Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McDonald's no longer has a $1 menu.
McDonald's no longer sells salads.
And people will still gladly spend more money on this garbage. You can get a 42oz container or oats for 2.79, 30 servings.
That breaks down to 9 cents per serving. But people will would rather pay $5 for a sausage eggs and cheese biscuits at the driv thru, whether they are short on money or not.
Because it tastes good and gives people a moment of happiness in their miserable lives.
I find it so much easier to live a healthy lifestyle when I'm happier. When things are tough, I eat garbage and waste my money. If people weren't so broke and depressed, it would be easier to make better decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McDonald's no longer has a $1 menu.
McDonald's no longer sells salads.
And people will still gladly spend more money on this garbage. You can get a 42oz container or oats for 2.79, 30 servings.
That breaks down to 9 cents per serving. But people will would rather pay $5 for a sausage eggs and cheese biscuits at the driv thru, whether they are short on money or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
I love how the responses to this are to tell you that you aren’t healthy and that you should diet. There is no known long term health benefit to losing weight, even for people who keep it off. However, many of the diets out there (Keto in particular), are known to increase your risk of heart attack and death. The extra weight leads to stronger muscles and bones too, which is part of the reason they think overweight and mildly obese people live longer.
You sound very fit and healthy. Don’t be fooled by pop culture and the diet industry. Keep taking care of your body!
Is this a joke?
I am one of the PPs who is objectively overweight, and I am all for body positivity and against fat shaming, BUT one has to be honest with oneself. 80lbs overweight is not healthy, and such person would generally benefit from losing extra weight.
Anonymous wrote:McDonald's no longer has a $1 menu.
McDonald's no longer sells salads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
I love how the responses to this are to tell you that you aren’t healthy and that you should diet. There is no known long term health benefit to losing weight, even for people who keep it off. However, many of the diets out there (Keto in particular), are known to increase your risk of heart attack and death. The extra weight leads to stronger muscles and bones too, which is part of the reason they think overweight and mildly obese people live longer.
You sound very fit and healthy. Don’t be fooled by pop culture and the diet industry. Keep taking care of your body!
I'm curious about this. The assertion that there are no known long term health benefit to losing weight.
I lost 20 lbs, not a huge amount but enough to reduce my A1C and increase my insulin sensitivity. I looked at the CDC website for the health impacts of overweight/obesity. In the list, it includes osteoarthritis, which is the breaking down of cartilage and bone, and cancers, and stroke and gall bladder disease, etc.
Carrying a little extra weight as you get older isn't a terrible thing and, as you mentioned, might be associated with some longevity when elderly. That makes sense. But, not obesity, which one would be if one was 80 lbs overweight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
I love how the responses to this are to tell you that you aren’t healthy and that you should diet. There is no known long term health benefit to losing weight, even for people who keep it off. However, many of the diets out there (Keto in particular), are known to increase your risk of heart attack and death. The extra weight leads to stronger muscles and bones too, which is part of the reason they think overweight and mildly obese people live longer.
You sound very fit and healthy. Don’t be fooled by pop culture and the diet industry. Keep taking care of your body!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
I love how the responses to this are to tell you that you aren’t healthy and that you should diet. There is no known long term health benefit to losing weight, even for people who keep it off. However, many of the diets out there (Keto in particular), are known to increase your risk of heart attack and death. The extra weight leads to stronger muscles and bones too, which is part of the reason they think overweight and mildly obese people live longer.
You sound very fit and healthy. Don’t be fooled by pop culture and the diet industry. Keep taking care of your body!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
I love how the responses to this are to tell you that you aren’t healthy and that you should diet. There is no known long term health benefit to losing weight, even for people who keep it off. However, many of the diets out there (Keto in particular), are known to increase your risk of heart attack and death. The extra weight leads to stronger muscles and bones too, which is part of the reason they think overweight and mildly obese people live longer.
You sound very fit and healthy. Don’t be fooled by pop culture and the diet industry. Keep taking care of your body!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who is significantly overweight will have spend the rest of their life fighting their body to retain their set point weight. Like, significant mental energy dedicated to it every single day. Most people simply aren’t capable of it. Without bariatric surgery or lifelong medication to treat it is statistically nearly impossible. The new GLP-1 drugs (semaglutide) are quite promising but they will need to be taken forever.
For those who are obese and overweight already the focus for individuals needs to be on improving health and mobility regardless of body habitus with diet and exercise, and treating obesity with surgery and/or medication.
We need to figure out on a population level what is making us obese. The truth is we just don’t know.
Its not a mystery, racism and poverty wages are making Americans obese. You know, because we are constantly stressed out and working. And for much of the population, cooking at home from whole foods is out of reach. My family is southern and most of the adults are obese. My brother and I are not, and my kids are not. We live in the city, the public charter school lunch is cooked on site, and we try to walk and be active. Hoping to break the cycle.
It isn’t a mystery you are right. But it is laziness, not poverty. People, all people of every income, are programmed to want to do the least work possible. Cheap and very easy and attainable food is in abundance here. It is tasty too. So of course, time and time again, that will be picked over heathy options that take time to prepare and maybe are boring and not as “tasty” as the things filled with fat, sugar, and salt. But they certainly are available to all. Oats, lentils, beans, rice, canned/frozen/seasonal produce, eggs, milk, is readily available to all people at all income levels. But it takes more time and if working with limited ingredients, may not be as appealing to all- but to say people can’t eat heathy bc they don’t have access to any heathy food just isn’t true
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does it make you sad? Unpack that.
Huh? I’m not OP but anytime I see someone who’s health is destroyed it’s sad.
I am roughly 80 pounds overweight. You’d probably be sad if you looked at me, I guess.
I hiked 9 miles today. I work out hard 4-5 days a week. I eat a healthy and varied diet. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal. My fasting blood sugar and A1C has never been close to even pre-diabetic. I am insulin resistant which is why it’s very hard for me to lose weight and why I’ve always been overweight.
You can’t tell how healthy someone is by looking at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Compare the Sidwell lunch menu to your local public and you have your answer. Add in food deserts, too.
I work in a Title 1 school and see what they serve the kids for free breakfast, lunch, and snack. All microwaved processed foods like hot dogs, cheesy pretzels, chocolate milk, nachos with cheese dip, etc.
This is what they offer to ALL kids at ALL public schools now.
Agree. My 6 year old loves all this junk they are serving to her at public kindergarten. So sad. No real kitchen, no real cooks. These kids have no chance to eat healthy anywhere really.
I am 51, and went to public school out west. From what I recall, school lunch was gross then, too. Did you all go to private school or something? School lunches in US public schools have been bad for eons.
Other countries definitely do it better, but they also pay their teachers better, too.