Jump to content

lizard_brain

Members
  • Posts

    1471
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by lizard_brain

  1. Obesity is often associated with depression. Depression can be addressed and mitigated in many cases and I am not talking about a pill.

     

    I resent obese people who refuse treatment to cure the problem. They insist that it is their right to be fat and then demand special treatment.

    They get handicapped parking while pregnant women are denied it.

    Insurance covers transportation costs when their joints collapse.

    Diabetes is statistically higher by a lot.

    There is more.

    I feel really bad for these people but at some point someone who cares, or all of us, need to stop facilitating this so-called disability.

     

     

    I recently read an article on FARK about a handicapped guy that was PO'd about the fact that nearly every time he went to the grocery store, he couldn't get an electric cart because all the fatties were riding around the store on them. He was saying that they're supposed to be for disabled people, not FAT people! He was upset, to say the least.

  2. Do you know how much a friggin' knee-replacement operation costs for example?

     

    Perhaps it's who I know, but I know more athletes who've required extensive, expensive, knee surgery than morbidly obese.

     

    i don't know any athletes who've had that type of surgery, but lots of obese people who have

     

    Me too. There have been two just in my office that have had it done. I thought if one of them lost 100 pounds (she was at least that much overweight), I'll bet she wouldn't need the knee surgeries. The other is only about 50 or 60 pounds overweight. (Only.) Imagine carrying around an extra 100 pounds wherever you go! I thought 20 was a lot! She has to do a powerlift every time she gets up from her desk!

  3. One thing I find is that after a multi-day trip in the mountains, after we get back and go to the nearest town to find something to eat, we go walking down the street, and I find I am asking myself 'What are all of these FAT people doing here?' EVERYONE looks fat in these towns after a few days climbing with some reasonably healthy friends.

    This is my selling point to get people to take me with them. I make re-entry into the regular world of fat people much easier.

     

    Hey, I'm here to help.

     

    :lmao:

    what the fuck are you laughing at, scrawny?

     

    My goodness, look at the time - I have to go throw up!

  4. One thing I find is that after a multi-day trip in the mountains, after we get back and go to the nearest town to find something to eat, we go walking down the street, and I find I am asking myself 'What are all of these FAT people doing here?' EVERYONE looks fat in these towns after a few days climbing with some reasonably healthy friends.

    This is my selling point to get people to take me with them. I make re-entry into the regular world of fat people much easier.

     

    Hey, I'm here to help.

     

    :lmao:

  5. One thing I find is that after a multi-day trip in the mountains, after we get back and go to the nearest town to find something to eat, we go walking down the street, and I find I am asking myself 'What are all of these FAT people doing here?' EVERYONE looks fat in these towns after a few days climbing with some reasonably healthy friends.

  6. [quote=JayB

    Who is talking about virtue here? What anyone chooses to do to their own body is their business, whether that's inhaling smoke or five helpings of curly fries and washing it down with 64-oz Slurpee.

     

    Yeah, I agree it's thier business, but I don't want to pay for it. I want points or a price break on my health insurance for having a normal BMI and exercising and not smoking, etc., just like I get a discount on my car insurance for safe driving. I don't want to pay for someone else's adult onset diabetes and high blood pressure and quadruple bypass.

     

    Ditto.

     

    A matter of virtue? No. A matter of responsibility? Yes.

     

     

    Many life threatening conditions have an overwhelmingly genetic component. It's not all "personal responsibility" (not even half or a quarter, an a lot of cases). Are you saying that you want a price break (or you want others to pay more, same thing) for your/their genetics?

     

    Yes. Anything that'll save me money. After all, I am completely self-involved.

     

    Not genetic - statisics.

     

  7. Is it education or counterpropaganda? The airwaves are bloated with misleading food marketing on a scale so immense that it's interesting to imagine how many people's diets would completely change if television ceased to exist.

     

     

    I ate my television.

     

    Probably got more out of it that way...

  8. There we go - resting heart rate around 52. Run 30+ miles a week. Ran 17 miles yesterday. (Marathon approaching.)

     

    Yeah, I look at these people like my doc and my cousin, and wonder what they think when they have to deal with people that are practically killing themselves, and just making excuses while they do it. It's their choice, I guess.

  9. Holly schnikees.

    I'm 120/70

     

    My doc says, "people would pay for bp like yours" and I say "What, you think my gym membership is free?"

     

    When I was first diagnosed with high blood pressure, my doc just whipped out the RX pad and started writing up a prescription. I asked him to hang on, and if there wasn't some other alternative. He gave me the details, and I did what he said. He later told me that he automatically gets out the pad because he finally learned that nobody listens to him when he tells them what to do to lower their blood pressure - they just nod and say 'Okay', and go home and do nothing different, and even lie to him out of embarassment when they come back.

     

    120/70 - I'll prolly never see that, though I do reach 125/75 now and then. (I check it a few times a month.)

  10. I am living proof that a fattie can survive the wilds of Seattle. So is RumR.

     

    And I am living proof that an overweight person (BMI-wise) can drop 20-30 pounds relatively easily and keep it off (so far), and change from high blood pressure to normal by changing diet alone and refusing the drugs. (My highest recorded BP was 160/105. Currently it's around 135/78.)

  11. Who is talking about virtue here? What anyone chooses to do to their own body is their business, whether that's inhaling smoke or five helpings of curly fries and washing it down with 64-oz Slurpee.

     

    Yeah, I agree it's thier business, but I don't want to pay for it. I want points or a price break on my health insurance for having a normal BMI and exercising and not smoking, etc., just like I get a discount on my car insurance for safe driving. I don't want to pay for someone else's adult onset diabetes and high blood pressure and quadruple bypass.

  12. I hear so much stuff from people that say they can't lose weight. But when I look at what they're eating, and how much of it...

     

    I sat down in the break room to eat my lunch with two gigantic women at a place where I was working some years ago. One of them said 'Is that all you're gonna eat?' I wanted to say 'If I ate as much as you, I'd be as fat as you', but working for the state at the time, I could have been fired in a second for not being completely PC.

     

    I just shrugged. 'Yeah.'

  13. I have a cousin that's a surgeon - he says more and more often they're needing to put two operating tables together to make them big enough to hold the fatties, and it takes so much more time to do simple operations to cut through all that fat and sew it back up again.

  14. I know about them from the UW - they are using them to clean up parts of campus as an alternative to spraying toxins that will eventually wind up in Lake Washington, among other places. They rented something like 60, and they are talking about buying some and using them year round.

×
×
  • Create New...