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Author Message
25 new of 378 responses total.
keesan
response 212 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 20:19 UTC 2006

Alcohol is addictive because it interacts with some receptor, which sugar does
not interact with.  But some people can't stop eating sugar as long as it is
near them.  Jim can't eat just part of a half gallon of ice cream so he does
not eat any.  If people can't resist certain foods, they don't need to buy
them and have them in the house.  The big problem is if someone else in the
house buys them and keeps them around.  

There is at least one genetic defect that causes even little kids to get very
obese - I think they have something wrong with the normal feedback loop that
makes you stop being hungry when you have eaten.  There are probably several
such feedbacks, including a full stomach and raised blood sugar.

Some people may lack feedback to eating sugar so they keep eating it (or it
is backwards somehow), so they should probably avoid eating any sugar, like
an alcoholic has to completely avoid alcohol.

SOme people eat as long as they see or smell food, rather than if they are
hungry.
scholar
response 213 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 20:52 UTC 2006

Re. 209:  You're an idiot.  Alcohol is completely different than sugar.  One
chemical doesn't necessarily have another chemical's properties just because
it is derived from that chemical.
richard
response 214 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 20:58 UTC 2006

re #207 anne you talk about "enablers"  Were you Sasha's "enabler"?  
Eighteen pound cats probably= 300lb human beings.  Was that Sasha's fault 
or yours?  Were your roomies feeding Sasha without your knowledge?  Or was 
finding her own ways to secretly access food?  
jadecat
response 215 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 21:09 UTC 2006

resp:214 in a way. My roommate at the time had two cats that were open
fed- and were mostly okay with it. Sasha had been portion fed from the
time she was a kitten- so with open feeding available she went nuts.
Plus I was in denial about just how chubby she was- until she got a lion
cut... whoa. By that time that roomie had moved out, bhelliom had moved
in and I was able to go back to portion feeding her (the amounts as
suggested by her vet). It took time and much patience with "I'm
STARVING!!11!1" whining, but I won. And so did she- she's much
healthier, and much more active now at 8 than she was at 4.

Keep in mind too that some cats CAN be 18 lbs and right in line with
their optimal weigth/health. Cats like Maine Coons are often that big,
or bigger, and aren't chubby. The majority of 'mutt' cats range from
10-12 lbs. Sasha lost about 1/3 of her weight, so it would be like a
person who should weigh 150 weighing 225... 

The idea of her finding anything other than cat food on her own is just
funny. This is the cat that meows at spiders/insects that get into her
view. Apparently she thinks she can talk them into leaving...
slynne
response 216 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 21:41 UTC 2006

resp:200 and resp:201

Well. Although the research on set-point theory isn t conclusive, I ll 
share it anyways but with the caveat that this is only a theory and one 
where there is some research that supports it and some research that 
refutes it. But here it is  There is a theory that people have a 
natural weight set point. Their body will adjust in order to get to 
that set point. If a person starts eating less and starts losing 
weight, their metabolism will slow down. If a person starts eating more 
and starts gaining weight, their metabolism will speed up. Different 
people have different set points though. It is possible that 600lb 
woman, for whatever reason has a set point that is much higher than 
most. 

But really, even if she did eat a lot more than most people to get that 
fat, I see that as evidence that she has a different appetite level 
than other people. There is strong evidence that a large part of a 
person s appetite is physical and relates to hormones in the stomach. 
Maybe her stomach produced more of that hormone than other people 
produce. Maybe her brain is more receptive to that hormone. I have no 
idea. I do know that if that is the case, gastric bypass is probably 
appropriate for her since cutting out the stomach seems to greatly 
reduce the number of those hormones a person produces. 

The real thing is that I don t see her weight as a character flaw. 
Which of course doesn t mean that she doesn t have character flaws. 
Heck, she might be addicted to certain foods for all I know. The point 
is that I don t know and neither do you and neither does the author of 
that blog Mary linked to. There is a word for judging someone  based on 
one s own biases rather than actual information and that is what I am 
accusing people of.  
richard
response 217 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 22:11 UTC 2006

that 600 pound woman needs drugs to increase her metabolism.  She needs some
strong amphetamines.  Better she be hooked on speed than food.
tod
response 218 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 22:12 UTC 2006

I agree that obsession with weight is an epidemic.  I also agree that obesity
is the cause of the epidemic.  I speculate that our country is abnormally
overweight due to the chemicals and sugar in all the food which cause cravings
and weird insulin shocks to our nervous systems.
richard
response 219 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 22:14 UTC 2006

They also have those "fat farms", aka diet camps, there's a famous one at Duke
University, which operate on the idea that the key is to remove the person
entirely from their previous environment.  That you can't lose that much
weight sitting at home surrounded by your enabling loved ones and bad habits.
If this 600 pound woman had the money to go spend 2-3 months at Duke it would
probably make a world of difference.
richard
response 220 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 22:35 UTC 2006

edina before you had your surgery, did you consider other less invasive
options, like liposuction or stomach stapling?  Or going to a fat farm on a
beach, where they give you a liquid diet and let you sweat off the pounds in
the high humidity?  
richard
response 221 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 22:57 UTC 2006

re #207 why did you stop at eleven pounds with Sasha?  Surely with a little
extra work, she can get back into the single digits.  Its only a pound more
to lose to be under ten!  :)
happyboy
response 222 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 23:38 UTC 2006

re217: wrong, amphetamines will kill her sooner than the fat, 
       dummy.


johnnie
response 223 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 23:51 UTC 2006

set point:  A person's set point can and will change (or so the notion
goes).  If one continues to eat too much, the set point will adjust
upwards; if one diets and exercises, the set point will adjust down.
tod
response 224 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 23:53 UTC 2006

re #222
Don't you mean amphatamines?!

I'm all for skinny cow ice cream sandwiches after work.  Who's with me?
marcvh
response 225 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 23:58 UTC 2006

Sure, meet me at the Cold Stone near Westlake Mall.
tod
response 226 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 00:33 UTC 2006

I got my oil changed by Jiffy Lube and they gave me a 2 free Cold Stone 1
scoop coupons
richard
response 227 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 00:41 UTC 2006

supposedly it helps to change from cow milk to soy milk.  cow milk is 
high in fat and a lot of kids get obese from loading up on the milk in 
their cereal over the years.  Problem is I have yet to find a soy milk 
that tastes EXACTLY like regular milk.
tod
response 228 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 00:44 UTC 2006

Soy milk ruins the male libido.
marcvh
response 229 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 00:49 UTC 2006

In that case health insurance should be required to pay for it as a birth
control method, and Wal-Mart should be required by law to stock it.
rcurl
response 230 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 02:35 UTC 2006

So far this has just been about obesity. I think it might be enlightening if
slynne is willing to post the values for her cholesterol (HD and LD) and
triglycerides, to compare with what are considered healthy ranges. 
nharmon
response 231 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 03:04 UTC 2006

I don't see any enlightenment coming from slynee posting her cholesterol
levels. And your amusement is not good enough reason.
tod
response 232 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 04:39 UTC 2006

It wouldn't be enlightening unless we had nathan's hdl and ldl counts to
compare with.
rcurl
response 233 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 06:01 UTC 2006

OK, in case anyone wants to compare, here is a simplified list. These are
important parameters because, regardless of weight, these values can cause
serious consequences if they are out of bounds.

Total cholesterol:  too high  > 200 mg/dl
HDL cholesterol:    too low   <  40 mg/dl
LDL cholesterol:    too high  > 130 mg/dl
Triglycerides:      too high  > 150 mg/dl
nharmon
response 234 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 12:53 UTC 2006

According to my doctor, my cholesterol levels have never been a 
problem. I used to have somewhat high blood pressure, but I think that 
was due to stress because it is normal.
jadecat
response 235 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 15:13 UTC 2006

resp:221 I 'stopped' at 11 lbs, Richard, because that's what the vet old
me she should weigh. I want a healthy cat, not an Ashley Olson in cat form.
richard
response 236 of 378: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 16:31 UTC 2006

re: speed.  most diet pills on the market are really just high end
amphetamines being sold as "diet pills"  The diet products industry is largely
one big scam.
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