sick? as in diabetes? as in heart disease? fat people lose mobility in life and limits everything that means living. It is stunning how fat people look to justify their choices. |
please provide a medical citation for your statement. We will all wait. Oh, the CDC reports that being fat was the #1 comorbidity to death from Covid. “Protective” ??? Keep lying to yourself. |
It just depends on so many factors that depend on the individual that it’s downright silly to argue whether losing weight makes you look younger or older or better or worse (or healthier or unhealthier, for that matter). Age, starting weight, length of time spent at a higher weight, amount of weight lost, genetic skin elasticity, where and how accumulated fat is carried, bone structure, and yes how rapid the weight was lost (although I don’t think this matters nearly as much as the other factors). |
Opposite has been true for my sister. She’s 54, and everyone has been floored … she’s always been very heavy and defensive about it. Without all that extra weight, she is absolutely stunning with cheekbones and bone structure to die for. She’s not “skinny”; she’s 5’5” and size 12, so it’s not about being tiny…just a healthier weight. I think she lost over 60lbs. |
What is your point? Grandma seems to think being fat is better. I don't but, I do realize we are all going to die. Your point? |
It is all about how fast you lose it. 2-5 lbs a month no big deal. 10 - 15 pounds a month your skin will look looser. |
OP must have a friend who lost weight and looks better. This is her passive aggressive way to put her down. |
Exactly. |
I did earlier--it's a large scale study and there have been meta-analyses This is actually an area I research: My quote from an earlier post :Obesity levels 2 and 3 are associated with early mortality compared to normal weight. Obesity level 1 has the same mortality rate as normal weight, and overweight has a lower association with with all-cause mortality. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC48555...wer%20all%2Dcause%20mortality. " |
The link didn't copy properly when I cut and pasted from earlier message--here it is: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4855514/#:~:text=Conclusions%20and%20Relevance,significantly%20lower%20all%2Dcause%20mortality |
The conclusion of this report states what we all know - if you are in any stage of obesity your mortality is at risk: Please stop with your characterization of this article to support of your own issues on weight less or wrinkles or whatever your deal is. We get it - you are fat and hoping for justification. You do you. The next Covid is going to happen - do your research on how fat impacts the organs - in the case of Covid - the lungs. See your doctor and ask for a medical interpretation of the article you provided. |
This thread is weird. Just get filler and some lasers. |
I know how to read the report--I do this for a living. And my interpretation isn't about me (I'm not yet of later middle-aged where the report would even pertain to me, and I'm here just trying to lose the 10 lbs I gained over the pandemic). I just thought my knowledge was relevant to the thread. You can ignore it if you don't want to believe it. Feel free to ask your doctor about the report if you're curious. The report states that being overweight has the lowest mortality compared to being normal weight AND that there is no difference in mortality between obesity 1 (BMI 30-34.9) and normal weight in terms of all cause mortality. There is higher mortality in being in Obesity 2 and 3 which is a BMI above 35. Health researchers know this pattern but we don't totally know what causes it. We don't advocate people to be overweight especially at younger ages because there are of course other health impacts besides dying that are associated with obesity--and if you on a trend of gaining weight when you are younger you might end up in Obesity 2 and 3 which are really bad for your health. But if you're losing weight when you're older, it's fine to have a target weight at the higher end of normal BMI or even overweight. And if you've gained a little weight--not to obesity level--in later middle age, you might live longer if you focus on maintaining weight and fitness/strength training rather than losing weight through calorie restriction. As for Covid, though the data is still really in flux, obesity is clearly a risk factor. It's unclear whether being overweight is--it may be at the younger ages, it doesn't seem to be for middle-aged/older, but no one has a fully clear picture at this point. But covid-19 has been unusual in the level of negative impact of obesity compared to other infectious diseases, so we don't really know if the 'next covid' would have the same effect. |
Love how DCUM always assumes the worst. ![]() ![]() |
A skinny ass isn’t beautiful, sorry. |