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1 new of 41 responses total.
resp:25 I guess that is possible. However, I think there are a LOT of people who arent comfortable with their weight and who suffer quite a lot from it and who simply cannot maintain any significant weight loss. So while I suppose there are people out there who just are happy with their weight and the level of discomfort it causes, I dont think that in our present culture of discrimination and fat hatred that there are many fat people who would be comfortable with *that. But I imagine that there are plenty of people who are comfortable with the way their bodies feel to them even at very large sizes. It seems to me that things like that are likely to vary among individuals. As for me personally, it isnt so much about tolerating a level of incapacitation so much as avoiding things that make me feel miserable. There are many many things about my weight that I dont like. I imagine that anyone at any sort of size extreme might feel some of the same things. The world simply isnt built for people of my size or for very tall people or very short people. I cant even begin to tell you of the physical discomfort I feel on a regular basis because of my size. Chairs often dont fit me and are thus extremely uncomfortable, especially those little half desks they have at EMU. So yes, I am talking about physical pain, sometimes pretty bad pain too, caused because I am too fat to fit in the chair correctly. And trust me, that is just one of about a hundred things I dont like about being fat. Efforts to lose weight have always made me feel worse. And while sustained weight loss is not the typical result of any commercial diet, symptoms of starvation neurosis apparently are very common (at least according to one of the few controlled experiments on weight loss - The Minnesota Starvation Study) These symptoms are: * Cognitive processes center on food. Thoughts of food intrude constantly; the major part of the waking hours are spent in contemplating it. * Behavior includes toying with food and hoarding it, especially during re-nourishment. * Coherent, creative thinking is impaired. * Mental function is characterized by apathy, dullness, exhaustion, and depression. * Interest in sex wanes. Basically I suspect that weight is a very individual matter as is health. There are people who can eat all they want and stay thin. There are people who gain weight if they wanted to but choose not to. There are people who couldnt gain weight if they wanted to. There are people who put on weight and then are able to lose it by maintaining a state of semi-starvation for the rest of their lives. There are people who put on weight who suffer a lot if they try to lose weight. Everyone is different. And that is why you cannot look at a person's body and know very much about them at all. You cant know if that 300 lb person gets lots of exercise and eats a great diet. You cant know if that 180 lb person has more will power than some 300 lb person. You cant look at a very thin person and know if they are thin because they restrict their calories or if they are just naturally thin. You cant know if they are smart, or motivated, or lazy motherfuckers shoveling in the pizzas while sitting on the couch in their underpants. You really can not tell that by looking at a person's body.
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