Tag Archives: United States Navy SEALs

Scientific Ways Coffee Gives You Super Powers:

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September 03, 2011 607,768 views

Coffee is an amazing drug. As we’ve pointed out before, it can be just as addictive as many hard drugs, but on the plus side it increases alertness, tastes fantastic and works as a temporary truth serum by making whiners admit that they’re completely useless (until they’ve had a cup).There’s a joke that scientists are devices for turning coffee into results, and being scientists, they’ve taken it literally. The following studies show how caffeine makes you a better person, and we’re not talking Lifetime channel hand-holding “better person.” We’re talking faster stronger smarter less likely to diebetter.

#7.
Upgrading Navy SEALs

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Scientists decided to see what happens when you subject 68 Navy SEAL trainees to secret drug doses, nonstop stress and three days of sleep deprivation. That’s not the sort of experiment that creates Captain America; it’s the sort he has to clean up after.

Marvel.com
And he has better things to do.

The U.S. Army’s Military Nutrition Division, the most badass caterers of all time, took advantage of “Hell Week.” That’s where the SEALs force as many wannabes as possible to fail, and are so good at it that 22 of the study’s 90 volunteers had quit before the scientists even got there. All subjects were “volunteers,” but we’re fairly sure that saying you’re too scared to ingest coffee automatically fails you from SEAL training.

U.S. Army photostream via Flickr
“Pop smoke, they’ve got a Starbucks! Repeat, we are under heavy grande and need evac!”

After three days of sleep deprivation and constant torture by both superior officers and the sea itself, trainees were given caffeine and tested on marksmanship, cognitive ability, vigilance and saliva. The scientists claimed they were checking the saliva for caffeine levels, but it’s more likely a test for insane, drooling, hyperaccelerated crack-shot madmen. At which point they deploy Dolph Lundgren.

They found that 200 milligrams of caffeine significantly improves vigilance, alertness and reaction time, even after half a week awake. These guys are extremely serious about getting things done. Their conclusion recommends caffeine over amphetamines because it’s legally and medically easier to give to people. It’s also motivating for regular people: If coffee can help Navy goddamn SEALs stay awake for 72 hours of torture, that morning coffee better not just wake you up — you’d better karate chop through your desk and do a day’s work before lunch. Standing. Violently.

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“WHERE IS YOUR TPS REPORT?”

#6.
Coffee vs. Cancer

Possibly on the grounds that caffeine can do anything, scientists organized a death match between store-bought coffee and human cancer cells. And coffee can’t die. This wasn’t some advanced caffeine extract irradiated with science rays — they walked out of the hospital lab, bought four different coffees in the lobby and poured their very-probably-venti liquid into their experiments instead of into themselves. And coffee is so awesome, it’s useful in both places.

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Though we usually prefer medical researchers not to use a kid’s “Pour this in and see what happens” approach.

It exhibited antiproliferative effects on cancer cells, preventing them from multiplying, and multiplying is cancer’s entire deal. Even at dilutions of 1:70, the coffee inhibited cancer cell activity. Flow cytometry analysis — the cellular equivalent of instant replay — showed that the coffee even made some of the cancer cells kill themselves. That’s a level of psychological combat you don’t normally see at the cellular level.

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“You’re fat, you’re ugly and, trust us, absolutely no one loves you.”

Other studies have shown that caffeine also increases the effectiveness of radiation therapy and tumoricidal drugs. It really helps everything work harder, even gamma rays, and their job is a hell of a lot more important than yours.

#5.
Faster, Better Than Before

Coffee enables you to not only do stupid things faster, but also run away from the results faster as well.

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He just “fixed” the server by rebooting it.

This is because caffeine is a turbocharging kit for your cardiovascular system. The liver breaks it down into three demethylated chemicals, and they’re a better-designed hyperactivity team than the Power Rangers. Paraxanthine increases lipolysis, converting fat into glycol fuel and dumping it into the blood. Theobromine dilates your body’s blood vessels. Theophylline relaxes smooth muscle tissue, allowing your heart to beat faster and more efficiently. So your blood is flowing faster and in greater volume, and it contains more muscle fuel.

The sprint study showed an improvement of one second over a 20-meter sprint. If that doesn’t sound like much to those of us who double as Dorito storage tanks, one second faster over such a short distance is the difference between life and death when it comes to crossing the street before that speeding truck arrives, outrunning that bear and every other use of sprinting that doesn’t involve track and field.

A 5-kilometer study showed a 1 percent improvement in times for both trained and amateur runners. So this isn’t some minor chemical effect that only applies to those at the top of their game: Anyone in any game is improved by coffee, as long as that game involves running like hell.

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They’re already training for London 2012′s looting event.

#4.
Brain Upgrades

Many treat coffee as a way to be less crap, something to cancel out tiredness and hopefully restore you to “sentient being” instead of “sweating paperweight.” But caffeine doesn’t just clean up your skull after last night’s party; it improves the human brain above and beyond normal values. After dosing volunteers with small amounts of caffeine first thing in the morning (which they apparently had to do in a special facility, instead of going to any office anywhere in the world), scientists found increases in vigilance, vigor, energy, anger, efficiency and reaction time. Or in other words, caffeine is Batman.

Lady Orlando on Flickr
Criminals are a fatigued, unproductive lot.

Reaction time decreased with increasing blood plasma caffeine concentration, without an increase in errors. The paper concludes that caffeine “significantly improves human performance and mood.” They found that these results were further enhanced when combined with aspirin, a superhero serum often used by brave warriors fighting their deadly nemesis, The Hangover.

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Curse his mind-breaking powers!

#3.
Neuroprotective Effects

Caffeine doesn’t improve your day — it improves you, by altering your brain’s chemistry. Adenosine agonizes brain receptors, which really doesn’t sound like something that would make you sleepy, but is. It’s released as you think, and the more of it you have sloshing around your skull, the higher the voltage required to fire neurons. It electrically gets harder to think until you have to switch off and sleep. Caffeine antagonizes these receptors. It has a similar enough shape to connect with them, blocking adenosine, but not similar enough to make them change the voltage. It’s the good opposite of that asshole blocking seats on the train with his bag. Suppressing adenosine allows the brain to enjoy more dopamine effects, which are basically all the good ones. You’re awake, alert, intelligent and motivated. Coffee is great!

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It’s like smart in a mug!

And the more you use it, the longer your brain will work. Long-term caffeine use has been found to reduce the risk of brain damage, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, epileptic seizures and even stroke. A 10-year study of over 130,000 people found that the more coffee men drank, the safer they were against Parkinson’s. Another showed that just one cup a day cuts the risk in half. Women also benefit, but caffeine is apparently a bit Victorian and advises ladies to enjoy in moderation. A few cups daily cut the risk to about 55 percent, but unwomanly excess increases the risk again.

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“Honestly, baby, I’m saving your brain by making you stay half-naked in the kitchen.”

The most kickass curative effect is how low doses of “caffeinol” are highly neuroprotective. Caffeinol is equivalent to three cups of strong coffee and one cocktail. That’s not us simplifying the amounts for you — that’s exactly how the scientists defined the ratio. When a research paper gives mixing instructions, it’s not just a treatment, it’s a party. They brilliantly recommend that this treatment should be safe to add to other therapies. We’re also fairly sure this means that White Russians are an immortality serum for a perfectly balanced brain. Truly, The Dude had it worked out all along.

#2.
Liver Lifesaver

That’s not the only reason to drink alcohol and caffeine. They’re also delicious and productive, and without them the Cracked offices would resemble an accountant’s tomb. Oh, and your risk of cirrhosis drops 22 percent with every cup.

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It’s tequila time tonight!

A study of over 120,000 people found that death by liver cirrhosis decreases with coffee intake. Note that it’s a 22 percent reduction compared to the value from the previous cup, so five cups won’t give your liver the ability to regenerate by 110 percent when exposed to alcohol. No, instead you’ll only have reduced your risk by a piddling 73 percent. (We do mean piddling. Five cups of coffee is a non-trivial bladder event.)

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He’s pissing his way to immortality.

A more recent study found that drinking two or more cups daily cut the risk of chronic liver disease in half. Brilliantly, this only applies to people already at higher risk due to heavy alcohol intake or obesity. Coffee isn’t a vice; it protects you from other indulgences. A drug hasn’t been this magically tempting since ’80s cartoons. But you have to do it properly. Multivariate-adjusted analysis showed that the hazard ratio was halved by proper ground coffee, but actually increased 30 percent by decaffeinated or instant coffee. Because if you’re going to disrespect coffee, it’ll disrespect you back right in the liver.

GASTROENTEROLOGY 2005;129:1928–1936
Insulting the barista gods is unwise.

Also, Hazard Ratio is now the name of our action movie starring an actuary who plays by his own rules.

#1.
Actual Lifesaver

If you’ve ever complained that you can’t survive without your morning coffee, you’re a whiner, but one-eighth correct. The cirrhosis study above also revealed that the rate of suicide drops by 13 percent for every cup of coffee consumed daily. True, those people were all Californians, but it’s probably applicable to the rest of the species, too. (When people build a megalopolis on a known fault line, they’re clearly more vulnerable to suicidal effects.)

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Californians view tectonic timebombs as wacky neighbors.

We’re all familiar with the feeling. Before your morning coffee, the world really doesn’t seem worth the effort. Another study followed over 86,000 women for eight years, which is something you can do without being arrested if you’re a scientist. They found that two or three cups daily cut the relative risk of suicide to 34 percent. And these weren’t average people — they were registered nurses, people whose job description is “See all the horrible shit that can happen to people.”

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“Coffee makes the daily genital wart discharges bearable!”

Java doesn’t just make you do more, and do it better: It makes you want to do it more and for longer.

Luke McKinney’s favorite coffee is the Black Blood of the Earth, an experimental ultra-coffee brewed by a radiation expert who trains bomb squads in nuclear device disposal, and used to be barman at the South Pole. Really. Luke is much less interesting, but still tumbles and has a website.

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The Alpha Effect: Why We Love Manly Men Again!

I have to admit, I love manly men. I’m talking about muscles, grunting, cavemen types. I’m not sure why, but Alpha Males are always on my list. I thought this article was interesting… we are moving from a period of CSI nerds, geek chic, so to speak to more masculine GI Joe types. I say the more the merrier….

On a side note… hair is coming back in again (according to this article) I don’t mind hairy chests… backs- it’s got to go. Not ok, never will be ok. Wax that Sh@t!


By Simon and Schuster AUTHORity, 3 hours 26 minutes ago

By Laura Griffin
Author of Snapped

Sweat-beaded chests. Bulging biceps. Grunting matches. Dudes in the wild. Why are we women all of a sudden so into the alpha male these days? From top TV shows to NAVY Seals in the news, Laura Griffin explains why we can’t get enough of our big, strong, hairy men. (She should know: As a bestselling romance author of the Tracers trilogy and the upcoming Snapped, she has seen her share of hotties come and go.)

For years people have been talking about “The CSI Effect”—how fictional TV shows such as CSI have created a multitude of armchair experts in forensic science. But are we now seeing the opposite trend? More and more, reality shows such as Surviving the Cut, Top Shot, and One Man Army are having an effect on fiction–as evidenced by the bumper crop of tough alpha males populating today’s romance novels, from Navy SEALs and Army Rangers to police snipers.

As an avid reader (and writer) of romance fiction, I’m gleefully embracing this trend. I mean, nothing wrong with a duke or an earl or a glittery vampire who drives a Volvo, but what really pulls me into a story is a big strong alpha guy like the ones I’ve been watching on reality TV lately. Flip on the tube and you’ll see what I mean. The lineup is loaded with police snipers, spec ops warriors, survivalists. What is it about these sweat-slicked, dirt-covered, worm-eating adrenaline junkies that appeals to women?

They’re driven. Whether it’s the SEAL-in-training who jumps out of an airplane to perform a rescue mission on less than an hour’s sleep, or the sniper who spends three hours belly crawling to reach the perfect position for that thousand-yard shot, these guys are tough, committed, and determined to do the impossible. I never knew it a person could cross a gorge on a piece of parachute cord until I saw Bear Grylls do it on Man vs. Wild.

They fight for justice. I like watching bounty hunters kick down doors and haul away the bad guys. I enjoy seeing SWAT teams converge on the house where some man’s got his girlfriend held hostage, then watching them slap on the cuffs.

They’re protective. Most women I know have a soft spot for men with a protective streak. What’s not to like about the Coast Guard cadet who leaps into frigid waters to save a drowning fisherman or the firefighter who runs into a burning building to rescue a child? When men use their strength and training to protect the vulnerable, it strikes a chord with women.

They have a code. Almost all of these highly trained action-hero types went through some sort of rigorous training to get where they are. Whether they were Army Rangers, Navy SEALs, FBI agents–at some point on their journey they’ve been pushed and tested and instilled with a code of ethics. This snippet from the SEAL creed is just one example: “I voluntarily accept the inherent hazards of my profession, placing the welfare and security of others before my own.”

We saw this attitude on display when that team of SEALs was fast-roped into a potentially lethal environment to take out the word’s most hunted terrorist. Who wasn’t riveted by this act of bravery?

And finally, there’s The Swagger. I know, I know. No one wants to admit it. But as much as women roll their eyes when these alpha-males strut around looking manly, we secretly admire it. Because when it comes to sex appeal, a good bod is nice, but what’s even better is that calm self-assurance that you see when a man has made a career out of looking danger in the eye and refusing to blink.

Bestselling author Laura Griffin started her career in journalism before venturing into romantic suspense. Her novels have won numerous awards, including a 2010 RITA (Whisper of Warning) and a 2010 Daphne du Maurier Award (Untraceable). Her new release Snapped is on sale August 30. Visit her at www.lauragriffin.com.

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