of our area. There are many reasons for this, but for instance in a place like Finland where there is ample amounts of public spaces for social interaction as well as exercise and destressing, people are still getting worse. Largely because they aren't using them , or aren't using them often enough.
The unfortunate truth is that we are lazy by nature, where we will consistently take the easiest path forward, the road perceived as requiring the smallest amount of effort. However, due to the changes in our daily routines, this has very quickly devolved into an outcome we didn't want or intend to get. Our waist lines are increasing, as our mental health is decreasing, and our societies are falling apart as there aren't enough healthy members to keep them afloat.
I don't think anyone would want to be subjected to social scoring, but I also find it interesting that people are not complaining too much about being subjected to just that, on the many platforms they spend their time. The data they generate is used to score them socially, even if it isn't used directly by the government to control them. I think that where we are today is a society is already well into the dystopic conditions science fiction writers have imagined for many decades already, yet we do not acknowledge it personally, because we are still under the mistaken impression that we have control of ourselves. The trouble with that position though, is that a majority can't even control their emotions when they hear something they take as an insult without bursting in rage, but believe they are able to counter the subtle manipulations used by platforms that hire experts who know precisely how the majority of people behave.
They know me better, than I know the back of my hand.
As I was talking with someone who works directly in the field of investigating and exploring possibilities to improve community physical health, I suspected that whatever the solution, it is going to have to compete with the easiest thing to do. And the easiest thing to do at any given moment is, to do nothing. And that is what most of us do, most of the time; even when we know we should be doing something else. And the "nothing" most of us are mostly doing, feels like we are doing something, like scrolling a feed, or watching something on a streaming service. This makes it hard to compete with, especially since we also feel that when we aren't doing those things, we are missing out on something that would make our life better.
Even though our life is getting worse from doing it.
It is interesting that so few of us truly realise the harm we are doing to ourselves to the point that we are willing to change our habits. Our daily habits have quickly changed to be commanded from the sofa, and we are almost categorically worse off for it, yet we keep expanding the amount of time we spend on the couch, or in front of a screen. Even with all the "mobile" devices we have at our disposal, we aren't walking more, nor are we using them to improve our physical wellbeing. Pokémon Go got a few people out and about more, but the problem is, it only captures a certain kind of person.
As much as I wish it wasn't necessary, gamification is likely needed to get people moving, and to get them outside using the spaces created for activity, it needs to be incorporated into the spaces themselves. However, gamification for physical also requires some kind of reward, since apparently being healthier isn't a compelling enough reward in and of itself.
People in your area...
When it comes to behavioural design, it is quite an effective way to shift activity by comparing people to the averages in their area, in a similar way to "people like you liked" statements. So perhaps using all the wearables people have, this could be accomplished anonymously, with a lot of blind information gathered and then filtered into approximate locations and suburbs so that people could get the temperature of how people like them, in their age group, are behaving and, see how they themselves measure up. I suspect that for a fair percentage of people, this would generate enough of a competition loop that they would shift their behaviour, as it challenges our social esteem, even if only internally.
Many don't like the thought of this.
Nor do I.
The fact is though that we are failing as a society when the averages are getting worse across all of the metrics that matter for human wellbeing. We are less physically healthy, less mentally healthy, less emotionally healthy, and less socially healthy. If health is wealth, we are fast falling into an average of extreme poverty.
As far as governments are concerned, the cost of healthcare is a large cost and it has ramifications on all kinds of other factors, from productivity to military capability, and societal viability. The primary goal of government should be to increase wellbeing of the population, and we should hold them accountable for this, which would include changing the entire way government currently functions. But that is not an overnight process itself, but to have the energy to do it, we would also need energetic citizens who are willing and able to make the changes necessary to shift the course of society. We don't have them - instead we have tired, lethargic, stressed, depressed populations that are just looking for the easiest way to escape from reality.
The "build it and they will come" mentality is no longer enough to just create the space, because it also requires the incentives for the space to be used. There needs to be encouragement to push some boundaries, even if the first push is to get our asses up off the couch. For many, that is the hardest of the steps. From there, even improving our activity moderately by a percent or two each year, will see large differences in outcomes in a couple decades from now.
All this data is currently being used to sell more to us, whilst making us worse off. Yet, we should own our data and have tools and incentives available to use it to improve us, to make us stronger physically, mentally, emotionally, and socially. Strong individuals who create strong societies.
We can be better across the board.
We just have to design our lives so we behave better.
Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]
Be part of the Hive discussion.
- Comment on the topics of the article, and add your perspectives and experiences.
- Read and discuss with others who comment and build your personal network
- Engage well with me and others and put in effort
And you may be rewarded.
This is just the article I needed to get my new year goals back in view!
I've operated from this mindset for so long, trying to minimize my responsibilities to the point where I have very little to be accountable for each day. But it also means I have little reason to live for also, and I do not like being so disassociated from everything.
The nothing I have to compete eith every day is Splinterlands. Devoting my time to this game is my present version of doom scrolling. Sure I'm making some rewards and I show more accumulation every Season, but the time I spent with Splinterlands is keeping me back from advancing my life in other areas. Well, that and all the cannabis I'm smoking.
Well, at least here I can give some thanks to @actifit here on Hive and the FitBit I've been using over the past 18 months. I do enjoy the gamifications of tracking my steps. I still don't remember to do it every day to ppst through actifit, but I do try and hit that 10K steps goal daily. It is much easier when I'm at work as a teacher, since I typically hit that mark with all the work I do bopping around my classroom and taking the students up and down 4 flights of stairs a few times a day. I made it right into the actifit Top100 for 2025 with over 2M steps logged!
I had a partner, the beloved Dr. Jane Hurley, who studied exactly this problem for her doctorate. She was looking into which incentives provided the best "bang for the buck" to get people at low activity levels to medium activity levels. She hated cars, but love riding bikes and taking public transportation. Cruelly she was killed as a pedestrian in a car crash back in June 2019 just a month after defending her dissertation and only 3 days after signing her first job contract to work for a Top3 think tank in urban planning. Humanity would be better off if she was still around. I'm sure wherever she is now, she is smiling that you are writing an article about her field of study and passion!
This is where kids have played a role in life earlier - because it is automatic responsibility and activity.
What else do you want to do?
That is awesome. Do you find yourself pushing for a few more each day?
By the sounds of things, for sure. I wish I had had the chance to have a decent conversation with her and perhaps get a small amount of influence into her planning future. We need more people who think enough to actually get people changing for the better, rather than making them change to increase profits.
Maybe I'm against the commitment level of children, but I could definitely do better with a bit more responsibility and discipline. Which rolls into point #3...
I need to do more with the pushing and the pulling + a more nutritious whole-food diet during my hectic school days! It not so much the steps because I've always had that soccer-style endurance, but I need more horsepower!
For point 2, I need to learn the tech skills behind streaming and editing. I used to edit for TV for a living, but the technical aspects the past 10 years have kept me off Twitch/YT/3peak. If I want to get serious about building my brand and getting out of USA, it is time I learned this stuff yesterday and get to it.
So far, I can't even keep the consistency of actifit posts but somehow I want to build a personal brand? I need a more strategic plan cuz I'm just grapsing at straws at the moment, grabbing onto whatever feels good.
It would be nice to have quite a few different convos with Jane about how things are going in this world. She would have been fighting like hell against this state of affairs and putting in the work to create the future she wanted. Miss her all the time. We are all worse off without her around anymore.
Yeah, I get that. More the point that having children makes the responsibility default. Without them, we seem to lack defaults so have to find responsibility. The community is the target.
So many ways to start getting into this with a low bar - just do it!
It is such a compelling way to live, but I think it is ultimately unrewarding as it leaves us feeling empty. That might just be me though.
She would have been fighting like hell against this state of affairs and putting in the work to create the future she wanted.
Often the people we need, seem to be the ones taken first.
Like my Nikes are talking to me. So you are saying I should stop making excuses ehh?
Probably when you started being able to order groceries online for delivery XD
I haven't yet figured out whether that's cognitive dissonance or wilful ignorance or some hybrid.
It's too much of a faraway mythical thing when you want/expect your "reward" the very second you did something outside of existing.
A lot of the "wellbeing" things actively try to short circuit that (and then other people take "be happy with yourself" that tiny bit too far by assuming that it's permission to stay exactly the same and make everyone else the problem for being toxic and judgemental) and the comparison with others is one of the main depressors coming from social media.
Though having said that something like Fitbit's heart health spectrum is probably inoffensive enough (I don't know if they still have it, it was on the app when I used to use Fitbit); it is/was a red to green colour bar that showed where you were compared to an "average" range of people within your age range and then a pro-athlete outlier somewhere on the extreme end of excellent XD
For the medical/pharmaceutical industry (not to be conflated with the practice), unhealthy populations seems massively profitable.
and are probably harder to control/manipulate. Totally being a conspiracy theorist again :)
Maybe before. Some people live off pizza.
Wilful ignorance I think. People don't want to believe they are the product.
Yes. But competing on what makes a difference I think. We are competitive by nature, but people are comparing themselves to filters and AI now.
I would like to see s "ninth lane" at the olympics with some random audience member in it trying to compete in the heats. :D
Yes. The governments are enriching the pharmas - helps make their "GDP" look better.
For sure.
I simultaneously realise and acknowledge that this is true and refuse to believe that this is true.
You're right there as well. In my groups one of the favoured "competitions" is my variation of the handstand competition, where the kids have to try to hold a handstand for as long as they can while their partner times them. They are simultaneously trying to outdo each other while eagerly cheering each other one because COME ON YOU'RE SO CLOSE TO BEATING YOUR HIGH SCORE (although every now and again there's YOU DIDN'T START IT AT THE RIGHT TIME).
It was much less effective when I was doing it as a straight handstand comp (where it is quite simply last man handstanding) so I don't do that as part of my conditioning but will happily join in if one of the other groups is doing one.
Then in one of my other groups I can't do anything that looks like it might have some components of a competition because there's a special needs kid who simply cannot cope with it.
Maybe trying to claw up against an average would work and the idea of the ninth lane amuses me no end XD
Bahahahahhahaaaaa I feel like everyone would be cheering for them regardless of if they finished as expected or did the startling upset XD
obviously someone with some background in whatever right otherwise people gonna die XD
And that reminded me of a recent competition where one of the boys had probably every single coach, gymnast and spectator in the building screaming encouragement at him as he really, really struggled with one of the skills as though if we yelled loud enough our voices could give him the extra boost that he needed to complete it, sadly he wasn't able to and there was the huge AWWWWWWWW when he had to bail XD
I have Fitbit linked to my watch which I rarely check. The only thing I do check is my sleep schedule, previously it was set to the default 8 hours per day which I never met. I recently lowered that to 7 hours and it's good to see my sleep score improve considerably. It's a great way to improve my emotional wellbeing.
I just checked my steps, average 3000 in the past month 😬 and I blame that on the constant rain every day. The good thing is that I know I'm not permanently like that, during the summer or when I go away, I'm a lot more active.
Wrt to social wellbeing, I was talking to a friend recently who moved to UK 5 years ago, and this year to Asia for work. He said he found it very difficult to make new friend even during those 5 years. At best you have associates but not someone you can call out for dinner on a Friday night and have a great evening. It bothered him a lot. I get his frustration, cuz I know it is a lot harder to make new friends as you grow older, yet personally that doesn't bother me a lot.
Sorry, rambling on here. The bottom line, one has to take responsibility for their own wellbeing and adjust as they see fit, no one can help them
I don't value sleep enough - but I think people around me wish I would sleep more, so I am not as crabby.
But I think that it is so easy to track with these gadgets and makes such a big difference, most people would benefit.
Mine is 6300, and I feel I have barely left the house since before Christmas! :D
I know people from the UK who came to Finland and lasted a year, because they couldn't make decent friends. In Finland, they don't have many friends, but once a friend, it is "friend for life" territory. I myself was lucky when I came here, as I connected with people at the university in the first few days, even though I didn't go to school here. Many of them are still my friends today.
The challenge is that I think responsibility has been eroded in so many ways so people don't even realise they aren't taking responsibility.
Actifit gamification really does work for me. Every day I try to get to the ten thousand steps. And it works much better for me than Samsung Health, because I know that I will post about it and the number will be shown.
So it is a gamification and accountability mechanism. Does not work for everyone though, I think that you have to have a certain psychological profile in order for Actifit to motivate you.
My resting heart beat is relatively low, when I sit it is usually between 50 and 56 BPM.
There is some accountability and some incentive :)
Maybe. But think if you were knowingly being compared to your neighbours over the fence.
That is fantastic. Mine sucks. It could also be due to the medications I am on, but unsure.
I used to have a cheap fitbit that tracked steps. It finally died and never replaced it. Might look into one of those Oura rings. We will see.
Since retiring, it is possible I'm one of those people that has developed a social anxiety or agoraphobia. Although I am working on getting out more, it is still a work in progress and still get anxious when I do go out. Agreed that this does lead to deterioration of mental and physical health if one allows it to. It did for me.
I used to laugh at my younger son and wife playing POkemon Go, but it got them out and walking around gathering whatever it is they did for the game. So your gamification idea is spot on, I think we can use tech to do just that.
Maybe gamify public spaces for physical activity of some sort. Not sure how, but if people will spend hours playing online games for fake stuff, they surely would do it offline as well.
There are a few different ones out there. I saw that the "whoop" got banned in the tennis, even though it doesn't have a screen.
PTSD is another reason for what might look like agoraphobia.
I reckon simple check-ins, leader boards (even pseudonymous) and comparisons with others in the area would go a long way. Not everyone will get on board, but if even 30% made a decent change in activity, it would be significant and likely lead to more joining soon after.
Doing nothing on a phone feels like doing something,which is why it's so hard to put it down and go for a walk. We really have designed our lives to be as lazy as possible, and the only way out is to start making things a bit less convenient again.
The gap seems to wide for many, so the gap needs to be narrowed a bit with incentives.
This is going to sound horrible, I am sure, but I think a lot of it is simply the fact that I don't care. To be fair, I'd argue that 90% of conversations people have with other people is stuff that is irrelevant. Maybe it's just me, but on social media, I can just skip past someone droning on about themselves. If I am stuck in an actual conversation, I have to try and make not make it obvious I don't care, which is just hard for me to do. That's the social side anyway. On the activity side, I agree, getting out and doing stuff is better.
It doesn't sound horrible. Most people I talk to don't have much interesting to say, as it is all commentary on third-hand information, social media, entertainment, or whatever new thing they bought.
But I reckon that if you were out with a group of decent people playing softball or something like that, you might enjoy the smalltalk too.
I definitely feel more comfortable with people I know or topics I am familiar with. I just feel selfish, but much of the time small talk doesn't interest me. It seems like people are just filling dead space.
I agree. I think it is part of the degradation of society, as conversation has also become limited by social expectation.
It just feels fake and self serving.
So we just need governments to not act like governments, and for people to not act like people, and we're all set.

Nah, I think we need people to act like people instead of robots.
I agree that the convenience of staying at home has led to a lot of health problems. We should seek for a balance and make outdoor activities a priority ;)
Do you think you get out and about enough?
Only at the weekends.
This post has been manually curated by @steemflow from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.
Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens.
Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.
100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @steemflow by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.
Thanks.