Anonymous wrote:^^Pretty THIN, not thing.
Anonymous wrote:^^Pretty THIN, not thing.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because the same people who have the drive and motivation to be out running in the early morning are oftentimes the same people that have the drive and motivation to eat well and moderately.
Wrong. I have periods where I run over 50+ miles per week (female) and I love McDonald's and a Dairy Queen. Like every week. Both. And PASTA. Lots and lots of it!!
What does over 50+ mean? 60 miles a week? What are you training for?
And yes, I've completed ironmans so know the training cycle well. Nourish yourself on what you like (for instance, McDonalds is a non food to me), but if you are running that much for no reason its a little odd. You may be just doing it so that you feel "allowed" to eat such junky food.
When I hit 40-50 MPW I eat an average of around 3000 calories a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because the same people who have the drive and motivation to be out running in the early morning are oftentimes the same people that have the drive and motivation to eat well and moderately.
Ridiculous
Anonymous wrote:Because the same people who have the drive and motivation to be out running in the early morning are oftentimes the same people that have the drive and motivation to eat well and moderately.
Anonymous wrote:Your weight without your height is meaningless. I look fat at 130 but I'm only 5'3. If you are 5'10 and 130 you are thin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe they run more than you?
I'm sure they do. I appreciate the hard work they put in, and I intend to get better, but that wasn't my point.
It wasn't? You are sharing your opinion that running makes people skinny. Wouldn't it make sense that people who run more than you are thinner than you, based upon your own original assertion.