Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile
Shah Fahad

@shahnutrition

Nutritionist. I believe in the power of personalised nutrition to prevent and cure diseases. Scientists are my Hero. PhD Scholar

ID: 56919715

calendar_today15-07-2009 04:05:06

13,13K Tweet

1,1K Followers

3,3K Following

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I’ve been thinking about this after reading Matt Shumer article and when I finished reading this one , it was like I was reading about my thoughts and what I wanted to say. It’s time to embrace AI faster and not wait for doomsday.

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

AI anxiety is mostly a knowledge gap. So we fill it with headlines & doomsday takes about humanity and jobs. Even many thought leaders are guessing, uncertainty sells fear. Naval podcast is a masterclass to drop fear, embrace it faster and move forward

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Principles without 100% commitment aren’t principles they’re preferences. 99% feels safe but it’s where compromise lives.

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A new twin study says the “silver spoon” story is incomplete. Your future socioeconomic status may depend a lot more on your genes than your parents, school, or motivational speeches want you to believe. Uncomfortable? Reality often is. We keep telling people success is mainly

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Laga kar aag shehar ko, yeh badshah ne kaha Utha hai aaj dil mein tamashe ka shauq bahut Jhuka kar sar, sabhi shah-parast bol uthe Huzoor ka shauq salamat rahe, shehar aur bahut hain.

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

India consumes more rice than almost any country on earth and most of it delivers just 2.5 g protein per 100 g. CSIR’s new designer rice pushes that to ~9 g, with lower GI and added B12, iron, and folic acid. Not a supplement. A smarter staple. This could quietly reshape how

Shah Fahad (@shahnutrition) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Interesting read on the gut microbiome. Two patients with alopecia universalis received fecal transplants for C. diff infections. Both experienced hair regrowth weeks later (ACG Case Reports, 2017). A separate 2019 case reported hair regrowth and re-pigmentation in an