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Showing posts with the label Corporate Health

When Sitting All Day Becomes a Metabolism Problem | 2026

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When Sitting All Day Becomes a Metabolism Problem | 2026 Picture a typical Tuesday. Alarm goes off. Coffee. Commute. Chair. Eight, nine, sometimes ten hours of sitting — broken up, maybe, by a walk to the kitchen and back. Lunch eaten at the desk. Late afternoon slump hitting like a slow tide coming in, heavy and grey. Then the commute home, the couch, the screen. And somewhere in the background of all of it, the body running a metabolic calculation nobody asked it to do, quietly, without announcement. The desk job is the dominant work format for a substantial portion of American adults. And the metabolism, it turns out, has opinions about that. This isn't a scare piece. The goal here is clarity — a plain-language walk through the actual biology of what happens when human bodies spend large portions of the day in a chair, how that connects to glucose regulation and energy levels, and why this conversation has started landing in boardrooms and HR departments in ways it sim...

Office Social Drinks and Next-Day Metabolism — What Many Employees Notice About Energy and Focus

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Office Social Drinks and Next-Day Metabolism — What Many Employees Notice About Energy and Focus There's a rhythm to workplace social drinking that's become so normalized it's almost invisible. Happy hours after project completions. Wine at client dinners. Beers during team-building events. Cocktails at conferences. Nobody talks about what happens the next morning at their desks. Not hangovers, necessarily — most workplace drinking stays moderate enough to avoid that. But something subtler. The fog that settles over the 10 AM meeting. The way emails take twice as long to compose. The sluggish afternoon where focus keeps sliding away like trying to hold water in your hands. I've chatted with folks who've hit this wall time and again, and they describe it almost identically: "I wasn't drunk, barely even felt it that night, but the whole next day I'm just... off." That "off" feeling has metabolic roots that rarely get connected b...