Anonymous wrote:I followed the Slimfast diet a few times while college in the 1980s! The one and only time I’ve ever fainted was post Slimfast (plus drinking the night before) and never again. I was about 115 pounds/ED.
Anonymous wrote:Are you the poster who spams every weight loss thread with "eating disorder" and "anorexic" accusations?
40% of Americans are obese, OP. Two thirds carry excess weight. This leads to significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and all sorts of dementia (because dementia is linked to cardiovascular health). The burden on the American taxpayer is HUGE, because public health initiatives cost money and government subsidies for medicating these conditions and building more Medicare nursing homes cost billions.
Anorexia and eating disorders are not as prevalent and don't cost anywhere as much as being overweight!
So you're not obsessing over the right issue.
It's really too bad that the body positivity movement has sapped all common sense out of the debate. Yes, everyone is beautiful. No, this isn't about looks. It's about quality of life and not dying of something preventable. It's about having money in your pocket for something other than someone else's dementia facility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you the poster who spams every weight loss thread with "eating disorder" and "anorexic" accusations?
40% of Americans are obese, OP. Two thirds carry excess weight. This leads to significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and all sorts of dementia (because dementia is linked to cardiovascular health). The burden on the American taxpayer is HUGE, because public health initiatives cost money and government subsidies for medicating these conditions and building more Medicare nursing homes cost billions.
Anorexia and eating disorders are not as prevalent and don't cost anywhere as much as being overweight!
So you're not obsessing over the right issue.
It's really too bad that the body positivity movement has sapped all common sense out of the debate. Yes, everyone is beautiful. No, this isn't about looks. It's about quality of life and not dying of something preventable. It's about having money in your pocket for something other than someone else's dementia facility.
If you ask people to follow an unsustainable diet they will gain back everything they lost. Are you going to follow the slim fast diet the rest of your life?
Anonymous wrote:Tbh I love doing Slim Fast as a way to get back into self discipline mindset of eating less.
I do it about once or twice a year when I want to shed 2-3 pounds in a hurry because it requires no thought about food until dinner. Then I just need to eat healthy for dinner. And once I’ve done it for a week, my body isn’t craving all the fatty carb-loaded sugar foods and I can go to the market to shop for healthier breakfast/lunch food because I’m ready to eat completely healthy for a while.
I wouldn’t do several months of slim fast, but 1-2 weeks usually gets me motivated enough to keep up the weight loss effort without it.
Anonymous wrote:Tbh I love doing Slim Fast as a way to get back into self discipline mindset of eating less.
I do it about once or twice a year when I want to shed 2-3 pounds in a hurry because it requires no thought about food until dinner. Then I just need to eat healthy for dinner. And once I’ve done it for a week, my body isn’t craving all the fatty carb-loaded sugar foods and I can go to the market to shop for healthier breakfast/lunch food because I’m ready to eat completely healthy for a while.
I wouldn’t do several months of slim fast, but 1-2 weeks usually gets me motivated enough to keep up the weight loss effort without it.
Anonymous wrote:It says to eat 1 sensible meal, eat a meal replacement bar and 2 shakes. That’s it. How is that a sustainable diet? Doesn’t that diet basically sound like an eating disorder?
Anonymous wrote:Are you the poster who spams every weight loss thread with "eating disorder" and "anorexic" accusations?
40% of Americans are obese, OP. Two thirds carry excess weight. This leads to significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and all sorts of dementia (because dementia is linked to cardiovascular health). The burden on the American taxpayer is HUGE, because public health initiatives cost money and government subsidies for medicating these conditions and building more Medicare nursing homes cost billions.
Anorexia and eating disorders are not as prevalent and don't cost anywhere as much as being overweight!
So you're not obsessing over the right issue.
It's really too bad that the body positivity movement has sapped all common sense out of the debate. Yes, everyone is beautiful. No, this isn't about looks. It's about quality of life and not dying of something preventable. It's about having money in your pocket for something other than someone else's dementia facility.
Anonymous wrote:No, it’s just a crappy diet. The shakes and the bars are good.