The Long Game 113: Getting the Devs Jacked, US Life Expectancy, Happiness is Incremental, Don't Read History for Lessons
π« Data Science and Dating, Social Comparison, The Great Unbundling of Consumer Social, The Future of Europe, Copper Books, and Much More!
Hi there, itβs Mehdi Yacoubi, co-founder at Vital, and this is The Long Game Newsletter. To receive it in your inbox each week, subscribe here:
ππ± Weβre inviting more and more people to Vital. Do you own an Apple Watch, a Garmin, an Oura ring, or something else? Let me know π
In this episode, we explore:
Getting the devs jacked
Happiness is incremental
Donβt read history for lessons
The great unbundling of consumer social
Social Comparison Orientation and Its Correlates
Why is life expectancy in the US lower than in other rich countries?
Letβs dive in!
π₯ Health
π¦Ύ Getting the Devs Jacked
This was the best and funniest article Iβve read recently. I wish I had written it! I might take some time to write my version of how to build muscle and get stronger, but in the meantime, I highly recommend this one:
I know the headline says βdevsβ but this is not only for the devs. Whether youβre a VC, founder, advisor, trader, angel investor, community manager, or operator - this is for you. This is for all of you who need to get in shape.
There is no more DeFi summer, Kusummer, or Solana summer. There is only βworld of atoms summerβ (not shilling Cosmos here) and I know that scares you because you spent too much time flexing NFTs and you have no chesticles to flex. And if we discuss flexibility below, I will be not referring to your ability to flex.
Then, the ten rules:
Donβt get cocky
Donβt frame poor results as great ones π
Make a plan, set some goals
βWhen it comes to goals itβs easy: set a number youβd like to lift on the bench press, deadlift, and squat. If you donβt squat because βyou got a bad kneeβ then fix it! Itβs just an excuse.β
Bigger pecs=fatter checks
βA rule that will get you far in life is that you can trust a man who benchpress a lot. And you wanna be that guy. Because if you bench-pressed heavy that means you know what it feels like to lift a bag above your head that can literally smash your face inwards.β
More plates=more release dates
βWhether itβs a simple linear progression or some sophisticated periodization make sure youβre getting stronger. I hate to break it to you, but you have to at least:
Benchpress 1.25x your bodyweight
Squat 1.5x your bodyweight
Deadlift 2x your bodyweight
And these are ridiculously low standards.β
I agree with these standards; theyβre good initial goals to root for.
Try the Bulgarian method of training to understand the pain
It will test you mentally like few other things. Also, this is more βBulgarian inspiredβ rather than Bulgarian.
Forget bodyweight, functional, apocalisthenics, and other BS
βI canβt stand this nonsense. Everybody wanna look swole but nobody wanna pump iron. βHey man, I donβt wanna get too bulky!β - Well you ainβt gonna anyways. If youβre not a genetic prodigy (trust me you are not) itβll be very hard to get bulky (if you donβt mean fat because thatβs easy).β π€£
Jokes aside, bodyweight stuff can get you results, but if you can have access to weights it will be much better (very hard to build a strong lower body without weights)
Count calories & know how to bulk and when to cut
I donβt entirely with βcounting calories.β It can help a first to get a clear picture of what you consume and what you should be consuming, but the ideal is intuitive eating if you manage to. Counting calories is so annoying to do daily.
βSupplementationβ
People tend to overthink this one. If your training is on point, and you eat well, you wonβt need anything.
βThe diet (aka real food) should provide for most things. If you want to know what you need to supply in addition to your diet, get bloodwork done. These days there are companies that can test you and send you tailor-made supplements for your deficiencies.β
Pair with: General notes on supplements
Take care of your recovery
This one is important. Recovery doesnβt only mean resting. It also means nutrition, sleep, etc.
Do Crossfit! [I donβt agree with this one π ]
Nothing against Crossfit per se. I just think there are way better and safer ways to train!
If you came here for real tips and you wanna start lifting then please read this to understand that you suffer from Fuckarounditis. For a solid workout plan with background info, any of Jim Wendlerβs 531 books should do. In terms of a deeper understanding, any content by Kabuki Strength is gold. For dieting tips, Iβm a fan of Berkhanβs Leangains method and Efferdingβs Vertical Diet. (π in the piece linked above.)
π± Wellness
π§ββοΈ Happiness is Incremental
Two things made me think of a similar idea this week: reaching a βdestinationβ is absolutely not what will make you durably happy. The journey is what matters. You might think itβs obvious, but itβs still very common to see people think and act otherwise.
First, this tweet:
Then, this article:
Becoming famous is amazing.
Being famous is a mixed bag.
Losing fame is miserable.
The amount of fame almost doesnβt matter. Itβs the trajectory that people cling to.
Same with money. I think for a lot of people the process of becoming wealthier feels better than having wealth.
If itβs wealth we were after, most of us would feel great, because most of us are unfathomably wealthier than we were a generation or two ago. Or ten years ago. Or five years ago. Or two years ago!
What feels great is being on an upward path. Thatβs when dopamine takes over. Thatβs when you can extrapolate it and assume it goes on forever, and compare yourself to where you were before, and feel like nothing can stop you.
When that path declines β even if it happens when you have a level of wealth you couldnβt fathom a few years ago β the whole sensation shatters.
π§ Better Thinking
π° Donβt Read History for Lessons
Itβs tempting to think we can read history to find lessons for the present day, but this often leads us to the wrong conclusion. This is an excellent article on the topic:
The reason I think this way is because Iβm sympathetic to the two criticisms most typically levelled against learning from history. To summarise crudely, the two arguments go something like:
Everything in life is path dependent. A lucky break early in a personβs career makes all their latter successes easier; a lucky decision early on in a companyβs life makes their latter projects more likely to succeed. You canβt replicate a companyβs success, nor learn from their failures, if you donβt also replicate their path. And it is impossible to replicate their path. As a throwaway example, think back to the legendary, non-exclusive deal IBM made with Microsoft for MS-DOS in 1980 β which allowed Microsoft to sell DOS to every other PC-compatible manufacturer. This deal is often described as βIBMβs great mistakeβ. Had they not done the deal, Microsoft would have had a very different set of opportunities in the ensuing decade. But IBM did do the deal with Microsoft, and that, in turn, set the stage for Microsoftβs dominance in operating systems for years afterwards. It may not be useful to learn the lessons of Microsoftβs history when much of what they accomplished hinged on chance events and idiosyncratic decisions in their past.
The second argument against reading history is even more harsh. The argument is that accountings of history are not accurate, and can never be accurate, thanks to the narrative fallacy. By its nature, narrative necessarily compresses reality into some coherent tale, meaning that accountings of history tend to overemphasise intention and action, instead of the more plausible βrandom actions by actors in a complex adaptive system, conspiring to create unexpected resultsβ. This is a roundabout way of saying that whatever histories you read are most likely wrong β and not even a good representation of reality.
Ok, so what should we read history for, you might ask.
Iβm coming around to the idea that you should not bother with generalisable lessons β or at least, to be extremely conservative when you attempt to do so. Instead, you want to think βok, this is an instance of <concept>, and this is one additional way this can show up in the real world.β To reiterate one of the central claims of CFT: experts in ill-structured domains reason by comparison to fragments from prior cases theyβve seen β one implication is that concepts are represented not as abstract principles in their heads, but a cluster of real world cases that serve as prototypes.
The goal of reading from history, then, is to expand the set of prototypes in your head.
Treating history in this manner sidesteps many of the problems weβve discussed earlier. You donβt have to worry about path dependence, for instance, since youβre not drawing tight lessons from specific scenarios. Nor do you have to care as much about the narrative fallacy β if you have enough samples of the thing in action, your brain will be able to pattern match against the similarities across cases, never you mind that retellings of each case may be inherently flawed. When youβre hunting for concept instantiations, the criticisms of historiography are a wash; they fall to the wayside.
Pair with: Silicon Valley History
β‘οΈ Startup Stuff
π± The Great Unbundling of Consumer Social
The 2020s is the decade of the great unbundling of consumer social. This piece explains why:
So letβs step back into the theory. When do βbundlingβ and βunbundlingβ occur more broadly?Β
Bundling takes place when companies can stack up customersβ willingness to pay by providing a package of services, rather than providing each service independently. Chris Dixon has a great microeconomic explanation of this.Β
Unbundling takes place where the opposite is true: companies can extract more value by isolating one element from the bundle, and offering it as a standalone service. This allows the unbundler to disrupt the bundler by:
Method 1: The unbundler having more efficient pricing (because eliminating expensive parts of the bundle lowers the unbundlerβs costs), OR
Method 2: The unbundler having better service quality (because the unbundler builds the product specifically around the unbundled use-case)
The whole thing began with TikTok unbundling Instagram and creating a platform better suited for entertainment than Instagram is.
Have a look at your Instagram feed. As you enjoy the ever-weaker dopamine hit coursing through your veins, note that two categories of content will quickly emerge:
βSocialβ (your friends and family): Wedding photos, messages from friends, group video calling, perhaps even the odd βIβm humbled to announceβ¦β or #TBT
βEntertainmentβ (creators): Memes, cooking tutorials, pranks, shopping, influencer #ads
So, by a series of product decisions that sacrificed βsocialβ features, TikTok has made a dramatically more entertaining product than Instagram (and, arguably, elements of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, all of which started as βsocialβ apps).Β
So the entertainment part was unbundled by TikTok. What about the social part? Companies like BeReal, Zenly, and Snap are taking care of it:
Take BeReal as an example: the app is minimalistic, and does not feel designed to βentertainβ. By encouraging users to take one photo per day to share with their friends, it allows people to keep up-to-date with their loved ones, while sharing their updates in a low-effort way.
Feels, Discord, Sendit, Zenly, NGL and others have similar social-first attributes.
So although BeReal and other equivalents remain in early innings, I believe that there is a generational opportunity to unseat Instagram (possibly with several apps to start, instead of one monopoly).
Why now? Because with unbundling: when it rains, it pours. Now that TikTok has taken leadership of βentertainmentβ, Instagramβs bundled offering becomes even less compelling, and competitors focusing purely on βsocialβ have a unique opportunity to grow share.
As Creator Economy thought leader Hugo Amsellem puts it: we are in a βLoneliness Economyβ, and these social apps can fill this gap.
Pair with:
π What I Read
βοΈ Social Comparison Orientation and Its Correlates
On social comparison:
Social comparers prefer to make everyone else worse off, if it means they will obtain a relative advantage.
Β Also unsurprisingly, social comparison was highly correlated with competitiveness (βI judge my performance on whether I do better than others rather than on just getting a good resultβ).
Interestingly, researchers have discovered that even controlling for self-esteem, social comparison was associated with feelings of envy, guilt, and regret. In other words, even if two people have the same baseline level of self-esteem, the one who is more prone to social comparison will experience more negative social emotions.
In sum, people who habitually compare themselves with others tend to score highly on:
Psychopathy
Narcissism
Malicious envy
Guilt
Regret
π The End of the Millennial Lifestyle Subsidy
Something beyond rising energy and labor costs is leading to sticker shock on once-cheap urban amenities.
Several weeks ago, I needed a ride home after some late-night drinks about two miles from my place in Washington, D.C. I pulled up the Uber app and entered my address. When the price on the screen popped up, I assumed Iβd entered the wrong street, and perhaps the wrong state. I carefully retyped. But the same price appeared on the screen: $50.
Thatβs outrageous, I thought; $50 for a 10-minute ride? Then I kept thinking. Arenβt gas prices and inflation near half-century highs? Isnβt the labor market so tight that low-paid workers are switching jobs at historic rates? Isnβt nominal wage growth rising fastest for the kind of workers most likely to drive for Uber? Yes, yes, and yes.
But something beyond rising energy and labor costs led to that startling price tag. With markets falling and interest rates rising, start-ups and money-losing tech companies are changing the way they do business. In a recent letter to employees, Uberβs CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi, said the firm needs to βmake sure our unit economics work before we go big.β Thatβs chief-executive speak for: We gave Derek a nice discount for a while, but the partyβs over and now it costs $50 for him to get home.
Pair with: Ads are coming to your Uber app
πΊπΈ Why is life expectancy in the US lower than in other rich countries?
Why do Americans have a lower life expectancy than people in other rich countries, despite paying so much more for health care?Β
The US clearly stands out as the chart shows: Americans spend far more on health than any other country in the world, yet the life expectancy of the American population is shorter than in other rich countries that spend far less.
The chart here doesnβt just show the latest data points, but how life expectancy and health spending have changed during the last five decades. The arrows start in 1970 and connect the annual data points for both metrics, showing the change over time.Β
In the 1970s the US didnβt stand out at all, it does so now because life expectancy increased much more slowly than in other countries. At the same time, health spending in the U.S. increased much more rapidly, particularly since the mid-1980s. The consequence of these two exceptional developments is that the US followed the much-flatter trajectory that the chart shows.
The unequal development over recent decades led to an inequality between the US and other rich countries. In the US health spending per capita is up to four times higher, yet life expectancy is lower than in all of these countries.
β¨ Clout
How social media status contests are shaping our reality.
The competition is along the other axis: cultural capital. When it comes to political Twitter (Iβll stick to Twitter here since itβs the platform I know best and also the one where this status competition is the most brazen), thereβs a very specific kind of cultural capital that predominates: the specialized language and esoteric knowledge of wokeness. As Iβve noted before, exhibiting your familiarity with and fierce commitment to the political sensibilities of elite four-year college-educated urban professionals today serves the same function that driving a Lexus with a Stanford bumper sticker did in the pre-internet days: it indicates your elevated class position and thus your rightful place on the status hierarchy. This is what Iβve called βmoral capital.β
π Brain Food
π« Data Science and Dating
This was an interesting piece on online dating and data science. As most dating now happens online, we can understand human preferences like never before.
So, what traits make people desirable to others?
Well, the first truth about what people look for in romantic partners, like so many important truths about life, was expressed by a rock star before the scientists figured it out. As Adam Duritz of the Counting Crows told us in his 1993 masterpiece βMr. Jonesβ: We are all looking for βsomething beautiful.β The conventional attractiveness of a mate is the number one predictor of how many messages someone gets, for both men and women. We are also looking for:
someone tall (if a man)
someone of a desired race (even though most never admit it)
someone rich
someone in an enforcement profession (like lawyer or firefighter) if a man
someone with a sexy name (such as Jacob or Emma)
and someone just like ourselves (people are 11.3 percent more likely to match with someone who shares their initials)
The interesting part is those traits do not correlate with romantic happiness. So all humans compete for attributes that do not make the future couple any happier than if those desirable traits were absent.
If I had to sum up, in one sentence, the most important finding in the field of relationship science, thanks to these Big Data studies, it would be something like this (call it the First Law of Love): In the dating market, people compete ferociously for mates with qualities that do not increase oneβs chances of romantic happiness.
Moreover, if I had to define the qualities that are highly desired even though they donβt lead to long-term romantic happiness, I would call many of them shiny qualities. Such qualities immediately grab our attention. Just about all of us are quickly drawn to the conventionally beautiful, for example. But these attention-grabbing, shiny qualities, the data suggests, make no difference to our long-term romantic happiness. The data suggests that single people are predictably tricked by shininess.
Pair with: Data Scientist Exposes Men & Womenβs Real Dating Preferences
π₯ What Iβm Watching
π The Problem with the Next Moon Mission
πͺπΊ The Future of Europe
A thought-provoking video on the possible future of Europe.
π§ The Tool of the Week
π Copper Books: A Social App for Authors & Readers
Continuing my deep dive into the world of vertical social networks, Copper Books is a social network focused on reading & publishing books. Another well-done vertical social network.
πͺ Quote Iβm Pondering
"I've missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. Twenty-six times, I've been trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed."
β Michael Jordan (highlights)
π EndNote
Thanks for reading!
If you likeΒ The Long Game, please shareΒ it on social media or forward this email to someone who might enjoy it.Β You can also βlikeβ this newsletter by clicking the β€οΈ just below, which helps me get visibility on Substack.
Until next week,
Mehdi Yacoubi