Crash Landing: The Inside Story of How the World’s Biggest Companies Survived an Economy on the Brink by Liz Hoffman (Review)

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A compelling narrative about how various CEOs, politicians and business leaders manuevered companies, industries and the U.S. economy during the pandemic. Bill Ackman was able to foresee the future and made billions in profits. Other CEOs struggled to keep their companies afloat and needed loans and financing from the government to survive.

Hoffman presents a study of various approaches of crisis management from the perspectives of different industries (hotel, airlines, auto, financial services etc.) The book was very well written. You do not have to be a MBA student to grasp the precarious situations companies were in during the first months of the pandemic.

Government and specifically President Trump were not very helpful. Trump exhibited zero leadership skills during this crisis and his only concern was getting re-elected. However Steve Mnuchin, Secretary of the Treasury, did exhibit some initiative and acumen in working with various CEOs during the crisis.

The reader realizes that a lot of money was thrown against this pandemic to save companies and also to assist workers and the public to survive. How much of this effort was prudent and effective may be worth another book.

If you read and enjoyed Too Big to Fail by Andrew Ross Sorkin about the financial crisis of 2008-2009, you will like this book too.



View all my reviews

How to Combat a Plateau or Slump in Pickleball

Pickleball is a sport that demands skill, strategy, and continuous improvement. Whether you’re a seasoned player or a novice, everyone encounters plateaus or slumps in their game at some point. Here are some potential strategies to overcome these challenges and elevate your pickleball performance.

Note: This advice is appropriate for just about any sport or performance effort you can make.

1. Take a Break from Competition

Sometimes, the best way to overcome a plateau is to step back momentarily from competitive play. Give yourself a breather to rejuvenate both physically and mentally. This break allows you to return to the court with a fresh perspective and renewed enthusiasm.
2. Practice, Don’t Compete:
During your break from competitions, focus on deliberate practice rather than competitive play. Work on specific aspects of your game, such as refining your serve, improving your footwork, or perfecting your dinking technique. Precision in practice often translates to better performance in actual games.
3. Solicit Advice from Peers:
Engage with fellow pickleball enthusiasts to gather valuable insights into your game. Other players may notice patterns or habits that you’re unaware of, providing a fresh set of eyes to identify areas for improvement. Constructive feedback can be instrumental in refining your skills.
4. Online Research and Video Analysis:
In the digital age, there’s a wealth of pickleball resources available online. Explore instructional videos to learn new strategies, techniques, and tactics. Analyzing your favorite players’ games can provide inspiration and offer a visual guide to implement advanced maneuvers into your own play.
5. Film Your Play and Evaluate:
Recording your own gameplay is a powerful tool for self-assessment. Reviewing footage allows you to identify strengths, weaknesses, and areas for improvement. You might discover nuances in your game that are difficult to notice in real-time, enabling you to make targeted adjustments.
6. Improve Fitness Levels:
Enhancing your overall fitness, strength, and agility can have a significant impact on your pickleball performance. Incorporate specific exercises into your routine to strengthen muscles used in pickleball movements. Improved fitness not only enhances your endurance but also contributes to better on-court decision-making.
7. Lose Weight:
Maintaining a healthy weight is crucial for agility and mobility on the pickleball court. Shedding excess pounds can improve your speed, responsiveness, and overall endurance, positively influencing your game.
8. Play at a Lower Level:
Take a step back and play at a lower level to refine fundamental skills and build confidence. Working on your game against less challenging opponents allows you to focus on specific aspects without the pressure of a highly competitive match.
9. Seek Coaching from Certified Instructors:
Professional guidance can be a game-changer. Enlist the help of certified instructors to receive personalized coaching and tailored strategies. A coach can pinpoint areas for improvement, provide targeted drills, and offer invaluable insights to elevate your game.

Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity by Peter Attia (Review and Notes)

My rating: 3 of 5 stars (Goodreads)

It’s a very long book with some helpful background science and medical information. But I can’t say that I really learned anything new. It may or less reinforces things that I have read or heard previously. For someone younger than 40, it may be a cautionary tale and a more valuable read than for someone as old as me.

My notes from the book.

The odds are overwhelming that you will die as a result of one of the chronic diseases of aging that I call the Four Horsemen: heart disease, cancer, neurodegenerative disease, or type 2 diabetes and related metabolic dysfunction.

Exercise is by far the most potent longevity “drug.” No other intervention does nearly as much to prolong our lifespan and preserve our cognitive and physical function. But most people don’t do nearly enough—and exercising the wrong way can do as much harm as good.

Our tactics in Medicine 3.0 fall into five broad domains: exercise, nutrition, sleep, emotional health, and exogenous molecules.

So we will break down this thing called exercise into its most important components: strength, stability, aerobic efficiency, and peak aerobic capacity. Increasing your limits in each of these areas is necessary if you are hoping to reach your limit of lifespan and healthspan.

My point is that if you really stop to consider the kind of aerobic fitness that most people actually need in the course of their lives, it basically boils down to being really good at going slow for a long time, but also able to go hard and fast when needed.

The best science out there says that what you eat matters, but the first-order term is how much you eat: how many calories you take into your body.

You may have heard of this gene, which is called APOE, because of its known effect on Alzheimer’s disease risk.¨

The authors of the study, published in Nature, speculated that rapamycin might extend lifespan “by postponing death from cancer, by retarding mechanisms of aging, or both.”¨

This is not an atypical scenario: when a patient comes to me and says their father or grandfather or aunt, or all three, died of “premature” heart disease, elevated Lp(a) is the first thing I look for. It is the most prevalent hereditary risk factor for heart disease, and its danger is amplified by the fact that it is still largely flying under the radar of Medicine 2.0, although that is beginning to change.

¨This is why, if you have a history of premature heart attacks in your family, you should definitely ask for an Lp(a) test. We test every single patient for Lp(a) during their first blood draw.¨

The single most powerful item in our preventive tool kit is exercise, which has a two-pronged impact on Alzheimer’s disease risk: it helps maintain glucose homeostasis, and it improves the health of our vasculature.¨

Strength training is likely just as important. A study looking at nearly half a million patients in the United Kingdom found that grip strength, an excellent proxy for overall strength, was strongly and inversely associated with the incidence of dementia.¨

Sleep disruptions and poor sleep are potential drivers of increased risk of dementia. If poor sleep is accompanied by high stress and elevated cortisol levels, as in Stephanie’s case, that acts almost as a multiplier of risk, as it contributes to insulin resistance and damaging the hippocampus at the same time.¨

Studies have found that hearing loss is clearly associated with Alzheimer’s disease, but it’s not a direct symptom. Rather, it seems hearing loss may be causally linked to cognitive decline, because folks with hearing loss tend to pull back and withdraw from interactions with others.¨

In Medicine 3.0, we have five tactical domains that we can address in order to alter someone’s health. The first is exercise, which I consider to be by far the most potent domain in terms of its impact on both lifespan and healthspan.¨

Next is diet or nutrition—or as I prefer to call it, nutritional biochemistry. The third domain is sleep, which has gone underappreciated by Medicine 2.0 until relatively recently. The fourth domain encompasses a set of tools and techniques to manage and improve emotional health. Our fifth and final domain consists of the various drugs, supplements, and hormones that doctors learn about in medical school and beyond. I lump these into one bucket called exogenous molecules, meaning molecules we ingest that come from outside the body.¨

Think of the Centenarian Decathlon as the ten most important physical tasks you will want to be able to do for the rest of your life.¨

The three dimensions in which we want to optimize our fitness are aerobic endurance and efficiency (aka cardio), strength, and stability. All three of these are key to maintaining your health and strength as you age.¨

In San Millán’s view, healthy mitochondria are key to both athletic performance and metabolic health. Our mitochondria can convert both glucose and fatty acids to energy—but while glucose can be metabolized in multiple different ways, fatty acids can be converted to energy only in the mitochondria. Mitochondrial health becomes especially important as we grow older, because one of the most significant hallmarks of aging is a decline in the number and quality of our mitochondria.¨

Strength training, especially with heavy weights, stimulates the growth of bone—more than impact sports such as running…



View all my reviews

Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things by Adam M. Grant (Book Review)

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Want to reach your potential? Achieve success on your terms? This book offers a variety of strategies to get you there.

There were perspectives on success, learning and improvement that I found interesting and consistent with what I experienced in my life. For example, I wish that I was not so afraid to make mistakes when I was younger. I also wished that I dreamed bigger than I did. I believe its important to have a network of advisors and mentors.

Parts of the book were more interesting to me than others. However it is well written. I particularly enjoyed the stories about Seth Curry and R.A. Dickey and their routes to playing at professional levls in their respective sports. Dickey’s story about how he finally succeeded as a major-league pitcher is particularly inspiring.

Listed below are portions of the book I found worthy of note…

Potential is not a matter of where you start but of how far you travel.

This capacity to absorb, filter and adapt enables sponges to grow and thrive. And it’s a capacity that matters a great deal for humans too.

A key to being a sponge is determining what information to absorb versus what to filter out.

Seek discomfort. Instead of just striving to learn, aim to feel uncomfortable. Pursuing discomfort sets you on faster path to growth. If you want to get it right, it has to first feel wrong.

Seek out new knowledge, skills and perspectives to fuel your growth—-not feed your ego.

Strive for excellence, not perfection. Practice wabi sari, the art of honoring beauty in imperfection. Did you make yourself better today?

Deliberate practice is the structured repetition of a task to improve performance based on clear goals and immediate feedback. Deliberate play = deliberate practice + free play (Seth Curry)

It’s better to disappoint others than to disappoint yourself.

Compete against yourself. The risk of competing against others is that you can win without getting better.

Instead of relying on a single expert or mentor, remember that the best directions come from multiple guides.

Hundreds of experiments show that people improve faster when they alternate between different skills (interleaving).

It turns out that if you are taking a new road, the best experts are often the worst guides. Experts often have an intuitive understanding of a route, but they struggle to articulate all the steps to take.



More Thoughts on the Fly

  1. The Republican who performed brave and honorable actions, risking his life and that of his family on January 6, 2021, withdrew his name from the 2024 Presidential nomination due to lack of support. Frankly, I largely viewed Mike Pence as a toady during his vice presidency, but I find him a more suitable option compared to the individual who sought to overturn a fair election process and currently faces 91 civil and criminal indictment counts.
  2. While I remain concerned about Trump, my greater worry lies in the significant number of supporters he commands and the influence he wields. This speaks volumes about the state of our country, indicating that Trumpism could endure without Donald Trump.
  3. Inflation, Israel, and the indictments involving his son will likely damage Biden’s prospects in 2024. Although Biden served as a competent placeholder, I would prefer a different, younger nominee for the Democratic party.”
  4. I recently sold my house and relocated. My main grievance stems from paying a 6% commission fee during the house closing. Considering the current seller’s market and the available technology for facilitating home sales, commission fees should ideally range between 4% and 5%.”
  5. “The overwhelming presence of misinformation, lies, and exaggerations across various domains such as media, politics, business, science, and education can easily deceive even the most discerning individuals, leading them to believe a significant portion of it.”
  6. “The auxiliary attractions of gambling and ‘sports talk’ form the pillars upholding sporting events and programming. The off-field or off-court action and controversies often prove more captivating than the actual games themselves.”