seriously guys
He has kids, has a main job, runs a side business, and has a history of damage from endurance exercise and low carb
Guy should be 400 lbs
This is just laughable, and you know it.
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seriously guys
He has kids, has a main job, runs a side business, and has a history of damage from endurance exercise and low carb
Guy should be 400 lbs
I’m actually much more inspired by haidut at the moment, how he is able to raise a family with kids, going out to eat, playing soccer with friends, drinking with friends, and in the meantime able to setup a company
First he's obviously jealous. Second, he's here to undermine Georgi's credibility (as if he could). Third ..., never mind, he's not worth a third point. I'd just swat him away.Lol, someone has an axe to grind.
5+ people in my family, 1 still alive (95), all would've been considered a little "overweight," but everyone one of them were sharp into their 90's. My living 95 year old grandma lived in her own apartment with her little brother (94 years old) alone.
My dogs (German Shepherds) have always carried a little extra weight in middle age. I always know when it's getting close to the end when they get very lean.
Ha!
:10:This forum has never been perfect but it used to be a lot less confrontational way back. We are all here together on our own health journey, let's be friends lol. :---)
I don't think being confrontational has a lot to do with being friends or not. It can be inconsiderate.. but that's different:10:
It’s actually @charlie (s) forum.Anyone going to tag Georgi (Haidut) so he can defend himself on his own forum?
When ever I see a very lean raccoon, squirrel, coyote or other wild animal, my first thought is uh-oh, that animal must be sick-dying-starving. I’m really baffled by why human beings think leanness=health. In the animal world it generally does not. A well fed animal looks vital and healthy, an animal that has obvious musculature due to lack of fat sends alarm signals. Those are the ones that get picked off by predators or disease.Same in my family. My great-grandparents immigrated to the U.S. from Hungary and lived to be 95. They lived in their own apartment, doing everything for themselves, until their last day (my great-grandfather died in his sleep, and my great-grandmother called my grandmother to tell her, then died before my grandmother could get to their apartment).
My great-grandmother was plump for all the years I knew her.
My wildest cat, who mostly hunts for herself, gets plump every year just before winter, then loses all the weight in the spring and gets very lean by mid-summer.
My dogs (German Shepherds) have always carried a little extra weight in middle age. I always know when it's getting close to the end when they get very lean.
When ever I see a very lean raccoon, squirrel, coyote or other wild animal, my first thought is uh-oh, that animal must be sick-dying-starving. I’m really baffled by why human beings think leanness=health. In the animal world it generally does not. A well fed animal looks vital and healthy, an animal that has obvious musculature due to lack of fat sends alarm signals. Those are the ones that get picked off by predators or disease.