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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
August Abolins | Rob Mccart | I need to drop weight and |
March 6, 2023 12:14 PM * |
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Hello Rob Mccart! ** On Wednesday 01.03.23 - 01:15, Rob Mccart wrote to AUGUST ABOLINS: RM> [...] The problem with that is often the amount of food RM> required to feel full gets higher and higher as your RM> stomach stretches to accomodate what you eat. That could very well be how it works. RM> My family grew up with a given amount of food served to RM> you with no expectation of second helpings, with the RM> exception of special meals like Thanksgiving or Christmas RM> meals. Always seemed to have plenty growing up. 2nds and 3rds were accepted. RM> Another problem is the 'comfort food' issue where people RM> eat to feel better or because they are bored. Those people are probably not concerned about their health. There are better things to do than eat when one cites boredom. RM> I also am convinced that there is a genetic component, RM> that two people eating the same amount and living the same RM> way, one may end up weighing quite a bit more than the RM> other. Have not heard that. People in prisons/concentration camps seemed to have the same results among them. RM> Losing weight is hard since you are going against RM> 'something' normal for you to accomplish it, so I have a RM> lot of respect for people who can make the changes RM> necessary. I am a much bigger fan of self control than RM> getting one's stomach stapled though. I concur. Eating is habitual. It's easy to get into an unhealthy pattern. RM> Exercise is important to health under any circumstances if RM> your normal life is not filled with situations that RM> naturally gives you lots of exercise. I concur. Actvity is an important element in overall health too. Sadly, some people reach a stage where is becomes too hard to lug all that extra weight around. It becomes a descending spiral of health. RM> ..I'm 68 and have no issues with blood pressure or RM> cholesterol or diabetes. [...] In recent weeks, in my RM> exercise routine, I've moved up from doing 100 to doing RM> 110 push-ups in under 3 minutes. I get lots of exercise RM> mowing lawns or shovelling snow and looking after the RM> wooded lakefront lot where I live. That's amazing. I'm just a handful of years younger. I've tried sticking to a pushup routine (and increasing the numbers gradually) ..but some days preclude the activity and the routine gets out of wack. RM> I figured early on that staying as healthy as possible RM> would make things a lot easier as I got older. Once you RM> can finally retire, who wants to be in such lousy shape RM> that you can't do active things and enjoy life?.. I concur. Perhaps some people simply don't look at that way. And when they reach "retirement" age, they are too weak to do anything worthwhile for enjoyment. RM> BTW.. as for the 'genetics' idea, I am in far better RM> health than either of my siblings, both overweight and the RM> younger one severely diabetic, so you can take that for RM> whatever it's worth.. Then it can't be genetics. Your better health proves it. I have an older brother (by one year) who is quite large. But I've seen his high caloric intake. He can barely walk now. -- ../|ug --- OpenXP 5.0.57 * Origin: The LOOK of MicroNET https://kolico.ca/ftn/micronet (618:250/1.9) |
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