ATrollFromTheFatBoard
New member
Hi,
I don't *think* so(?). On my campus we had a health educator who put up the menus every week with the healthiest choices circled for those students who were weight-conscious. I mostly followed those (every now and then I got sick of rabbit food and wanted a taco salad with real sour cream!), plus I knew pretty much that the green crunchy stuff was healthy and nutritious and the french fries weren't. I ate *about* as much as my friends ate. I might eat, say, an extra half slice of chicken and half serving of broccoli, but then again I was running about four times the distance my friend Karen was, too.
*sigh* I'm beginning to wonder about the inferior genetics thing. I wish it were easier for my weight to reflect the amount of exercise I do. But I am not going to stop exercising because it doesn't. I did that once, because I was so pissed off about it, and wasn't very happy with the result.
Anyway, I am always open to advice about the best way to get stronger, have more stamina, and acquire better balance. Just lay off the stuff about body fat and getting thinner, because that part is pretty damned discouraging.
Its very simple. Use fewer calories than you consume, and you will lose weight. When you were exercising for hours and hours each day u must have been eating CARBS like a horse.
I don't *think* so(?). On my campus we had a health educator who put up the menus every week with the healthiest choices circled for those students who were weight-conscious. I mostly followed those (every now and then I got sick of rabbit food and wanted a taco salad with real sour cream!), plus I knew pretty much that the green crunchy stuff was healthy and nutritious and the french fries weren't. I ate *about* as much as my friends ate. I might eat, say, an extra half slice of chicken and half serving of broccoli, but then again I was running about four times the distance my friend Karen was, too.
*sigh* I'm beginning to wonder about the inferior genetics thing. I wish it were easier for my weight to reflect the amount of exercise I do. But I am not going to stop exercising because it doesn't. I did that once, because I was so pissed off about it, and wasn't very happy with the result.
Anyway, I am always open to advice about the best way to get stronger, have more stamina, and acquire better balance. Just lay off the stuff about body fat and getting thinner, because that part is pretty damned discouraging.
