Something You Should Know - How People Are Changing Their Approach to Work & Why Your Allergies Are Getting Worse - SYSK Choice
Episode Date: June 7, 2025Are you keeping a secret? Everyone does - usually more than one. The problem with keeping secrets is that it is a burden that impacts your life in ways you may not realize. This episode begins with an... explanation. http://now.tufts.edu/articles/how-burdensome-are-secrets The world of work has changed quite a bit in the last few years. Today, more people are not just looking for a paycheck or promotion, they are looking for meaning in what they do. Another big change is that many workers today have more than one job. People relate to their work and their employer differently than they used to. Bruce Feiler has been watching and researching these changing trends and joins me to discuss what these changes mean and what opportunities they create for all of us. Bruce is the author of six consecutive New York Times bestsellers including The Search: Finding Meaningful Work in a Post-Career World (https://amzn.to/3OKgwUI) It seems like just about everyone today has allergies. But it wasn’t always this way. How do we get allergies? Why do some people get them while others do not? While allergies and little more than a nuisance for some of us, they are a serious health problem for others. Here to discuss what everyone needs to know about allergies is Theresa MacPhail. She is a medical anthropologist, and associate professor of science and technology. She is also author of the book Allergic: Our Irritated Bodies in a Changing World (https://amzn.to/43d9uwb) You know that exercise is good for your health. But did you know it is also good for your sex life? Listen as I reveal how people who exercise regularly have a lot more fun in the bedroom and feel better about their own sex appeal. https://www.runnersworld.com/uk/health/a776324/can-exercise-lead-to-a-better-sex-life/ PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! MINT MOBILE: Ditch overpriced wireless and get 3 months of premium wireless service from Mint Mobile for 15 bucks a month at https://MintMobile.com/something ! FACTOR: Eat smart with Factor! Get 50% off at https://FactorMeals.com/something50off ROCKET MONEY: Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster! Go to https://RocketMoney.com/SOMETHING QUINCE: Elevate your shopping with Quince! Go to https://Quince.com/sysk for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns! INDEED: Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING right now! DELL: Introducing the new Dell AI PC . It’s not just an AI computer, it’s a computer built for AI to help do your busywork for you! Get a new Dell AI PC at https://Dell.com/ai-pc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know,
why holding onto a secret
can be a bigger burden than you imagine.
Then, the world of work.
It's changing. It has to,
because so many of us are unhappy.
Let's look at the numbers, Mike.
70% of people are unhappy
with what they do.
75% plan to look for new work
this year.
A million people a week quit a job.
That's 50 million people a year.
That number is twice what it was 10 years ago. Also, people who exercise have a lot
more sex appeal and a lot more sex. And allergies, why we have them and the one good thing about
them. If you are allergic, you might have a slightly lower chance of developing certain
cancers, specifically certain types of skin cancers.
And the reason is is that your immune system is actually really strong and healthy and is constantly on the lookout.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Something you should know.
Fascinating intel.
The world's top experts.
And practical advice you can use in your life.
Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hi, welcome to Something You Should Know. I was just reading some very nice reviews about this
podcast. It was on Apple Podcasts and somewhere else too. I certainly appreciate that and invite
you, if you have a moment, to leave us a review, a rating for this podcast. It really does help us. First up today, if you've got a
secret, and I think everybody probably has a secret, if you've got a secret the
sooner you tell someone the better. A study from Tufts University confirms
that keeping a secret can affect everything else you do. It could be good news you're waiting to announce, or something not so good that you feel you
need to hide, but holding it in can actually hurt.
The burden of suppression can act as an emotional and physical weight in your day-to-day life.
People who keep secrets tend to move slower and require more energy to get things done.
And that is something you should know.
The world of work has changed a lot.
Certainly COVID rattled the whole working landscape with so many people working from home.
But there's more to the change than that.
This whole idea of having a job, a career that follows this path, that guides your life,
that just isn't the way for so many people anymore.
Things are different.
I mean, I can feel it.
And someone who's really been looking closely at this is Bruce Feiler.
Bruce is the author of six consecutive New York Times bestselling books, including The Secrets of Happy Families, The Council of Dads, and his latest is called The Search, Finding Meaningful
Work in a Post-Career World.
Hey, Bruce, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thank you so much, Mike.
It's great to be with you.
So paint this picture for me of how work has changed, because I think many of us still
have this view that you have a job
That's what pays the bills. Hopefully it's a job. You like you work at your job. You move up in your career and
That's how it goes
But that's actually not the way it works today. The way it works is that each of us has up to five jobs
Many of us have a main job
But actually the statistics show fewer than half of us even have a main job but actually the statistics show fewer than
half of us even have a main job anymore. And in my study it was 39%. Two-thirds of
us have a care job, which is caring for young children or aging relatives.
Three-quarters of us have a side job, which you do for love or for money. But
then there's two other categories that just became clear the longer I listened
to the hundreds of hours of interviews that I collected,
is that 86% of us have what I call a hope job, which
is a term that I coined just because I was hearing it
all the time.
And a hope job is something that you do that you hope
becomes something else, right?
Like writing a screenplay or selling jewelry on Etsy
or pickles at the farmer's market.
And many of these hope jobs,
people actually pay out of pocket to do
like starting a podcast or something like that
because they think and they hope
that it might lead to something else.
And then quickly, the fifth job is that 93% of us
have what I call a ghost job,
which is an invisible time suck that feels like
a job, like battling self-doubt or discrimination or sobriety or mental health.
And the way you described it, I think is 1000% accurate, but I think it's worth pausing
and celebrating that this is a powerful change because what you said was, is that one or two
of these jobs we might do because we need the salary
or the income or the benefits.
But if we don't get meaning out of that job,
then we take another job, which is where we get
the meaning in our lives.
And that actually is an incredible opportunity
because where do we begin?
The thing that's not negotiable is
that people want work with meaning these days.
But because we have this kind of collection,
this 360 degree relationship with work,
if one of our jobs doesn't get meaning for us,
because the meaning is not negotiable,
we'll go to another job and do that,
because it gives us the meaning that we want
and that we crave.
And so do you think that this is new,
or this is just new research on something
that's been going on for a long time,
and now you've put a face on it?
The short answer is I think that it's new.
For most of human history, people lived where they worked,
and they worked where they lived.
Okay? There was no word for career. There was no word for job.
It wasn't until the 19th century that for the first time, two things happened.
A third of the country left rural areas and moved to cities,
and this massive wave of people emigrated to the United States.
And in 1908, a man named Frank Parsons invented the idea of the career.
The career is a Latin word for chariot that goes around the course.
And in 1908, he opened the first career counseling center in Boston.
And within two years, that went everywhere around the country and every college had a
career counseling program. So, in effect effect he invented the idea of the career but what
did he say? It was only for boys, you only did it once, and if you ever changed your
career there was something psychologically wrong with you. 50 years
later then the embodiment of that linear career was created and it was the resume.
Before 1950, no one ever needed or had a resume.
And what was the resume but a linear trajectory of jobs that you did?
And that was an age when the only people doing this were a certain kind of person.
And that was a person who left home, went to work, and there was somebody back at home who took care of the kids and the laundry.
Well now the workforce is entirely different.
Beginning in 2019, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the majority of all people hired are
black and brown women.
Okay, so the workforce is changing and as a result they've changed the way we think
about work.
So I think that this is a long historical shift and it's something that we have to reckon
with and by the way if you work in a company and you want to recruit and retain talent,
the old days when you can say I'm paying you, that should make you happy, that doesn't work
anymore.
Companies have to realize whether it's mental health, whether it's family leave,
whether it's finding ways for your workers to feel engaged,
if you don't offer these opportunities to your workers,
they're gonna leave in two and a half years.
So this is a massive inflection.
And what are the stakes?
Let's look at the numbers, Mike.
70% of people are unhappy with what they do.
75% in a poll released in May of this year.
75% of people plan to look for new work this year.
A million people a week quit a job.
That's 50 million people a year.
That's a third of the workforce.
That number is twice what it was 10 years ago.
And another third is saying, I don't
want to come into the office every day.
I want to maybe come in several days.
That's 100 million people who are in a state of flux.
These numbers are unprecedented.
This is new.
We have to grapple with it.
And it creates great opportunity.
But we need help trying to figure out
how do we ask the questions and make the decisions we all need to make. What is the impact of this? And when
you say people have up to five different jobs, they have side jobs, what is the
impact of that? Is that a good thing or is that a bad thing or it just depends?
The research on this is actually quite interesting, Mike. Okay, so let's just take
a side job, which as we said,
three quarters of Americans have a side job.
Here the research is quite telling.
If you have a side job that is the same
as what you do during the day,
it will actually make you less happy and less productive.
So for example, if you work in a design shop
and you spend your weekend calligraphing wedding invitations,
it actually will undermine your performance at work.
But as in the case with most people,
if your side job is something different,
if you, as I said, make jewelry or sell pickles, right?
Or are notary public or do DJ at weddings,
and you work in a design office,
because those are different,
because it gives you meaning in that other part,
you'll actually be more effective,
more productive, and happier at work.
So this is not a threat to the workplace,
it's an opportunity, but it requires a rethink
and a reframing on everyone's part.
Why do people have side jobs typically? Is it just for the money or what?
The short answer to that question is people have side jobs because it will give them meaning.
For some, that meaning is money. Okay, I need to replace the tires or put a new roof on my house or prepare to send my kid to college.
But for others, it's a sense of service or getting back.
So I'm gonna serve on the condo board, right?
Or I'm going to write a memoir, right?
Or I'm going to do something else that gives me meaning
because we don't just make meaning
in one area of our lives.
So how are you supposed to find, or what
are the questions you ask to find out
what it means to find meaning in your career or in your work?
What is a problem you've been trying
to solve since you were a child?
What were the upsides and downsides
you learned about work from your parents?
And by starting in the past and then moving to the present
and filling out basic questions like,
I'm in a moment in my life when?
Or, my purpose right now is,
people begin to find out that they have a variety of things
they want to accomplish.
Sure, they need to support their families,
if that's their role in the family.
But also, they also need to support their own life story.
I want to give back.
I want to have purpose.
I want to somehow make the world a better place.
And by the way, that's a lot of people.
There are 3 million school teachers in this world.
There are 5 million people in arts and culture.
There's 10 million people who work in religious institutions or higher education.
And there's 20 million people who work in public service.
That's 50 million people.
That's 30% of the workforce that is saying meaning is not exclusively about money for
me. I draw a broader definition and I seek a more fulfilling story.
We're talking about the ever-changing world of work and my guest is Bruce Feiler.
He's author of the book The Search, Finding Meaningful Work in a Post-Career World.
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So Bruce, I get what you're saying that people are rethinking work and career,
but aren't there also a lot of people who don't have this deep philosophical inner dialogue about their work.
They have a job or they want a job to pay the bills,
and that's it.
I interviewed a woman, and she grew up
in a horrific self-circumstance.
And she was gang-raped as a child,
and she pursued education, and it was not the right fit for her.
She went off and worked on a boat for many years
and then she began this path to healing
and now she does body work and she helps people recover
their inner trauma and move beyond it
and reclaim their lives and their life stories.
And I asked her this question,
almost exactly the same word.
And she said, but what if you're just going about your day
and you don't feel that you have a story to tell?
And what she said has really resonated and stuck with me.
She said, if that's where you are right now, keep going.
But you're not necessarily always going to be there.
And there are gonna be moments in your life
when you say, ah, now I'm confused, now I'm stuck, now I'm unhappy with what I do,
as 70% of us are, as we just were saying,
and now I wanna ask those questions.
So if you're not in this place right now,
that's great, keep going.
But you or someone you know is in that place right now,
and for them, this is what they need to do.
Because the story that we have told in this country since the very beginning is that success
is all about climbing.
Rags to riches, greater salary, higher office, you know, better view, more benefits.
But having done this now for 1500 hours of listening to people tell their stories,
I can tell you one thing I know with confidence, that people who are happiest, feel most fulfilled,
and are most successful in what they do, they don't just climb, they also dig. They excavate
the story they've been trying to tell their whole lives, and they say now is the moment that I'm
going to start telling it.
Yeah, I mean I get that. It just seems like those people are more the exception than the rule, but it sounds like what you're saying is it's really the rule.
Three quarters of people are looking for new work this year. 70% of us are unhappy.
This is what the data are telling us very, very clearly.
80 million of us are in a work quake right now.
You or someone you know is going to sit down with someone they love today
over breakfast, a cup of coffee, late at night, and say,
I'm unhappy with what I do and I want to do something that makes me happy.
Because here's the thing, Mike.
Those of us of a certain age grew up with the expectation that the American dream was
that each generation would do better than the prior generation.
And that better was almost exclusively defined by one metric, money, and these external metrics
of achievement.
We still have that desire,
but what happens when you go talk to people
is that their definition of doing better than their parents
is they want to be happier and more fulfilled.
I asked everybody, the first question
I asked people in my interviews were,
what were the upsides or values of work
that you learned from your parents?
64% said working hard.
Then I asked them what were the downsides or shadows of work
that you learned from your parents.
The number one answer, they worked too hard.
The number two answer, they sacrificed the family.
That is the change.
86% of millennials say that they are more committed
to well-being at work than the generations prior.
That's the X-ers and the boomer.
86% of millennials self-identify as caring more
about a meaningful workplace and work that gives them meaning
than their parents or the generation immediately
before them. That is a massive change. This is built in. Fewer people are searching merely
for work. More people are searching for work with meaning.
And what does it mean to have work with meaning? Because you get what from that?
I love this question because I think it allows me to do what I know you love to do in your
podcast, which is to geek out a little bit on the science. There's a difference between
happiness and meaning. Okay, so happiness is present oriented. It's a fleeting emotion.
I cite in the search this incredible research by Roy Baumeister of Florida State, who is a kind of a meaning guru in American academia today.
And he says animals can be happy because anybody can be happy in the present.
But meaning is different.
Meaning is about stitching together past, present, and future.
And for example, meaning is about accommodating in your own life story
unhappy events as well as happy events, okay?
And the way you do that is with a story.
Because what we've learned through neuroscience
is that our brains are wired to tell a story.
Life is the story that you tell yourself,
that story you have in your head about who you are
and what brings you purpose and where you came from
and where you're going.
That's not just part of you,
that is you in a fundamental way. Okay, that's what we've
learned from neuroscience. And while work is out there, we have a story to tell. For
whatever reason, that has not really been in the world of work. So the idea that I explore
in this book that each of us has a work story, that's actually a new way of thinking about
it.
But that's exactly where career counseling has gone.
So now the cutting edge of career counseling
is what's called narrative career construction.
The idea that your work is a story
and that every time you have one of these work quakes,
which as we've been saying is every two and a half years,
that's like a plot twist in your own life.
And it causes you to revisit the decisions that you're making
and the choices that you choose to follow.
So that is the big change.
Our work is a story, and at different times of our life,
we want to tell a different story.
And so what's going to happen, or what is happening,
with those jobs that are inherently fairly meaningless.
You know, if you're working the fry machine at the fast food place,
hard to imagine you're going to find a lot of deep meaning in that, but somebody has to do it.
Well, in fact, what happens when you talk to people is that they find great meaning.
I tell the story about an iconic study at the University of Michigan Hospital where
researchers talked to people who worked, mostly women, in janitorial roles.
And when they ask somebody, they ask a woman, what does it mean to empty a bedpan?
What do you do?
She doesn't say that I empty a bedpan.
She doesn't say that I do the most menial
and meaningless job you can imagine.
She says, I'm an essential part of the care team.
That that's what I am.
I am making people's lives better.
And when you ask people, as I did,
all of the hundreds of people that I interviewed,
what is the thing that is, who are the people.
And when I ask people, as I've done for hundreds of people,
like what is it that brings you most meaning?
They say the people,
but they don't mention the colleagues, okay?
They mention the people that they help.
So if you talk to people, as I have done now for years,
and say what is it that does make you happy
and bring you meaning from what you do, they tell a story.
So somebody in the cement business,
my father was a builder, okay?
And I remember a conversation from when I was 10,
and I was like, dad, like everybody else's parents
seems to have a job.
Like you seem to do like four or five different things.
Okay, you work in multifamily and solo family
and you have apartments and like,
and every two years it's changing
because that's what the real estate business was like
in the 1970s.
I was like, what do you do, dad?
And he said, I'm in the shelter business.
And now almost 50 years later,
I can remember the beauty and power of that statement.
Wow, he's in the shelter business.
And that's one of the essential things that we all need as human beings.
Okay.
He doesn't see it the way I do.
He's going to apartments and houses and construction sites.
He is serving a purpose that we all have.
And that's what people do no matter what job they have.
So there's a difference, or maybe there isn't a difference between finding work with meaning
and finding meaning in your work. Oh that's a beautiful, beautiful question and I do think
I love that question and I'm reflecting on it as I'm absorbing it as you ask. The way to think
about that beautiful question is each of us wants a life with meaning.
And the work is only one part of that.
And at different times in our lives,
we may prioritize different things.
So maybe we say my family is most important to me right now.
So if I'm willing to take work that has less meaning,
because I need other things from it,
a sense that I can provide for my family
and the security and the benefits and things like that.
But then maybe in a few years,
we become empty nesters and we all know people like this
who say, okay, you know what?
I devoted myself to belonging.
I wanted something for myself now.
Or we also know people who said,
I've been focused on myself and my agency
and my contributions and my own salary and title and status,
I'd like to give back now.
So my answer to your question is, what's most important to us
is that we have a meaningful life,
and we can adjust how we find meaningful work
to suit that larger purpose.
I think everybody who works at some point
has that sense of, you know, is this
all there is?
Is this it?
Is this really what I want to do?
And it's remarkable that so many people are having that kind of epiphany moment and saying,
oh, let's think about something else.
Let's find meaning in what I do.
And this is a whole new world of work.
I appreciate you sharing it.
I've been talking with Bruce Feiler.
The name of his book is The Search,
Finding Meaningful Work in a Post-Career World,
and there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Appreciate it, thanks for being here, Bruce.
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I don't know too many people who don't have allergies. Seems like everyone's allergic to
something and a lot of times it's just stuff in the air. I have that allergy. I have no idea what specifically I'm allergic to but on certain days I
and a lot of other people start sneezing and get watery eyes, get stuffed up and
then there are food allergies. Seems like a lot more people today have food
allergies than in the past. Why is that? What is an allergy? Why do we
get them? Can you get rid of them? Here to explain all this is Teresa McPhail. She is
a medical anthropologist, associate professor of science and technology studies, and author
of the book Allergic, Our Irritated Bodies in a Changing World. Hi, Teresa. Thank you
for coming on Something You Should Know.
Hi. Thanks so much for having me. So what exactly is an allergy? What's going on when you have an
allergic reaction to something? It's basically an immune reaction and it's basically just a
hypersensitive immune system response. So your immune cells are responding
to an allergen, whatever it is, peanut protein or oak tree pollen in the air, grass pollen,
and it's deciding that that thing should not be part of you. And it's triggering a similar immune
response that we have to things like bacteria and viruses.
So it's basically just gearing up the immune system.
To attack?
To cope, I would say.
So it's mistaking a pollen grain
for something that is potentially harmful.
A normal person will just tolerate a piece of pollen that enters your nasal
passageways. But for those of us who have allergies, your immune system cells respond to that pollen as
if it's a bacteria or a virus. So it starts turning on inflammation. So that's why you get the swelling.
It turns on the mucus production, which is why you get all sneezy and your nose
starts to run and your eyes start to itch. So all of the same mechanisms come on, which is why it's
sometimes, especially, you know, in the spring, it's really hard to tell sometimes if you have a cold
or allergies because the initial response is the same. So you said something a moment ago that if you're a normal person does this and someone
with an allergy does that.
Well, it seems like it's pretty normal to have an allergy.
I mean, what are the numbers of who has allergies
and who doesn't?
Well, it's growing.
It's about, it's hard to get an accurate number
because it's really hard to measure these things.
But we think anywhere between 30% and 40% So it's hard to get an accurate number because it's really hard to measure these things.
But we think anywhere between 30 and 40% of the total global population has an allergic
response to at least one thing.
So that's a ginormous number of people.
And I think that sounds low to me because I don't know anybody that doesn't say, oh
God, my allergies, oh my god. Right? Yeah. Well, what about in
Western society? Is it worse? Yes, there tends to be more allergies in developed countries, or
I would say richer countries. And there are various theories for why that is, and it all boils down to our lifestyles.
And one of the interesting things
that might surprise people is that you often see,
like say someone is living in Sub-Saharan Africa,
and then they immigrate to the United States or England.
In about three years, a lot of them will develop allergies and they had
absolutely no allergic response in their country. You mentioned a moment ago asthma
and eczema. Are those considered allergies? That is such a tricky thing to
answer. Most of the researchers and clinicians that I talked to would say yes.
There are some people that hold out a no.
And the reason is that something like asthma,
even though it's a similar immune response,
it uses the same pathways,
you can get asthma from exertion.
And that's not an allergy.
So a lot of people want to keep asthma separate
and then refer to people who have
Allergic triggers they'll call it allergic asthma. So here's what I'm trying to understand here is that
You say that people for example come from the desert and move to the West within three years. They have an allergy
What why what happened in those three years that they now have an allergy because they came here?
It could be a variety of things. The number one reason is probably that their bodies are being introduced to things that they've never seen before.
So the immune system, before we turn three years old, your immune system is learning the world, if you want to think of it that way.
So your early exposures really train your immune system
to respond to the things in your environment.
So if you grew up in one area
and then you move to another area,
your immune system,
if you've never been around elm trees
and suddenly you're breathing in elm pollen,
there's a chance that your immune system might think, hey, wait a minute, we've never seen this before, this shouldn't be
here and react. So that's the primary way. But the secondary way is that their diets
change likely and all likelihood and also their lifestyles are changing. So if you think
about people moving from more rural areas to more urban centers, they're being exposed to more particulate matter in the air from air pollution and things like that.
So their immune systems are being bombarded with a lot of things that they haven't seen before.
So that can go either way. Some people are fine.
And then other people who would never have developed possibly an allergy in their home
country then start their immune system, start having trouble with coping with all of the
new things in their environment.
So help me understand something.
When I was a kid, I don't remember many people having allergies and I certainly don't remember
people, very many people having allergies and I certainly don't remember people, very many people, having
food allergies. Today, you know, you can't bring peanuts to school, this is a peanut-free
zone. There seems to be a lot more people with food allergies than there used to be.
These aren't people coming from another climate, from another part of the world. So what happened?
What changed that now this is such a thing
and it didn't used to be?
It's interesting because allergic responses to food
were likely around for a very long time,
but they flew under the radar.
And there are possible reasons for this.
A, we weren't looking for them.
And there's always the trope of if you're not
looking for something, you don't see it.
But also, children were just growing up in a different way.
The other problem is that we gave mothers and fathers
bad advice, especially in terms of peanuts.
You're probably, some of your listeners are aware, we changed the guidelines a few years
ago.
So up until fairly recently, they would advise mothers not to ingest certain foods during
the latter stages of their pregnancy and not to give toddlers and
young children things like peanut butter just in case.
And it turns out that was the exact wrong advice, that early introduction is better,
even though someone might still have an allergic response.
But we kind of created a bigger problem because again, that training. So if you withhold it until older,
then the immune system doesn't get trained on it.
So they've actually reversed course
and they want parents to introduce things like peanuts
as soon as possible into the diet
to see if there is a problem.
And if there's not to potentially prevent a problem
from developing by getting the baby
immune system used to that form of protein.
So that is another reason that we saw this explosion of food allergies.
I remember hearing someone explain that the increase in allergies in people has something
to do with the fact that we tend to live in a very clean
environment. We're not exposed to a lot of things. It's kind of that argument of you know you should
let your kids play more in the dirt and get dirty because the more things we're exposed to
then that helps our immune system and that because we lean live in such a clean environment
the immune system gets bored and it needs something to do,
so it attacks itself.
And that's why we have all these allergies.
Does that explanation line up with what
you found in the research?
Yes.
That is usually called the hygiene hypothesis.
So the idea is that when you're not
exposed to a lot of bacteria and viruses when you're young,
the immune system was evolved to deal with a lot of that. And so in the absence of it,
your immune system is rather like a toddler that has not been given anything to do. It's bored and wants to do something, and so it's actively looking for something to do.
I mean, the evidence does show that kids who grow up on farms particularly,
so if you grow up on a farm, but interestingly enough, it has to be a farm with animals.
And there's something about being in the barn, like so if you carry your infant into the barn
and they're exposed to all these animals and dirt
in the barnyard,
those kids tend to have extremely low rates of allergies.
So we know that at least partially
the high gene hypothesis is definitely true.
Can you give me a sense of like
what are the most common allergies and what are,
you know, like how many people have peanut allergies and how many people have allergies to,
you know, stuff in the air? I mean, I have allergies to stuff in the air.
I don't know too many people who don't.
It's really hard to say.
And the reason is we usually rely on self-reported surveys.
So you're basically asking people who may never have been to an allergist to say if they have an
allergy. So it's really hard to get a good number on this. Obviously hay fever or respiratory
allergies are really prevalent. It's probably so again again, this number, you're like, why is
it this big? It's the difference. It's either 10% to 30%. I like to go right in the middle
and say about 20% of the whole global population has hay fever or respiratory allergies. It
could be more than that, but it's definitely not less than that. Like you said, almost everyone I talk to has something. Food allergy typically is smaller.
The best information we have is around 9%, 8% or 9% of children are having issues with one or more
food allergens. And that seems fairly stable, but again,
it's really hard to get those numbers
because not everyone has access to an allergist,
which is another huge problem everywhere.
Is it true that allergies will sometimes just disappear?
Yes, yes, because especially food allergies,
a lot of them, like nut allergies seems to persist over time,
but a lot of allergies that people have when they're younger
tend to disappear over time because for whatever reason,
your immune system develops a tolerance over time.
Also your immune system function changes
in relationship to things like stress, hormones.
One of the really interesting things I learned was that more boys have asthma than girls,
but adults, females have asthma at higher rates than males.
The reason is that testosterone is protective because it dampens down the immune response. So testosterone kind of turns the dial down
on the immune system, which is exactly why more men
were prone to dying in response to COVID.
And that's also why you might've heard that
sometimes when women get pregnant or go through menopause,
they'll develop new allergies that they haven't had before.
But the truth is, if you have an allergy,
pretty much the best thing you can do is to avoid,
as best you can, whatever it is you're allergic to,
because there's no cure, typically, for an allergy.
And so you just have to avoid it or live with it, right?
Yep.
That's one of the worst parts about writing this book is that there's no happy ending.
Like I would love to say that we're so close to solving this problem, but you can't solve
it partially because you can't turn off the immune response.
I mean, none of us want that because then you might die of pneumonia. I
mean, you can't, you have to modulate it. So there's no cure that we know of. Like I said,
you can learn to tolerate it. So the treatments coming online now, that's what they're aiming
to do is like, can you moderate the immune response so that it turns it down a notch
so that your immune system learns to tolerate or
you just shut off that part of your immune response that is reacting. And that is the
best we can do for now. So there really isn't a possibility for a cure that we know of.
Well, the one thing that seems to help with allergies is just getting older, right? I mean,
a lot of kids have allergies and those allergies as they age will disappear. Is it just the immune
system just gets tired of it and just stops responding? So your immune response will get
less strong as you age, so often the allergies will fade because it's just your immune system
overall is not as robust as it used to be.
So in a sense, it's kind of a double-edged sword, right?
You're living a better quality of life because maybe your allergies are a bit better than
they used to be when you were young, but also then you're more vulnerable to things like the influenza virus or COVID. So it is tricky. It really is tricky.
I understand that a lot of people claim to have allergies to foods or whatever that aren't actually
allergies. That if you want to know if you really have an allergy, you really need to see an allergist.
But a lot of the things that people say are allergies or maybe sensitivities, but they're not allergic reactions.
Especially with food allergies. I just like to underline that. It's really hard to tell because so many things have the same symptoms.
So if you're getting stomach upset, it could be an intolerance, right? You could be lactose intolerant or you could have a milk allergy. And if it's not a severe response,
then it's going to look similar. And the only way to tell is to go and have the testing done and to
go and see a food allergist and do the golden test is the double
blind food challenge.
But even something as simple as a respiratory allergy, you could have something else going
on.
And it's always a good idea to, if you can, to get a referral to an allergist because
also, and this is a fun fact that I think will surprise a lot of people,
is that your GP in medical school, they don't really get allergy training. They get about two
weeks. So most GPs actually are not really the right people to diagnose allergies because, yes,
while they may see it a lot, they're not exactly trained in the same way and they definitely don't get the same level of
training. So even if you get a test at a GP, you should always try to see an
allergist if you can. Well here's the thing, if every spring when the flowers
come out, you start sneezing and your eyes get watery and you don't have a cold,
what else could it be? It's probably allergies. Yeah. You could have, I mean, you could have
a sinus infection you don't know about, a persistent one. That comes out, that comes on
every year in May. It seems. Well, exactly, exactly. You can put the pieces together yourself,
which is what most of us do.
Very few people with hay fever go to see an allergist.
I get it, because why?
And also, it's really hard to tell what you're allergic to.
And even if you know, like, so say you do go to an allergist
and you get the panel done and they say,
oh, you're allergic to grasses and mold.
Well, what are you supposed to do?
Right, exactly.
Yeah, it's going to be the same.
And they're probably just going to tell you to take a daily antihistamine during the season.
I could have told you that.
Right, exactly.
And so I get it.
I get why people wouldn't want to go.
But for those people who are having serious responses,
but some of the people I talk to, they can't sleep at night.
They're so congested that it really
affects their quality of life.
For those people, it's really important to go to a specialist
because you can get stronger antihistamines that are not
available over the counter. So when I think of allergies I think of you know
food allergies like peanuts and shellfish and respiratory allergies, hay
fever, pollen, that kind of thing., different chemicals, milk, egg, wheat, corn, soy.
I mean, those are the shellfish.
Those are the main ones.
Peanuts, obviously, tree nuts is huge.
Those are the main ones, I would say.
And then though, if we kept going,
I can't even list them because there are people who will have allergies to really random things.
I mean, during the course of researching this book, I mean, it's not unheard of. Occasionally,
you'll get someone who's allergic to cold
And it's real it or allergic to Sun. Is there anything good?
Is there any good about allergies or is it just all it's just a nuisance and it's horrible. Is there any
silver lining
If you are allergic you might have a slightly lower chance of developing certain cancers,
specifically certain types of skin cancers.
The reason is that your immune system is actually really strong and healthy and is constantly
on the lookout.
It's possible that an allergic person's immune system is spotting those rogue cells earlier and doing something
about them faster than a non-allergic person. So that's a little silver lining in an otherwise
big cloud. Well, it's such a weird thing, allergies. I mean, it's not a sickness,
it's not an illness, but it sure is a pain in a lot of ways to deal with and I Appreciate you coming on and explaining it. I've been speaking with Teresa McPhail. She is a medical anthropologist
Associate professor of science and technology and author of the book allergic are irritated bodies in a changing world
And there's a link to that book in the show notes. Appreciate it. Thanks, Teresa
in the show notes. Appreciate it. Thanks, Teresa. Aerobic exercise can improve more than just your heart health. It can also improve your
love life. A study carried out in adult runners revealed that 80% of those runners felt more
attractive in front of their partner as a result of that exercise. Another study by
the University of California found that after following a moderate aerobic
regime four times a week for nine months, male subjects had sex 30% more often.
People who exercise regularly increased their lovemaking time by 15%.
What's more, research in the Electronic Journal of Human Sexuality found that 80% of men and
60% of women who exercise three times a week rated their sex appeal as above average.
And that is something you should know.
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wherever you're listening I'm Mike Herr-Ruthers thanks for listening today
to something you should know. You might think you know fairy tales and you might
think they are cute and sweet and boring but the real grim fairy tales. And you might think they are cute and sweet and boring. But the real
grim fairy tales were not cute at all. They were very dark. And they were often very grim.
On Grim Grimmer Grimmest, we tell a grim fairy tale to a bunch of kids. Perfect for car rides
or screen free entertainment, Grim Grimmer Grimmest activates kids' imaginations and
instigates fun conversations. Because fairy tales speak to all of us at a very deep, primal level.
And they raise interesting topics and questions that are worth chewing over together as a family.
Every episode is rated Grim, Grimmer, or Grimmest.
So you, your kids, your whole family can choose what is the right level of Grim for you.
Though if you're listening with Grandma, she's just gonna go for grimist.
Trust me on this one.
Tune in to Grim, Grimmer, Grimist and our new season available now.
I'm Amy Nicholson, the film critic for the LA Times.
And I'm Paul Scheer, an actor, writer, and director.
You might know me from The League, Veep,
or my non-eligible for Academy Award role in Twisters.
We love movies, and we come at them from different perspectives.
Yeah, like Amy thinks that, you know, Joe Pesci was miscast in Goodfellas, and I don't.
He's too old.
Let's not forget that Paul thinks that Dude 2 is overrated.
It is.
Anyway, despite this, we come together to host Unspooled, a podcast where we talk about
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