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In many European medical exams, lung capacity is measured in liters. A healthy adult male might have 6L total lung capacity. An athlete may reach 8L. 11L would be extraordinary—literally "extra quality." So "11L extra quality" could be a goal: a body that functions at peak, above average. Part 2: The Bodycheck – More Than a Physical Exam A proper bodycheck is not just stepping on a scale or getting blood drawn. It is a systematic audit of your physical vessel. Dr. Sommer’s column often provided checklists. Here’s a modern version, inspired by the keyword’s demand for "extra quality." The 11-Station Extra Quality Bodycheck | Station | What to check | Extra Quality Standard | |---------|---------------|------------------------| | 1. Heart | Resting HR, BP, ECG if needed | HR <70 bpm, BP <120/80 | | 2. Lungs | Spirometry, peak flow | FVC > 5L (goal: 11L!) | | 3. Skin | Moles, elasticity, hydration | No atypical lesions | | 4. Gut | Digestion, bloating, regularity | Pain-free, daily cycle | | 5. Muscles | Symmetry, strength, flexibility | No imbalances | | 6. Joints | ROM, pain-free movement | Full range, no clicks | | 7. Blood | CBC, lipids, glucose, vit D | All in optimal 20% range | | 8. Sleep | Duration, depth, apnea risk | 7-9h, >20% deep sleep | | 9. Mind | Stress, anxiety, self-talk | Resilient, positive | | 10. Posture | Standing, sitting, gait | Neutral spine | | 11. Recovery | HRV, soreness, energy | HRV >50ms |
is the opposite of imposter syndrome. It is the opposite of waiting for a better version of yourself. It is the ultimate Bravo—applause for showing up as you are during the bodycheck. bravo dr sommer bodycheck thats me 11l extra quality
Dr. Sommer’s most repeated advice was: Your body is yours. Compare less. Observe more. When a teenager wrote about asymmetrical breasts or a curved spine, he never said "fix it." He said: Notice it. Learn its limits. Work with it. In many European medical exams, lung capacity is
Dr. Sommer was the pseudonym for Dr. Martin Goldstein, a German-American physician who, from 1969 to 2003, wrote the advice column "Dr. Sommer" in Bravo , Germany’s most popular teen magazine. Millions of teenagers wrote letters asking: Is my body normal? What’s that lump? Why does this hurt? Am I too fat? Too thin? 11L would be extraordinary—literally "extra quality






