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Amy - The Tonic's avatar

There is a lot of talk about wearable tech in the long COVIDsphere, especially the tech that measures HRV, sleep, oxygen saturation, and the Garmin “body battery,” which ostensibly tells you how much energy you have upon waking and throughout the day based on the few different measurements above. There’s also something called the Visible app that uses a Polar armband wearable, and this app calculates how many “pace points” you have left in a given day. This can help a lot when you have an energy-limiting condition and are trying to keep within your energy each day to avoid what’s called a push-crash cycle (push your body too hard, crash with symptoms for days/weeks/sometimes months and years).

These wearables were helpful to me - until they weren’t, as you lay out in your article (but for healthy people). Through these tools, I was able to see that I was generally overdoing it when I could have sworn I wasn’t. That helped me pull way back on my activity, and I started over time to feel better and make recovery gains. But after a few months of tracking, I had to take off all my wearables. There was a point of diminishing returns where watching my body all day like a hawk just kept my nervous system and brain on high alert. In other words, once I had learned everything I needed to know, I just needed to chill the f- out. And it’s been working well for me in the long run.

Thank you for this post; I hope my perspective added something to the conversation.

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Pat S.'s avatar

Excellent article. I moved up from a Garmin fitness tracker to a smartwatch. I like that it tells when I'm stressed and need to take some breaths. Or to get up and move. I did start taking it off at night. I was focusing too much on my body battery and nonrestorative sleep.

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