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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 48 responses total. |
glenda
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response 24 of 48:
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Aug 26 20:57 UTC 2003 |
Damon is 6'8" tall. At 250 lbs he would be a toothpick. At 275 lbs he has
a little bit of a pot gut which scares the hell out of me. When he gets the
pot gut, he is about to shoot up another 2-4 inches.
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polytarp
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response 25 of 48:
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Aug 26 21:15 UTC 2003 |
I like Chinese dumplings.
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tod
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response 26 of 48:
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Aug 26 23:17 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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polytarp
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response 27 of 48:
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Aug 27 02:07 UTC 2003 |
I h8 fags.
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goose
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response 28 of 48:
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Aug 27 02:58 UTC 2003 |
They hate you.
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russ
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response 29 of 48:
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Aug 27 03:05 UTC 2003 |
I'm not 250 pounds, but I volunteer to help sit on sabre. I'll buy
bean burritos for everyone beforehand, too.
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jaklumen
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response 30 of 48:
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Aug 27 04:42 UTC 2003 |
resp:23 That's what's been so frustrating-- I've been so tired to keep
up a regimen-- so at least I do the walking. Julie suggested that I
stay active and not sit for very long, so as well as walking at work
(I usually walk about 3-5 blocks to the city library to pick up the
batteries for recycling) I get up from my desk about every 15-30
minutes for some sort of break to fax resumes, take print orders, or
whatever. I hope it will work.
Also, I came straight home from work, after I went to the agency to
send off an application. Could afford to do the lunch time thing
again: too many hidden sugars. So lunch was spinach greens, tuna,
green olives, and lemon tarragon dressing. I did go out to dinner
with my wife and daughter, but there was no dessert and I monitored
carefully what I was eating: diet pop, salad, the soup had a little
barley in it... not too many carbs. The eating plan I follow allows
carbs for dinner but limits the meal to an hour, but I decided to
forgo any obvious sugar.
I plan to keep measuring, keep weighing (measure fat more than pound),
and walk. The night time ritual will be nasal strips and a
humidifier. Hopefully, it will help some until the study.
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drew
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response 31 of 48:
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Aug 27 19:18 UTC 2003 |
Re #27:
Good for you! They cause cancer, y'know.
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polytarp
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response 32 of 48:
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Aug 27 22:49 UTC 2003 |
And AIDS.
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jaklumen
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response 33 of 48:
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Aug 29 07:43 UTC 2003 |
My scale readings made me very happy today: I'm down to about 307 lbs,
if I remember right, and about 37% fat. Hopefully this will continue.
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happyboy
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response 34 of 48:
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Aug 29 18:16 UTC 2003 |
how many pounds per week?
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tod
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response 35 of 48:
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Aug 29 18:25 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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happyboy
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response 36 of 48:
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Aug 29 18:31 UTC 2003 |
/runs for cover
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jaklumen
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response 37 of 48:
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Aug 30 06:50 UTC 2003 |
the average is only 2 lbs., but overall fat pounds has been about 8 so
far.
resp:35 Bed, Bath, & Beyond. It's a Tanita digital scale-- not sure
what the model number is.
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polygon
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response 38 of 48:
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Aug 30 15:45 UTC 2003 |
Re 15. No, losing weight became easier because without the apnea, I
am more rested by sleep and able to be more active during the day.
I was accustomed to feeling like my head was stuffed with cotton.
I could lie down and go to sleep anywhere, anytime.
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jaklumen
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response 39 of 48:
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Aug 30 20:33 UTC 2003 |
An interesting way to put it...
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edina
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response 40 of 48:
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Sep 9 19:06 UTC 2003 |
Dude - lose the soda. All of it. I've been on pure water for 3 weeks now,
and I've noticed a few things besides all of the weight loss (as that's not
the main contributor) - my skin is getting better and my teeth look better.
Water is the greatest gift you can give yourself.
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jaklumen
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response 41 of 48:
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Sep 9 23:21 UTC 2003 |
Even diet? I've never been able to tell if carbonation is the culprit.
I try to drink a big class of water in the morning-- probably what I
need to do is take a mug of water to work.
I got my sleep study scheduled, so I go to the lab to sleep on the
16th of October. I can hardly wait.
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gull
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response 42 of 48:
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Sep 11 02:53 UTC 2003 |
The culprit is probably the caffeine, which is a diuretic. People who drink
mostly caffeinated beverages tend to be dehydrated, and proper hydration has
all kinds of unexpected benefits.
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edina
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response 43 of 48:
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Sep 11 16:21 UTC 2003 |
I'm supposed to be getting 64 oz. of water a day. Plus whatever else I want
to drink. As my stomach is now the size of 2 oz., I have decided to forgo
all other liquids.
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slynne
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response 44 of 48:
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Sep 11 16:53 UTC 2003 |
How long does it take for the water to go through your stomach? I
always wondered that. I mean, you cant sit down and drink 8 ounces of
water in a 15 minute period can you?
How many calories are you getting a day? I read that the average after
this type of surgery is like 600. I also read that even though folks
are only getting a few calories, they dont feel hungry. Have you found
that to be true?
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edina
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response 45 of 48:
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Sep 11 17:01 UTC 2003 |
It takes me about 30 minutes to get through 8 oz. of water - if I'm
concentrating on it. I'm not sure how many calories I get - I concentrate
more on grams of protein, as I ideally like to hit 50 grams. With a protein
shake and the amount of beans and meat I get, I don't worry about it too much.
(If you don't get enough protein, it causes fatigue, hair loss, slows down
healing of the incision . . . .) I am rarely without a bottle of water, plus
I've learned to cheat a bit - when I make a protein shake, I toss in a bunch
of ice cubes for the blender - it makes it more like a milkshake and I get
more water.
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tod
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response 46 of 48:
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Sep 12 04:37 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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rcurl
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response 47 of 48:
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Sep 12 04:59 UTC 2003 |
(Sure - 0.001 Calorie per degree Celsius above the liquid reference state.)
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tod
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response 48 of 48:
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Sep 12 17:27 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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