Anonymous wrote:Anyone care that iggy pop is too thin? or Mick Jagger? These are just different body types.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mostly she looks skinny, but healthy, but I have to admit she looks like a bobble head doll in the photo where she’s wearing a tie-dye t-shirt.
She looks anorexic in that picture.
Thin-shaming.
She's much healthier than overweight people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mostly she looks skinny, but healthy, but I have to admit she looks like a bobble head doll in the photo where she’s wearing a tie-dye t-shirt.
She looks anorexic in that picture.
Thin-shaming.
She's much healthier than overweight people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two thirds of Americans are overweight or obese.
They can't discern any more what's a healthy weight, since nowadays healthy is not what you normally see! Norm does not equal health.
So then they look at a healthy person, and freak out that they're too thin.
It becomes a vicious circle, because people will more easily slide into the overweight category, thinking that overweight is healthy because it's the norm.
Mind-boggling.
Nicole Kidman has a BMI in the range of normal.
Do you?
It says her weight is 105. Her height is 5’11 according to at least a few posters here. That is a BMI of 14.6, which is nowhere near normal.
Idiot.
Anonymous wrote:A really high percentage of middle-aged white women I know have really bad stomach issues like IBS and end up with limited diets. I was always thinner than my sister but in her 40s she suddenly got horrific gut problems, after a bad infection (hospitalized), that have left her totally unable to eat gluten and dairy. So now she's way thinner than I am. She basically has to eat a crazy healthy diet of lean proteins and vegetables, or she's disabled (she was out of work for a year before the doctors came up with this plan for her). That's an extreme example, but I know a lot of women with some variation of this. Almost all the middle aged women I know that are extremely thin have some sort of stomach/gut issue that is leading to restricted eating. Of course, I'm sure some of the stars do it because of social pressure, but I think the medical stuff is under-recognized.
Anonymous wrote:Two thirds of Americans are overweight or obese.
They can't discern any more what's a healthy weight, since nowadays healthy is not what you normally see! Norm does not equal health.
So then they look at a healthy person, and freak out that they're too thin.
It becomes a vicious circle, because people will more easily slide into the overweight category, thinking that overweight is healthy because it's the norm.
Mind-boggling.
Nicole Kidman has a BMI in the range of normal.
Do you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is very thin. Very thin looks better than even slightly overweight, even though it is less healthy.
Aging is not for the faint of heart.
I think the exact opposite- especially as people are aging.
Agree. On a 25 year old, very thin looks better than even slightly overweight, but not true once you are over 45 or so.
I disagree. I have met a lot of women over 45 who are very thin and I think it looks good on them. Also for a lot of people, it's not possible to just put on 5-10 pounds. Many people are kind of programmed for thinness and the only way they are gaining weight is through unhealthy eating and putting on a lot of weight. Trust me, it would not improve their appearance.
Anonymous wrote:Context is everything.
I’ve been spending a lot of time recently watching films from my YouTubeTV library, all recorded from TCM - I love old movies and I hate advertising, so it’s my favorite channel.
Having spent so much time the last month or so watching movies from the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s - no, Kidman is not too thin. She looks normal in the context of how women used to look.
70% of Americans are overweight or obese. In that context Kidman looks thin, thinner than most of the women we see in our own social circles and communities and even in media given recent shifting norms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A really high percentage of middle-aged white women I know have really bad stomach issues like IBS and end up with limited diets. I was always thinner than my sister but in her 40s she suddenly got horrific gut problems, after a bad infection (hospitalized), that have left her totally unable to eat gluten and dairy. So now she's way thinner than I am. She basically has to eat a crazy healthy diet of lean proteins and vegetables, or she's disabled (she was out of work for a year before the doctors came up with this plan for her). That's an extreme example, but I know a lot of women with some variation of this. Almost all the middle aged women I know that are extremely thin have some sort of stomach/gut issue that is leading to restricted eating. Of course, I'm sure some of the stars do it because of social pressure, but I think the medical stuff is under-recognized.
Do you think this is what’s happened to Nichole?
Anonymous wrote:Two thirds of Americans are overweight or obese.
They can't discern any more what's a healthy weight, since nowadays healthy is not what you normally see! Norm does not equal health.
So then they look at a healthy person, and freak out that they're too thin.
It becomes a vicious circle, because people will more easily slide into the overweight category, thinking that overweight is healthy because it's the norm.
Mind-boggling.
Nicole Kidman has a BMI in the range of normal.
Do you?