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May 12 7 tweets 13 min read Read on X
Right before you fall asleep, your hands and feet get warmer. That warming is the real trigger that switches your brain into sleep mode. A 1999 Nature paper tested it against melatonin, core body temperature, heart rate, and how sleepy people felt. The hand and foot warming won.

The drawing in the tweet works on this exact trigger. The pose has a name in Japan: Mōkan Undō, or "capillary exercise." Katsuzō Nishi designed it in 1927. He was the chief technical engineer on the Tokyo subway, Japan's first. It became one of six daily exercises in his system, still done in Japan today.

You lie on your back, point your arms and legs straight up, and shake them for thirty seconds. While the limbs are up, gravity drains the blood from them. When you lower them, the blood floods back into your hands and feet, warming them in seconds. Your brain reads that warming as a green light to sleep.

The shaking activates a separate reflex, the kind most mammals use after a scare. Dogs and rabbits shake themselves off after a fright for the same reason. Dr. David Berceli, a trauma therapist, built a whole method around it, with certified instructors now in 40 countries. The shaking flips your nervous system out of "I'm wired" mode and into "I'm safe to sleep" mode.

Nishi got the biology wrong. He believed capillaries, the tiny blood vessels at the ends of your veins, did the pumping. William Harvey, an English doctor, had shown the heart did the work, three centuries earlier, in 1628. The exercise still works, for entirely different reasons than Nishi thought. The drained limbs come back warm. The body reads that as a sleep cue, and the shaking calms the nervous system on top of it.

A drawing on X with millions of views just rediscovered a 100-year-old Japanese sleep exercise. A subway engineer designed it first, decades before sleep scientists figured out why it would work.
Thanks for going down this rabbit hole ❤️

Follow @anishmoonka for daily stories across science, history, psychology, culture & AI.

—————

Sources:

Kräuchi 1999 Nature — “Warm feet promote the rapid onset of sleep”
nature.com/articles/43366

Raymann 2005 Am J Physiol — “Cutaneous warming promotes sleep onset” (causal follow-up to Kräuchi 1999)
journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.11…

Nishi Shiki — Wikipedia entry covering the six exercises including mōkan undō
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nishi_Shi…

Katsuzō Nishi — biography with Tokyo subway role
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katsuz%C5…

TRE Global — Dr. David Berceli’s Tension and Trauma Releasing Exercises
treglobal.org
Part 2. Japan has the shortest average sleep in the developed world, and the longest average life. Sleep: seven hours and twenty-two minutes a night. Life: eighty-five years. Japanese women have topped the global life expectancy chart for forty straight years.

The drawing in the tweet is part of something bigger. The Japanese have built small daily physical rituals into national life at a scale no other country matches. Each week, more than twenty million Japanese take part in a ten-minute calisthenics broadcast that airs every morning on national radio. The broadcast is called Radio Taiso. It has aired daily at 6:30 AM since 1928.

Radio Taiso came from America. In the 1920s, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company aired a radio calisthenics program for its policyholders. Japanese postal officials visited, brought the idea home, and built a national infrastructure around it. The Americans abandoned theirs decades ago. The Japanese still do theirs.

Sleep deprivation costs the Japanese economy fifteen trillion yen a year, about one hundred billion dollars. Thirty-nine percent of Japanese adults sleep under six hours a night. They are not sleeping well. But they are doing something the rest of the developed world has stopped doing: showing up, in groups, daily, for free, to move their bodies in the same way at the same time.

Japan has more centenarians per capita than almost any country on Earth, roughly three times the US rate. As of late 2025, the count was ninety-nine thousand seven hundred and sixty-three people aged a hundred or older, virtually identical to the US total in a country one-third the size. Japan has set a new national record fifty-five years running.

The US sleep aid industry runs to about forty-four billion dollars a year. Melatonin gummies, weighted blankets, sleep tracking rings, mattress brands, prescription sedatives. The Japanese counterpart is a drawing of someone lying on their back, flapping hands and feet for thirty seconds before bed, now at 5.3 million views on X.

Nobody is selling it. That might be why it works.
Part 3. Your brain has a built-in cleaning system, and it only runs while you sleep. The researcher who discovered it calls it a dishwasher: it loads up during the day, runs at night, and you wake up to a clean brain. Skip a single night and the Alzheimer's protein in your brain rises by five percent.

In 2013, a neuroscientist named Maiken Nedergaard at the University of Rochester discovered the system and called it the glymphatic system. The name combines "glia," for the brain's support cells, and "lymphatic," for the body's normal waste-drainage network. When you fall asleep, the space between your brain cells expands by sixty percent, and spinal fluid floods in to pick up the day's metabolic waste and drain it out. The whole process pauses the moment you wake up. The system is so recent that doctors trained before 2013 never learned about it in medical school.

What gets washed out matters. One of the main waste products is beta-amyloid, the protein that aggregates into plaques inside the brains of Alzheimer's patients. Healthy older adults still have some. People with Alzheimer's have about forty-three percent more.

In 2018, researchers at the National Institutes of Health put twenty healthy volunteers in a PET scanner, kept them awake for thirty-one hours, and scanned them again. The Alzheimer's-related protein had risen by five percent overnight, concentrated in the hippocampus and thalamus. Those are the exact regions where Alzheimer's damage first appears.

The exercise in the source tweet works on the front end of this cycle. Falling asleep faster means more time for the cleaning system to work, since it is most active during deep sleep. Hours of insomnia mean hours subtracted from the shift.

Every minute you lie awake is a minute lost from the brain's cleaning shift. A 30-second bedtime exercise might be the cheapest way to start the shift sooner.
Part 4. A 2013 study at Henry Ford Hospital gave twelve people 400 milligrams of caffeine, roughly two strong coffees, six hours before bedtime. The next morning, their sleep monitors showed total sleep time had dropped by more than an hour. The participants said they had slept fine.

The reason: caffeine has an average half-life of five hours. That means if you drink a coffee at 3 PM, about a third of the caffeine is still active when you try to fall asleep at 11 PM. Caffeine is a stimulant by accident. The molecule happens to look enough like adenosine, the natural compound that makes you feel tired, to slot into the same receptors and block them. Once it does, adenosine cannot bind. Your brain stops registering that you are tired.

The five-hour average hides a huge range. Caffeine half-life across healthy adults runs from one and a half hours to ten, driven mostly by a gene called CYP1A2. A fast metabolizer clears half the dose in three hours. A slow metabolizer still has half of it circulating ten hours after the cup.

Drake's participants did not notice the disruption because caffeine attacks sleep quality more than total time asleep. A 2023 meta-analysis of twenty-four studies found that caffeine cuts deep sleep by about eleven minutes per night and adds twelve minutes of overnight wakefulness. People wake up feeling rested. The sleep was lighter than it would have been without the caffeine.

This is the part that makes the bedtime exercise in the source tweet useful or useless. A 30-second physical routine before bed can help your body slip into sleep mode, but it cannot un-block your adenosine receptors. If there is still caffeine in your system, your brain cannot reach the tired state.

The clean afternoon math: if your bedtime is 11 PM, your last serious caffeine should be by 3 PM. For a slow metabolizer, closer to 1 PM.

Coffee is fine. The hour you drink it matters more than the amount.
Part 5. A Virginia Tech historian named Roger Ekirch was reading a London legal deposition from 1697 when he noticed something strange. A nine-year-old girl described how her mother had awakened after her “first sleep” to go out. The phrasing was casual. Like it was the most normal thing in the world.

Ekirch began searching, and found more references, then more. He has now documented over two thousand mentions of “first sleep” and “second sleep” across a dozen languages. The oldest goes back to Homer’s Odyssey. In nearly every preindustrial Western society, people went to bed around nine or ten at night, slept for about three hours, then woke up. For the next hour or two they prayed, made love, smoked, worked, or visited neighbors. Then they went back to bed for a “second sleep” until dawn.

The eight-hour consolidated sleep most of us treat as natural is roughly one hundred fifty years old. It is the byproduct of artificial light, factory schedules, and industrial work.

In 1992, a psychiatrist at the National Institute of Mental Health named Thomas Wehr tested whether the old pattern was still hardcoded into human biology. He took seven healthy men and locked them in a room for fourteen hours of darkness every day, for one full month. The first few nights, they slept eleven hours straight to repay sleep debt. By the fourth week, their sleep had naturally split into two separate blocks of about four hours each, with a one-to-three-hour wakeful gap in the middle. Their bodies had reverted to the pattern in Ekirch’s records from 1697.

Sleep researchers have started to take this history seriously. Charles Czeisler, Harvard’s sleep medicine chief, has called Ekirch’s research a major contribution. Johns Hopkins sleep specialist David Neubauer has said the modern eight-hour ideal of consolidated, unbroken sleep is itself an unstable invention of the industrial era. Waking up at 2 or 3 AM for an hour may not be a malfunction. It might be the original setting your nervous system has not entirely let go of.

The bedtime exercise in the source tweet addresses falling asleep, the easier half of the modern problem. Most sleep complaints today are about staying asleep through the entire night. The historical record suggests that part is fighting human biology.

Your middle-of-night wake-ups might be ancestral biology. The eight-hour standard is the modern invention.
Sources for Parts 2-5

Part 2 - Japan Sleep Paradox (Radio Taiso, MetLife, centenarians)

OECD 2021 sleep duration data — Japan’s 7h 22m average
fpcj.jp/en/assistance-…

AP report on Radio Taiso — 20 million weekly participants, 1928 origin, US insurance company source
kiro7.com/news/health/ja…

Japan MHLW September 2025 — 99,763 centenarians, 55th consecutive record
newsonair.gov.in/japans-centena…

Pew Research Center — US centenarian count and global per-capita comparison
pewresearch.org/short-reads/20…

Market Data Forecast — US sleep aids market 2024 valuation
marketdataforecast.com/market-reports…

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Part 3 - Glymphatic System (Nedergaard 2013, beta-amyloid, Alzheimer’s)

Xie et al. 2013, Science — “Sleep drives metabolite clearance from the adult brain” (original glymphatic discovery)
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC38…

Shokri-Kojori et al. 2018, PNAS — “Beta-amyloid accumulation in the human brain after one night of sleep deprivation”
pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pn…

NIH plain-language summary of the 2018 study
nih.gov/news-events/ni…

Scientific American 2025 — “How Sleep Cleans the Brain and Keeps You Healthy” (Nedergaard’s dishwasher quote)
scientificamerican.com/article/how-sl…

Nedergaard and Goldman 2020, Science — “Glymphatic failure as a final common pathway to dementia”
science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…

——————————

Part 4 - Caffeine (Drake 2013, half-life, CYP1A2, adenosine)

Drake et al. 2013, Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine — “Caffeine effects on sleep taken 0, 3, or 6 hours before going to bed”
jcsm.aasm.org/doi/10.5664/jc…

AASM press release on Drake 2013 (with the “participants unaware” finding)
aasm.org/late-afternoon…

NCBI Bookshelf — Pharmacology of caffeine (half-life range, metabolism)
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK22380…

2023 systematic review and meta-analysis of caffeine effects on sleep architecture
sciencedirect.com/science/articl…

Mahdavi 2023, JAMA Network Open — CYP1A2 variation and caffeine metabolism
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC98…

——————————

Part 5 - Two-Phase Sleep History (Ekirch, Wehr 1992)

Ekirch’s faculty page at Virginia Tech with full bibliography and 2,000+ reference repository
sites.google.com/vt.edu/roger-e…

Wehr 1992, Journal of Sleep Research — “In short photoperiods, human sleep is biphasic”
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.…

CNN 2022 interview with Roger Ekirch on biphasic sleep history
cnn.com/2022/01/09/hea…

Harper’s Magazine 2013 — “Segmented Sleep” by A. Roger Ekirch (Neubauer quote on consolidated sleep as unstable invention)
harpers.org/archive/2013/0…

National Geographic 2024 — Background on Wehr’s experiment and modern segmented sleep
nationalgeographic.com/science/articl…

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More from @anishmoonka

May 10
For 38 years, the US paid farmers NOT to grow too much corn. In 1971, one guy killed that rule. Within 13 years your Coke had corn syrup instead of sugar, food was the cheapest it had ever been, and Americans were getting heavier every year.

Since the Great Depression, US farm policy ran on simple supply and demand. If everyone planted everything, prices would crash and farmers would go broke. So the government paid farmers to leave a chunk of their land empty, and held big stockpiles of grain like an emergency fund.

Then Nixon picked Earl Butz to run the Department of Agriculture. Butz was a farm-economy professor from Indiana who also sat on the boards of giant food companies. He told farmers to "get big or get out" and to plant every inch of land they owned. In 1972, when the Soviet Union had a bad harvest and came shopping, Butz quietly sold them 30 million tons of grain in one deal. The US emergency stockpile was gone overnight. By 1976 he had killed the entire 38-year-old system.

By the late 1970s, the country was drowning in corn, and Washington kept guaranteeing the prices anyway. Corn became the cheapest ingredient in the American grocery store. The government still hands corn farmers about 3.2 billion dollars a year, more than any other crop.

That cheap corn went two places. The first was your soda. Scientists had recently figured out how to turn corn starch into a syrup that tasted almost like sugar. With corn this cheap, that syrup (high-fructose corn syrup, or HFCS) was way cheaper than cane sugar. Coca-Cola started swapping it in by 1980. By 1984, Coke and Pepsi had ditched cane sugar entirely in the US. The average American went from eating zero corn syrup in 1970 to almost 38 pounds of it a year by 1999.

The second place was everything else. That same cheap corn fed the cows, pigs, and chickens packed into industrial farms. It also became the base ingredient or sweetener in most processed food on the shelf. Americans went from spending 17 percent of their take-home pay on food in 1960 to under 10 percent by 2000, one of the lowest rates in the world. Daily calories per person climbed from about 2,054 in 1970 to over 2,500 by 2010. The extra 500 came mostly from added fats, refined grains, and corn syrup. When Butz took office in 1971, about 15 percent of American adults were obese; today the CDC says it's 40.3 percent. Severely obese, defined as way past overweight, used to be under 1 percent. Now it's nearly 1 in 10.

Butz's policy did exactly what it promised. Productivity, exports, and grocery prices all moved the way he said they would, year after year for three decades. The right photo is just what happens to the average American body after fifty years of policy designed to make calories as cheap as possible.
Thanks for going down this rabbit hole ❤️

Follow @anishmoonka for daily stories across science, history, psychology, culture & AI.

—————

Sources:

CDC Data Brief No. 508 — Adult obesity 40.3% (Aug 2021-Aug 2023) and severe obesity 9.7%
cdc.gov/nchs/products/…

USDA ERS — Food share of disposable income, 1960 (17%) to 2000 (9.9%)
ers.usda.gov/amber-waves/20…

Grist — Earl Butz, the 1972 Soviet grain deal, and the dismantling of New Deal supply management
grist.org/article/the-bu…

USDA ERS Amber Waves — Daily calorie increase 1970 to 2003 (2,234 to 2,757) and where the extra calories came from
ers.usda.gov/amber-waves/20…

Wikipedia HFCS — Per-capita HFCS consumption peaked at 37.5 lb in 1999, near zero in 1970
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-fruc…
Part 2. Your fast-food meal today is 4x bigger than the same meal in 1955. The single business decision that made it happen came from a movie theater executive who couldn't get his customers to buy two bags of popcorn.

In the late 1950s, David Wallerstein ran the snack counter for Balaban & Katz, the biggest movie theater chain in Chicago. His one job was to sell more popcorn. He tried matinee discounts, two-for-one deals, free refills. Nothing worked. Customers bought one bag and stopped.

So Wallerstein started watching them. He saw people drain their drinks dry and shake popcorn bags for the last bits. They clearly wanted more, but wouldn't buy a second bag. Wallerstein figured out why: buying two bags of popcorn made people look like a pig in front of strangers.

His fix was simple. He kept the same base price but introduced a single bigger bag and a giant cup. Now buying "the large" delivered the same total food as two bags would have, with no social shame. Sales recovered overnight.

In 1968 he joined the board of McDonald's and pitched Ray Kroc on the same trick for fries and Cokes. Kroc was unconvinced, arguing that customers who wanted more food could just order a second burger. So Wallerstein staked out McDonald's parking lots in Chicago. He watched customers chug their sodas, shake fries bags upside down for crumbs, and rip ketchup packets open for the last drops. He brought the data back, and Kroc relented.

The "Large" fries showed up first. Then the "Large" Coke. By 1987 McDonald's was running a "Big Mac, Large Fries, Large Coke" summer promo. By 1994 it had a name: "Super Size."

The numbers tell the rest. McDonald's opened in 1955 with one size of everything: fries 2.4 ounces, Coke 7 ounces, burger 3.7 ounces. Today the "small" fries weighs 2.6 ounces and the "large" weighs 5.9, almost two and a half times the original. A large Coke is 30 ounces, four times bigger. The Big Mac is 7.5 ounces. The average American restaurant meal today is 4 times the size of the same meal in the 1950s, per the CDC.

Wallerstein had stumbled onto something every food company now treats as a textbook fact. Human appetite is elastic. A 2002 Penn State study from Barbara Rolls served people different portions of mac and cheese on different days. Given a portion twice the size, they ate 30% more, and reported feeling no fuller. Humans evolved to eat whatever is in front of them, and the body's fullness signals never catch up in time.

Wallerstein died in 1993, right before the Super Size button went on the menu boards. People will eat almost any amount of food in front of them, as long as it shows up in one container. The right photo is the photograph of a country that has spent 60 years buying the largest single serving available.
Read 7 tweets
May 9
The research behind this is wild. Your kitchen sponge has the same density of bacteria as human stool. German scientists found 54 billion bacterial cells per cubic centimeter inside used sponges in 2017. Yours is sitting right next to your sink.

Sponges are the perfect home for bacteria. They are wet, warm, full of food bits, and never fully dry between washes. Across all 14 sponges, the team found 362 different types of bacteria. The most common species include strains that can make people sick.

In 2011, the public health group NSF International swabbed 30 things in 22 American homes. The dirtiest object in the entire house was the kitchen sponge. It was dirtier than the toilet seat. 75% of the sponges tested positive for the kind of bacteria that includes Salmonella and E. coli.

Microwaving does not clean the sponge. The 2017 study found microwaved sponges had higher amounts of the smelliest, most harmful bacteria. Heat kills the weak strains. The strong ones survive and refill the sponge with no competition for space.

A 2021 Norwegian study compared kitchen sponges to dish brushes. In brushes, Salmonella was wiped out within three days because the bristles dry out between uses. In sponges, bacteria climbed to about a billion cells per sponge. The lead researcher told CNN that one kitchen sponge can hold more bacteria than there are people on Earth.

Three things actually work. Switch to a dish brush, because brushes dry fully between uses while sponges stay wet for hours. Replace your sponge every one to two weeks. Never leave it sitting wet in the sink. Norway and Denmark already do this by default, but most other countries don't.

The detergent is fine. Your sponge is the problem.
Thanks for going down this rabbit hole ❤️

Follow @anishmoonka for daily stories across science, history, psychology, culture & AI.

—————

Sources:

Cardinale et al. 2017, Scientific Reports, full paper nature.com/articles/s4159…

Jacksch et al. 2020 metagenomic follow-up on microwaved sponges ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…

NSF International 2011 Household Germ Study executive summary d2evkimvhatqav.cloudfront.net/documents/2011…

Møretrø et al. 2021 sponges vs brushes study sciencedirect.com/science/articl…

CNN coverage with Møretrø "more bacteria than people on Earth" quote cnn.com/2022/06/07/hea…
Part 2. 89% of kitchen towels in a 2014 study carried coliform bacteria, the family that includes E. coli and Salmonella. 26% had E. coli specifically. Researchers tested 82 dishcloths from kitchens across the United States and Canada.

The towel has the same problem as your sponge. It stays wet, picks up food bits, and never fully dries between uses. Researchers at the University of Mauritius tested 100 multi-use towels in 2018 after one month of regular use. Half of them grew bacteria. Of those, 36% had coliform and 36% had Enterococcus, a gut bacterium. Another 14% had Staphylococcus aureus, the bacterium behind staph infections and a common cause of food poisoning.

The worst contamination came from one habit: using the same towel for everything. The more jobs a towel did, the more bacteria it carried. Meat-eating households had more E. coli. Damp towels had more of everything.

A 2025 paper in the journal Foods went deeper and looked at how the bacteria are organized inside the towel. Every used towel tested had formed a biofilm: a structured bacterial colony glued together with proteins, sugars, and DNA. Counts hit up to 10 million bacterial cells per gram. The biofilm acts like a protective shell. Cold-water washing doesn't clean a towel fully because detergent can't reach the cells inside.

Three changes fix this. Use separate towels for separate jobs. Wash kitchen towels in water at 60°C (140°F) or hotter. Anything cooler doesn't kill the bacteria. Replace or wash daily if the towel touches raw meat juice or stays damp for hours.

The sponge is ground zero. The towel is what spreads it everywhere else.
Read 7 tweets
May 8
A standard Rolex has about 200 moving parts. The Patek Philippe on Jay-Z's wrist at the Met Gala has 1,580. Patek spent 8 years designing it. Then over 100,000 hours building the first one. About 11 straight years of someone working 24 hours a day, no breaks.

It's called the Grandmaster Chime, the most complicated wristwatch Patek has ever made. The inner mechanism alone has 1,366 parts. It fits in a circle smaller than an Oreo cookie. The outer case adds another 214 parts, and the case alone took four years to design.

In watchmaking, a "complication" is just any function beyond telling you the time. Most watches in the "grand complication" category have 5 to 7. This one has 20. When it launched, no wristwatch in history had combined that many. It tracks the phase of the moon, accurate to one day's drift over 122 years. It also has five different ways to chime: one that automatically rings the hours and quarters, one that rings only the quarters, one you press a button to hear the current time, one that rings whatever alarm time you set, and one that chimes today's date on demand. The last two had never existed in any watch before. Both were invented by Patek's own president, Thierry Stern, a trained watchmaker himself.

The chiming makes this watch nearly impossible to copy. Inside each one are tiny coiled steel wires called gongs. A single watchmaker shapes and tunes each gong by hand, testing every note with their own ears. Just putting one chime mechanism together takes 200 to 300 hours. Then the watch goes into a soundproof chamber where the chime gets recorded and compared against decades of past Patek chimes. Only then is it brought to Thierry Stern. He listens. If he doesn't like the sound, the watch goes back. Sometimes more than once. A rejected watch can take 500 hours of rebuilding before he approves it.

This watch holds four power springs in total. One is dedicated to the chimes alone, separate from the spring driving the time. Inside the mechanism is a ball bearing 7.2mm wide. It holds seven steel balls, each 0.3mm across, smaller than grains of fine sand. They handle 1,700 gram-millimetres of twisting force from the chime springs without slipping. The case has 11 holes drilled through it for buttons and pushers, and somehow none of them ruin the chamber that lets the chimes ring out clearly. The case itself flips around to show either of its two different dials.

Fewer than five workshops on the planet can build something at this level. Patek Philippe is the one all the others measure themselves against.

Jay-Z's version lists at $6.5 million. The unique steel version sold for $31 million at Christie's in 2019. It still holds the record for the most expensive watch ever sold at auction.
Thank you for reading my article ❤️

If it held your attention, a follow @anishmoonka keeps more coming.

—————

Sources:

Patek Philippe official Grandmaster Chime 6300 page (specs, complications, parts) — patek.com/en/collection/…

Patek Philippe official savoir-faire page (CEO approval process and anechoic chamber acoustic analysis) — patek.com/en/company/sav…

Time and Watches on the $31M Only Watch 2019 auction record — timeandwatches.com/2019/11/patek-…

Worldtempus engineering deep-dive on the 5175 development (7-8 year build, 60,000 movement hours, 1700 gmm ball bearing) — en.worldtempus.com/article/watche…

Tatler Asia confirms Jay-Z's specific ref. 6300 at Met Gala 2026 — tatlerasia.com/style/watches/…
Part 2. In 2019, a steel Patek Philippe sold at auction for $31 million. The same model in gold, the one Jay-Z wore to the Met Gala, lists at $6.5 million. Steel costs about 50 times less than gold. So the cheaper material sold for nearly 5x more.

The auction was Only Watch, a charity event for muscular dystrophy research that runs every two years. Patek Philippe builds one unique watch for it. In 2019, they made a single Grandmaster Chime in steel. Every other Grandmaster Chime ever produced has been in white gold or rose gold. Christie's set the pre-auction estimate at 2.5 million Swiss francs. Bidding opened at 5 million. Twelve minutes later, the hammer dropped at 31 million. That single sale was 80% of the entire night's total and beat the previous wristwatch record by over $13 million.

Steel is the reason for the record price. Patek almost never uses it. Their entire production runs on precious metals: gold, platinum, occasionally titanium. Steel cases account for less than 30% of their annual output, mostly the Nautilus sports models. A steel grand complication from Patek had almost never been made before this one. The handful of steel Pateks that do exist (including a 1518 chronograph that sold for $11 million in 2016) consistently outperform their gold equivalents at auction. Patek made one steel Grandmaster Chime knowing exactly what it would do.

Even at $6.5 million, you cannot just walk into Patek and buy a Grandmaster Chime. CEO Thierry Stern has stated publicly that "not everyone should get a Patek." The brand makes around 60,000 watches a year. Rolex makes about a million. To buy a Grandmaster Chime, you typically need years of purchasing history with the brand. Smaller pieces. Regular orders. A name they trust. Money alone is not enough.

All of this comes from one family. Charles and Jean Stern bought Patek Philippe in 1932 during the Great Depression. They were the company's dial supplier and stepped in to save it from bankruptcy. Today, Patek is still privately held by the Stern family, has never gone public, and has confirmed receiving acquisition offers from luxury conglomerates. German bank Berenberg estimated Patek could sell for $10 billion. Thierry Stern, Charles's great-grandson, has refused. His own children represent the fifth generation.

Their entire business model depends on producing fewer watches than the world wants. Increasing supply would solve a lot of problems. They will not increase supply.

At Patek, the price is the easy part. Getting permission to buy is the rest.
Read 5 tweets
May 6
A 17-year-old in Iowa boiled beets in her chemistry class and turned them into stitches that change color when your wound gets infected. Her name is Dasia Taylor. It started as a science fair project.

She wanted a low-tech version of the "smart stitches" Tufts researchers built in 2016. Those used thread wired up with sensors and a tiny chip that pinged your phone if something went wrong. Cool, but useless without a phone or a hospital that can afford it.

Her version doesn't need any of that. Healthy skin is slightly acidic, like lemon juice but much milder. When bacteria grow in a wound, the chemistry flips and turns more like soap or baking soda.

Beet juice has a quirk. The same red pigment that stains your fingers when you cook it shifts color based on what it touches. Bright red on healthy skin. Dark purple on infected skin. The switch lines up with infection almost exactly.

She tested ten threads before finding a cotton-polyester blend that soaked up the dye and changed color within five minutes. That was the prototype.

Around 1 in 40 American surgeries end in an infection at the cut, costing hospitals more than $3 billion a year. In poorer countries the rate is closer to 1 in 9. In parts of Africa it's 1 in 6. In some Ethiopian hospitals, up to a quarter of surgery patients leave with an infection.

The whole game is catching it early. Spot it in time and antibiotics handle it. Miss the window and the patient is back on the operating table.

Dasia filed a patent in 2021 and started a medical device company called VariegateHealth in 2022. The stitches haven't been tested on real patients yet. New medical device patents can take a decade. She's also looking into a side benefit: the beet pigment kills bugs like E. coli and Klebsiella in lab tests.

Smart stitches need a phone to read them. Hers just need eyes.
Thank you for reading my article ❤️

If it held your attention, a follow @anishmoonka keeps more coming.

—————

Sources:

Smithsonian Magazine on Dasia's invention: smithsonianmag.com/innovation/hig…

NIH PMC review on SSI rates in low and middle-income countries: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…

PBS NewsHour profile with US SSI cost figure: pbs.org/newshour/show/…

Tufts University announcement of the 2016 smart sutures: now.tufts.edu/2016/07/18/res…

NIH PMC paper on antimicrobial activity of betalains: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC98…
Part 2. Dasia Taylor was looking for a science fair topic when she stumbled into a number she couldn't put down. In some African countries, 1 in 5 women who give birth by C-section develop an infection in the wound.

5 million women a year get a pregnancy-related infection. About 75,000 of them die. Childbirth-related infections are the third leading cause of maternal death worldwide. Sub-Saharan Africa carries most of the weight, with around 130,000 women dying from sepsis tied to childbirth every year. Most of those deaths start as something a person could spot, if anyone was looking.

The C-section infection rate in Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Burundi runs 2 to 10 percent. In the United States, it runs 8 to 10. Surgical skill is comparable. The gap shows up in what happens after. In a rich country, a new mother gets follow-up appointments, lab tests, and repeat antibiotics if anything looks off. In a rural African hospital, she's often discharged the same day. She might have a basic phone, if she has any phone at all, and instructions that boil down to "come back if it gets bad." By the time it gets bad, sepsis has often started.

The C-section procedure itself adds extra infection risk. A Ugandan study found women who had C-sections were nearly 4 times more likely to get an infection after birth than women who delivered vaginally. As C-section rates climb across Africa, that risk grows with them.

This is the actual stake Dasia was staring at while boiling beets. A tool that works when no one else is in the room is the one that reaches these mothers.
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May 6
A kid drew himself sleeping in bed between mom and dad and labeled it 'safe.'

In Japan, this exact sleeping arrangement has a name. They call it 'the river.' Mother is one bank. Father is the other. The child between them is the water. Roughly 70% of Japanese mothers sleep this way with their kids, sometimes through the teenage years. The Western model of putting a kid alone in their own bedroom is barely 200 years old. For most of human history, in most cultures still alive today, kids slept beside their parents.

James McKenna runs the Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Lab at Notre Dame. He spent decades watching what happens when parents and kids share a bed. The bodies sync up. Heart rates align with the parent's, breathing falls into the same rhythm, and by morning even sleep stages have started matching. The parent's body, in McKenna's words, acts as a kind of biological jumper cable for the child's.

In 2013, researchers in the Netherlands tracked 193 babies through the first year of life. They measured cortisol, the brain's main stress hormone. Babies who had spent more weeks co-sleeping in the first six months produced less cortisol under stress at 12 months. Sleeping near a parent had rewired the kid's stress system to be calmer under pressure.

Inside the kid's brain at night, the amygdala, the fear alarm, gets more sensitive as the body gets tired. Darkness makes it worse. A 2021 paper in PLoS One from Australian researchers showed that light directly suppresses amygdala activity. Lights off, alarm louder. The whole brain is wired to read 'alone in a dark room' as a threat.

Now add a parent's body to that bed. The kid's nervous system reads warm body, breathing nearby, familiar smell. The threat alarm dials down. Two parents on either side dial it down twice. The drawing is the kid's brain calculating maximum safety: I am surrounded by the people who keep me alive, and nothing can reach me without going through them first.

The arrangement in this drawing is what most of human history called 'sleeping.' Sleeping the kid alone in another room is a 200-year-old Western invention that we forgot was an invention. Every kid who has ever padded into your room at 3am and crawled into the middle of the bed is just trying to redraw the picture.
Thank you for reading my article ❤️

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—————

Sources:

James McKenna's Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Lab at Notre Dame: cosleeping.nd.edu

McKenna on cosleeping around the world ("the river" concept): naturalchild.org/articles/james…

Beijers, Riksen-Walraven, de Weerth 2013, Stress journal: tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.31…

McGlashan et al. 2021, PLoS One, "Afraid of the dark: Light acutely suppresses activity in the human amygdala": journals.plos.org/plosone/articl…

Greater Good Berkeley on McKenna's biological jumper cable framing: greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/h…
Part 2. For 100 years, Western parents have been told that comforting a crying baby will 'spoil' it. One specific man invented that rule. He had just been fired from Johns Hopkins for an affair with his graduate student. He wrote a parenting book in 1928 with a chapter titled 'The Dangers of Too Much Mother Love.' His name was John B. Watson, and the book sold across America.

Watson was the founder of behaviorism. He believed emotions were not inborn but trained. He proved it (in his own mind) by conditioning a 9-month-old baby called Little Albert to fear a white rat. Every time the rat appeared, he clanged a steel bar with a hammer right behind the baby's head. The kid eventually flinched at anything furry. If emotion could be conditioned, Watson argued, then 'mother love' was just bad training. A properly raised child would be calmer and more independent if mothers kept their distance.

So he told American mothers to never kiss their children, never hold them in their laps, never rock them to sleep, and to treat them like small adults instead. His slogan was 'not more babies, but better brought up babies.' The book ran for decades.

Watson and his second wife Rosalie raised two sons on the system. William grew up to become a psychiatrist, openly rejecting everything his father had written, and killed himself at 33. James attempted suicide too. Watson's daughter from his first marriage attempted multiple times across her life. His granddaughter, the actress Mariette Hartley, helped found the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention in 1987 and wrote publicly about the family's emotional damage.

Late in life, Watson told an interviewer he 'did not know enough' about children to have written the book. He burned every paper he had not yet published. He died in 1958.

By then the book had done its work. The advice it set in motion (sleep alone, in your own room, with no one coming when you cried) became the Western default. Dr. Spock softened the tone in 1946 but kept solitary sleep as the goal. Ferber's sleep training method in 1985 ran on the same logic. Three generations of American parents were taught that responding to a child at night would 'spoil' them.

Look at the drawing again. The kid drew himself in bed between his parents and labeled it 'safe.' That picture would have looked completely normal to every culture on earth in 1927. It only became weird because one fired professor with a book deal told America it was.
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May 5
Christopher Nolan asked IMAX to build him a new camera. They did. Then he and Matt Damon spent four months filming The Odyssey on the open ocean, on the largest modern Viking longship in the world, with no green screens at all.

The shoot ran 91 days, from late February to August 2025. Seven countries: Morocco, Greece, Italy, Iceland, Scotland, Western Sahara, and Malta. Aside from one indoor studio in Los Angeles, every shot was filmed on real ground. In Italy, the cast and crew climbed 900 feet up a mountain every morning. Imagine walking up a 60-story building before breakfast. In Iceland, they filmed the underworld scenes by lantern light while rain came at them sideways.

The four months at sea actually happened at sea. Damon and the actors playing his crew sailed on a real ship called the Draken Harald Hårfagre, used here as a Greek warship. Nolan called the experience "primal." He said the cast and crew were exhausted in a way he had never seen before.

The cameras were the other big problem. IMAX cameras have always been too loud to record clean dialogue, which is why directors mostly save them for big action scenes. Nolan asked IMAX to fix this. They engineered a new soundproof case for the camera, a kind of quiet jacket, that lets the lens get within a foot of an actor's face while they whisper and still pick up clean audio. The new cameras also came out lighter and about 30% quieter than the old ones. To prove it worked, the lead cameraman Hoyte van Hoytema filmed a tight close-up of a child reciting a David Bowie song, "Sound and Vision." Nolan watched the test and called it "electrifying."

Damon went all-in on the role. He dropped to 167 pounds on a strict no-gluten diet. He grew a real beard for a full year because Nolan refused to allow a fake one. The crew built a full-scale wooden Trojan Horse and shot the attack scene at an ancient walled town in Morocco called Aït Benhaddou. Nolan himself climbed inside the horse with the cast and his cameraman to get the shot.

Across the whole shoot they used 2 million feet of film. That comes out to around 380 miles of it, longer than the drive from Los Angeles to San Francisco. At about $1.50 a foot, they spent roughly $3 million just on the film itself. The full budget was $250 million, the biggest of Nolan's career. They wrapped nine days ahead of schedule.

Tickets went on sale on July 17, 2025, exactly one year before the movie's release. That had never been done before in cinema history. Half of the 22 US theaters offering IMAX 70mm sold out within 12 hours, bringing in around $1.5 million in a single morning.

Nolan called the shoot "an absolute nightmare to film, but in all the right ways." He did not destroy a single IMAX camera. He has wrecked several over his career.
Thank you for reading my article ❤️

If it held your attention, a follow @anishmoonka keeps more coming.

—————

Sources:

The Odyssey (2026 film) — Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odyss…

Christopher Nolan Shot The Odyssey Entirely With IMAX Cameras — Variety variety.com/2025/film/news…

Christopher Nolan Used Over Two Million Feet of Film for The Odyssey — PetaPixel petapixel.com/2025/11/18/chr…

Christopher Nolan Has Been Making The Odyssey His Whole Career — Collider collider.com/christopher-no…

The Odyssey Tickets On Sale a Year Before Release — Hollywood Reporter hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-n…
Part 2. Christopher Nolan just spent $250 million on a Greek epic. He tried to make one in 2002. The studio took it away and offered him Batman as a consolation prize. He took the deal. Twenty-three years later, he made the Greek movie anyway.

In the early 2000s, Warner Bros. hired Nolan to direct Troy, a big-budget movie about the Trojan War. He had just made Memento and Insomnia. He was already obsessed with the Greek gods and the Trojan Horse, and how he wanted to film them.

Wolfgang Petersen had been developing Troy before Nolan came on. Petersen had stepped away to work on a Batman vs. Superman script. When Warner Bros. killed that, he asked for Troy back. The studio said yes. They took it from Nolan and gave him a Batman Begins script as the runner-up gift.

Petersen's Troy came out in 2004 with Brad Pitt as Achilles. It made about $500 million on a $150 million budget. The film stripped the Greek gods out of the story, which was the one thing Nolan most wanted to keep. Peter O'Toole, who played the King of Troy, walked out of a screening of his own movie after fifteen minutes and called the director a clown.

Nolan went off and made Batman Begins, followed by The Dark Knight, Inception, Interstellar, and Oppenheimer. He won Best Picture and Best Director at the Oscars. He became one of the most powerful filmmakers alive.

But the Greek story never let go of him. Nolan first saw The Odyssey as a school play when he was five or six, performed by older students. The image of the Sirens and Odysseus tied to the mast stayed in his head for almost fifty years.

His films are full of it. Batman Begins ends with a man finding his way back to the city he abandoned. Inception is a father trying to get home to his kids through layers of dream. Interstellar sends a man across the universe to get back to his daughter. Oppenheimer recasts the father of the atomic bomb as a modern Prometheus, the Greek figure who stole fire from the gods and got punished forever. Nolan has basically admitted it. He kept making The Odyssey by accident.

Now he gets to make it on purpose. $250 million budget. IMAX cameras the company designed for him after he asked them to be quieter. 91 days of shooting across seven countries. Matt Damon at 167 pounds with a beard he grew for a full year. A cast that includes Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Charlize Theron, Robert Pattinson, Zendaya, and Lupita Nyong'o.

The Greek movie Nolan lost in 2002 had a $150 million budget and stripped the gods out. The one he just finished has a $250 million budget and puts them back in, on his terms, with the studio answering to him this time. The school play that imprinted on a five-year-old turned into the most expensive movie of his career fifty years later.
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