Anonymous wrote:All my friend married big strong men.
Guess what, they have big muscular daughters.
All their daughters are 2 sizes larger than they were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many young women take antidepressants, ADHD meds, birth control pills, etc. and often the combo of meds leads to weight gain and difficulty losing weight. For some, it also stimulates their appetite and that combined with social drinking makes it even harder to remain slim. Others spent most of their youth playing high level sports or doing competitive dance. If they don’t continue when they get to college, their bodies have a hard time adjusting to the reduced activity level.
antidepressants, ADHD meds, birth control pills, etc...
Those things did not exist in previous decades?
Uh, no, they either didn't exist or were nowhere as common as they are today compared to previous generations.
+1
I don't know a single person who took ADHD or anti-depressants when I was in HS or college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why this is, but I wonder a lot. I'm a professor in my 40s with two kids and walk around campus wondering why I am thinner than these girls in their late teens/early 20s. When I was in high school, my friends and I went to the gym, went running, etc and continued that in college. Is that still common among high school kids?
If they are forced to eat dorm food, the food is usually extremely unhealthy hence the term Freshman 15.
[i]Yeah and this isn't exactly new. I went to college in 1995 and the freshman 15 was a phenomenon then too. Add heavy drinking to unlimited dorm food. That doesn't help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In earlier decades, people were less careful about hygiene around food and would leave meat out on the kitchen counter all day before cooking it. People ended up with a lot more incidents of, shall we say, “intestinal distress” back then, which caused them to quickly lose many of the calories they had eaten in the past 24 hours.
Better food safety practices mean less diarrhea and vomiting, more of the food we eat actually stays in our bodies.
If only....
I have IBS with frequent "intestinal distress." I am NOT thin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your "question" reeks of misogyny. You don't ask the same about young men, even though there are similarities. Go troll elsewhere.
and your reaction reeks of misandry. Haven’t you done enough damage to young men without fat shaming.
Whuh? DP here but holy hell your response is completely nonsensical. It's the grown up version of "well, you're a doo doo head." Come on, Surely you can do better.
Not at all. A poster wondered why fat young men were not of concern. I responded that enough damage has been done to young members that fat shaming should not be heaped on them. If you don’t think there is a problem with young men in this country, you “doo doo” have your “head” buried in the sand.
Please tell me what “damage” has been done to young males recently.