furryredmonster
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I'm around 5'2 (i know, i'm short) and weigh anywhere between 110-120 in a day. Says I'm normal weight.
Then you are on the smaller side of the scale for our heightI'm around 5'2 (i know, i'm short) and weigh anywhere between 110-120 in a day. Says I'm normal weight.
Not short...just vertically challenged.Join the club kiddo.I'm around 5'2 (i know, i'm short) and weigh anywhere between 110-120 in a day. Says I'm normal weight.
I think it was stated that if fast food were taxed that incentives should be given to more healthier food options - I mean this by way of lowering consumer price on healthy accessible alternatives.But that's not really a good solution either. Seems like another thing that punnishes poor and unhealthy people for being poor and unhealthy. The only way there's gonna be any change is on the level of the rich. I mean, we can villify the fast food industry a hundred times, but that's not going to villify the other problem- the companies that help to drive up health food prices. No matter how people are trying to solve the health problem, they're all going about it the wrong way.
The reliance on fast food is on 2 levels (not counting people who are addicted to eating, which is something different all together).
on one hand, fast food, frozen dinners, and junk food are usually what most poverty ridden families can afford for one. And the other hand has to do with the fact people work too many hours at a sedintary job/ The lunch hour quickly became the lunch second, and longer hours= less time mom or dad can come home and cook a decient meal. not to mention the fact that, even though they don't move around much, and sit at desks, they come home tired, and spend the rest of the day/night sleeping.
So for real change fast food taxes aren;'t going to do anything in the long run. They aren't going to go to healthcare or anty sort of program to help these people. The real change must come from business themselves. They need to stop working their employees to death, and intigate some sort of fitness regiment one hour a day. The schools need to work on edible food for kids, since lot of these kids have the only major meal at the school cafeteria. And to put more funding into phys ed. And to make it not torturous of course.
The weight for 5'2 is anywhere from 104-135 so yesNot short...just vertically challenged.Join the club kiddo.
But not the weight part.You're the perfect weight. I'm 4'11 and...well just let's leave it at that.
I sometimes workout in the late evenings and there's this one woman who breaks my heart. She's there doing intense cardio during my warm-up. I lift for under an hour and she's still there when I come down for a half hour of cardio and is still going after I leave. That's around two hours that I know she's there. It's apparent she's there for many hours and she's unnaturally skeleton-thin. It is no exaggeration. It is evident that she has a disorder and I can't see how the staff allows her do harm herself that way on the premises - even at night. It is just very, very sad. It serves to keep my priorities in check whenever I exhibit extreme behavior of any sort. I hope she gets help, but fear the night I stop seeing her will mean she passed away. The staff knows about her so I doubt there’s anything that can be done on my side, but I hate to be another person who does nothing.But, on the other side of the argument, you have people who are too thin, looking very bony, and very sick trying to meet with "the standards". Hollywood is a prime example of this. People who are anorexic and having bulimia are in the news all the time.
Look at some of the top actresses around. Cameron Diaz, Julia Roberts, Halle Berry(even though she can't act), Nicole Kidman, etc. are all thin. When you seem them getting their pictures made wearing a dress, they do look too thin. Even in last year's comedy "Knocked Up", Katherine Heigl's character is asked to lose some weight with the new job she just got promoted to, but Heigl's character looks like she has a healthy weight.
My advice is, eat healthy, stay active, but at the same time don't compare yourself to everyone else. If you think or more importantly if you know you need to lose some pounds, go ahead and do it, even though it's easier said than done.
But don't freight about this. Everyone is different.
Have you ever talked to them about it? It can't hurt.but fear the night I stop seeing her will mean she passed away. The staff knows about her so I doubt there’s anything that can be done on my side, but I hate to be another person who does nothing.
Do I think taxes are the way to go? Actually, yeah! I do. If anything deserves a “sin” tax in this country it is McDonald’s. Other affordable healthier options would arise.