Interesting facts and trivia about our health, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Almost There’, ‘Mechanical Engineering World’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.
Two minutes daily squat hold transforms your entire movement.
This simple yet powerful practice known as the deep squat hold is gaining attention in fitness and mobility training circles. Holding a deep squat position for just a few minutes each day places the body in a natural alignment that many people lose due to modern sitting habits. It gently encourages the hips, ankles, and lower back to open up, restoring movement patterns that support everyday comfort and flexibility.
This position is more than a stretch, it is a full lower body activation that engages the glutes, improves joint lubrication, and supports better posture. When practiced consistently, it can help counteract stiffness caused by long hours of sitting, walking less, or limited movement. Many trainers suggest it as a foundational mobility habit because it requires no equipment yet delivers noticeable improvements over time.
What makes this practice especially interesting is how it reconnects the body with a movement pattern humans were designed for. In earlier lifestyles, squatting was a natural resting position used throughout the day. Today, it has become rare, which may contribute to tight hips and weak stabilizing muscles. Reintroducing even short holds can gradually rebuild strength, mobility, and balance in a functional way.
Simple movements like this remind us that fitness does not always require complex routines or expensive equipment. Sometimes the most powerful changes come from returning to basic human movement. A few minutes a day can shift how the body feels, moves, and performs, creating long term benefits that build quietly over time and support a healthier, more active life.
Walking backwards (retro-walking) alters the biomechanics of the lower body by reducing the "heel strike" impact and shifting the load to the toes. This physically stretches the hamstrings and strengthens the vastus medialis—the muscle responsible for knee stability—which is often neglected in forward movement. Because the brain cannot rely on visual habit, it must engage in "proprioceptive mapping," forcing a massive spike in neural activity to maintain balance.
A study found that soaking fruits and vegetables in a mix of 1 teaspoon baking soda and 2 cups of water for 12–15 minutes removes 96–99% of pesticides, like thiabendazole and phosmet, from their surface.
This works much better than just rinsing with water or vinegar.
Baking soda’s alkaline nature helps break down and wash away pesticide residue on foods like apples, cucumbers, and grapes, making it a safe and cheap way to clean produce at home.
Quick Tip: Soak your fruits and veggies in the baking soda mix for 12–15 minutes, then rinse them with clean water. – A Facebook post by ‘Mechanical Engineering World’.
Scientists found a way to double brain waste removal simply by stimulating the skin. The finding may shape the future of Alzheimer's prevention.
Researchers have identified a non-invasive method to improve the brain’s natural waste-clearing system, which could create new possibilities for treating neurological diseases like Alzheimer’s.
Scientists at the Institute for Basic Science showed in mice that gently stimulating lymphatic vessels beneath the skin of the face and neck significantly increased cerebrospinal fluid flow, a key process for clearing harmful substances from the brain. Using a specially built mechanical stimulator, the team managed to double CSF outflow and restore drainage in aged mice, without drugs or surgery.
This advance points to a possible new strategy for safely supporting brain health in aging populations.
The team also identified previously unknown drainage pathways from the brain to superficial lymph nodes through facial lymphatics, routes that remain active even in older animals. These findings complete the anatomical map of CSF outflow and suggest that wearable or clinical devices could one day improve brain waste clearance.
While more research is still needed to confirm long-term effects and use in human patients, the researchers believe this gentle mechanical method could become a therapeutic tool to help prevent or slow neurodegenerative disease progression.
Paper:
Nature. Increased CSF drainage by non-invasive manipulation of cervical lymphatics, June 4, 2025. - A Facebook post by ‘Almost There’
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