Post your resting heart rate here
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109
Live fast, die young and leave a beautiful corpse |
Should I also post my net worth, penis length, and annual mileage?
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Originally Posted by Koyote
(Post 22661690)
Should I also post my net worth, penis length, and annual mileage?
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Originally Posted by urbanknight
(Post 22661693)
Yes, but you can only exaggerate one of them.
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Originally Posted by Koyote
(Post 22661706)
Then the answer is 9,000. I'll let you figure out which answer I'm giving.
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What? And give you my password info?
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40bps
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Originally Posted by M Rose
(Post 22661732)
40bps
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Does this mean I'm walking dead, never rested or what?
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...0dc13d570.jpeg |
Originally Posted by 79pmooney
(Post 22661737)
bps? Beats Per ???
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Low 60s for me. High 60s when I'm getting sick/stressed. 70s when I'm unfit.
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40
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1.
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Why?
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Of what possible use is a number, such as rHR, without context? Any number could indicate pathology, depending on what is "normal" for the individual. 40 bpm could indicate fitness, it could indicate bradycardia and a need for a pacemaker if "normal" HR is 70 bpm.
I, personally, have no interest in posting the personal health data necessary to make a rHR number meaningful on a public forum. This post is an exercise in narcissism. |
42. Always 42.
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If I post RHR here, how is Fitbit going to make money selling it ?
Barry |
Originally Posted by mschwett
(Post 22661653)
here's what apple says
and you believe apple? |
why do you want to know? Are you bragging about yours?
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Sorry, I'm too busy taking pictures of my food and posting it to social media...
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50 bpm an hour after 2 cups of coffee. I'm 54 years old and active.
As far as it being a narcissistic post, maybe, but no more so than comparing anything else. |
60.Before biking daily it was 70 to 75.
Why do people who don't want to participate in a discussion have to make everyone look at them anyway? Now *that* is narcissism! |
Originally Posted by noimagination
(Post 22661803)
Of what possible use is a number, such as rHR, without context? Any number could indicate pathology, depending on what is "normal" for the individual. 40 bpm could indicate fitness, it could indicate bradycardia and a need for a pacemaker if "normal" HR is 70 bpm.
Originally Posted by noimagination
(Post 22661803)
This post is an exercise in narcissism.
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