Let's see how unhealthy /g/ really is.
I used to measure waking
>>58489709
>40bpm
Are you alive?
>>58489052
>indicate normal rang
That's some quality.
To be honest I am sitting down so it's not all that surprising that my heart rate is pretty low.
According to Google Fitness I'm more active than 67% of my town which I find unlikely since I pretty much only walk my dog
>>58489888
That's more activity than most people...
I usually don't have my phone while working
>>58489868
>pretty low
lol, that's my heart rate after walking around for hours
>>58489804
I hit 34 for a few days. Most of the time I wish I was.
>>58489052
65BPM right now. Last time I put my finger on someones O2 saturation meter it read 99%. So I'm healthy.
Unless I'm having a panic attack, then my heart rate goes to around 120BPM.
>>58489915
Same. Though I still usually break 10k steps once or twice a week.
I a 23 year old, pretty healthy and in shape white male. I have tachycardia and sometimes my resting heart rate can go up to 130-140 just sitting down. Usually it hovers around 110, although sometimes it'll slow down to 85 or so at night when relaxing. My doctor says there's new medical data that suggests fluctuating heart rates can sometimes be beneficial, as long as there's no underlying causes or other structural problems. He said he wouldn't be worried even if my HR reaching 160 if I were standing up, as my ECG shows no other problems. Apparently, young people can withstand heart rates above 200 BPM with no harm done, it's just that there's the stigma in regards to higher heart rates usually indicating the average person is not in good physical/ cardiovascular shape. However, sometimes people just genetically have higher heart rates than others and it's not necessarily a serious problem.
tl;Dr if you're young and your heart rate is high- it's most likely nothing to worry about. (I would still recommend you go see a doctor and have some tests run to be on the safe side.)