[–] Carsandsarcasm 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
This is exactly what thin people do, though, except they aren't lying about it. It speaks volumes that fat people think that exercise must be a punishment and that all thin people just hate themselves and force themselves through it. It is supposed to be challenging and exhausting, but ultimately it's not a miserable experience. Thin people eat to feel better too. Eating is an enjoyable experience for most of us. This moron has accidentally made the case that thin versus fat is entirely due to lifestyle and that fat people simply have the moderation wrong.
[–] TheStapler 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
She’s wrong that they’ll always exist, the apocalypse that they are accelerating us toward will ensure that they don’t.
[–] existencebills88 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago
What's up with using a 'skinny bitch' as your profile pic though?
[–] tripfagssuck 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
It's because the twitter profile picture size is so discriminating! You can barely fit a child's face in it, shitlord, stop being so oppressive!
[–] rompele 0 points 7 points 7 points (+7|-0) ago
I’m convinced that “mindful eating” to them means “thinking about food even while eating.” Stuffing 5,000 calories into your mouth per day of processed food-like products is the complete opposite of truly mindful eating.
I’m addition, when you’re a huge, disgusting fatass, there is nothing to celebrate, because your body cannot do anything. Okay, so you think waddling on the treadmill for 10 minutes “celebrates” what your body can “do?”
How about eating less and stop trying to convince us that you’re some badass super athlete, and not the complete waste of space that you really are.
PS: we already know you’re an unhealthy sack of shit because we have eyes— you don’t need to show proof of your “health” because it doesn’t exist. This post just affirms why I hate fat people.
[–] ForestsAndTrees 0 points 4 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago
Stuffing 5,000 calories into your mouth per day of processed food-like products is the complete opposite of truly mindful eating.
Right?! I love food. But it's an appreciation that comes along with knowing the ingredients in the things I'm eating. Appreciating all the life, all the death that came from getting the ingredients together. It's the past where I was tweaking recipes and trying this or that thing. Teaching and learning aspects related to cooking and preparing it. The balance of vitamins, minerals, protein and fiber. And evil as it makes us the (gasp) calories.
Which isn't to say that one has to make a meal to appreciate it. But 'someone' needs to have made it. Not something, but someone. You can't be mindful of something that came from a black box system. Appreciative, sure. But not mindful. Mindful appreciation can come from faith in the person making a meal and their dedication to doing right by the people they're making it for. But that doesn't hold with corporations or something made at an assembly line. Being mindful of a meal means that someone, somewhere, must have been mindful of its preparation too.
[–] DorothyMantooth 0 points 6 points 6 points (+6|-0) ago
Yes. Normal people don't need to "celebrate" what our bodies can do, because they just do those things without much effort. I don't walk to "celebrate" that I am capable of putting one foot in front of the other. I don't "celebrate" being able to walk up stairs. The very idea of needing to "celebrate" that, by definition, assumes infirmity as a starting point or default.
I am pleased and proud when I can lift something some might not be able to lift--I picked up my 15-y-o daughter yesterday, and she is two inches taller than me and outweighs me by ten pounds (granted, I couldn't lift her for long, but still)--or run with my dog farther than I could before without getting especially out of breath, or whatever, but I'm not "celebrating" that my body can do that, I'm simply being pleased that I'm not a fat fuck. I can't speak for my friends here who lift and work out seriously, but I imagine it's the same: you celebrate when you reach a goal, but simply being able to lift ten pounds is not something to celebrate, it's a default position.
[–] eatstars 0 points 9 points 9 points (+9|-0) ago
I always hope that these fats who manage to live in fantasy their whole lives realize that their deaths were completely brought on by their own actions in that last moment. I hope they realize what they did to themselves. I hope they suffer a tenth as much as the trouble they created in their sphere of disaster
[–] ForestsAndTrees 0 points 9 points 9 points (+9|-0) ago (edited ago)
I've been around a fair amount of people with serious health issues. And yeah, the people in that position usually have a pretty horrible experience dying. And I know that sounds odd. Like how does anyone 'not' have a horrible time dying. But when you've had a really well lived life, one you're proud of, it cushions the blow to a pretty heavy extent. Not for everyone. But a lot of people. Good or bad, it tends to be those left behind that really start to occupy your thoughts.
And that's the thing about lifestyle related deaths. You see the pain in your loved one's eyes and you know without a doubt that you chose that for them. That they know it too. It's different when it's something that you fought against with them by your side. There's sadness there obviously. And pain. But it's the end of a long fight driven forward by love and appreciation of life. It removes some of the sting of death when everyone was fighting against it together. It's the difference between one person choosing the pain of mourning for his loved ones. And loved ones choosing life and fighting for it. Even if it's not a fight that can be won. Even if coming into it the odds are a million to one. It's the fight itself that really makes the difference at the end.
In a lot of ways it makes it a little easier when one has fought against impossible odds. The people left behind can look at the experience and think "they loved me enough to endure and fight against this for my sake". That love makes it hurt. But it also helps one heal from the loss. It's different when choices made from selfishness caused the death. Harder for the person dying because it's always the elephant in the room. And most are VERY conscious of it. Ironically too in being aware of how much pain they're causing their loved ones they tend to lash out more rather than less.
Dying isn't exactly super fun for anyone. But much of the emotion of the experience comes from the life you led. It's what brings people of various types to your side. It's what you see reflected when you look them in the eye. And in a very real way it's an afterlife that one gets to be aware of before death. Because we 'know' what of us will be held in people's hearts after we're gone. How our experiences with people will shape them and their lives when they're alive but we've gone. When you've fought for life you're often celebrated by life and the living when you're gone. When you fought for corruption your memory instead rots in a living hell of your own creation.
[–] ceasedmerrymaking 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Well said. That is poignant and very true.
[–] mmmmdonuts 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I'm going to start copying and pasting and saving everything you write.
You always remind me of what's really important.
Thank you for that.
[–] generic--username ago
Is the twitter profile picture even her?