As well as executive produce? I assume that you'd have some kind of creator credit given that it's a spin-off.
Middle age health thread for fatties
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
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Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
"I used to bullseye womp rats in my T-16 back in Whittier, they're not much bigger than two meters.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
- 101Walterton
- The Best
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- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 5:36pm
- Location: Volcanic Rock In The Pacific
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Sheridan Smith for Tom’s partner.
- Marky Dread
- Messiah of the Milk Bar
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- Joined: 17 Jun 2008, 11:26am
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Only if I can remaster it.
Forces have been looting
My humanity
Curfews have been curbing
The end of liberty
We're the flowers in the dustbin...
No fuchsias for you.
"Without the common people you're nothing"
Nos Sumus Una Familia
- Heston
- God of Thunder...and Rock 'n Roll
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Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Work your magic on WBTCORAR for me please.
There's a tiny, tiny hopeful part of me that says you guys are running a Kaufmanesque long con on the board
- Marky Dread
- Messiah of the Milk Bar
- Posts: 59039
- Joined: 17 Jun 2008, 11:26am
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
By removing all the music and lyrics?
Forces have been looting
My humanity
Curfews have been curbing
The end of liberty
We're the flowers in the dustbin...
No fuchsias for you.
"Without the common people you're nothing"
Nos Sumus Una Familia
- Heston
- God of Thunder...and Rock 'n Roll
- Posts: 38370
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 4:07pm
- Location: North of Watford Junction
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
"Medulla looks forward to that FLAC of four minutes of silence"
There's a tiny, tiny hopeful part of me that says you guys are running a Kaufmanesque long con on the board
- Marky Dread
- Messiah of the Milk Bar
- Posts: 59039
- Joined: 17 Jun 2008, 11:26am
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
For him I'll make a special megamix.Heston wrote: ↑12 Nov 2019, 7:44pm"Medulla looks forward to that FLAC of four minutes of silence"
Forces have been looting
My humanity
Curfews have been curbing
The end of liberty
We're the flowers in the dustbin...
No fuchsias for you.
"Without the common people you're nothing"
Nos Sumus Una Familia
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116696
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
It's still too loud. I want a mix that erases it from my memory.Marky Dread wrote: ↑12 Nov 2019, 7:45pmFor him I'll make a special megamix.
"I used to bullseye womp rats in my T-16 back in Whittier, they're not much bigger than two meters.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
- Marky Dread
- Messiah of the Milk Bar
- Posts: 59039
- Joined: 17 Jun 2008, 11:26am
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Enough! Enough! no more aaaarrrggghhh!Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑12 Nov 2019, 8:06pmIt's still too loud. I want a mix that erases it from my memory.
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Forces have been looting
My humanity
Curfews have been curbing
The end of liberty
We're the flowers in the dustbin...
No fuchsias for you.
"Without the common people you're nothing"
Nos Sumus Una Familia
- Flex
- Mechano-Man of the Future
- Posts: 35982
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:50pm
- Location: The Information Superhighway!
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Since this is the thread for it, here's sharing some of my recent exploits:
i gained some weight over the last six months (the broken foot really knocked the wind out of sails in the spring and then recovery was taking place in the summer combined with some mental and phsyical lethargy from job woes) but I've been pretty good and disciplined for the last month or so, hitting the gym and running just about every day and really tightening up the diet (in the sense of general food consumption, not going on a diet per-se) and I've already lost about half the weight I put back on. I've been using three techniques:
1. Calorie tracking for food intake: I use MyFitnessPal on my phone to track what I eat. While it's basically obvious to a person when they've eaten enough or too much or whatever, forcing some focus on eating decisions pays dividends for me at least. I did this in my initial bout of losing weight and it was probably the single most effective thing I did. When I get out of the habit, there's a tendency for drinking 1-2 beers to turn into 3-5, you know how it goes...
2. Intermittent fasting: Not in the sense of skipping eating for 1 or more days at a time, but trying to not eat for 13-16 hours nightly, mostly while I sleep. There's some evidence that this form of fasting is helpful for accelerating weight loss and regulating appetite: https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/int ... 8062914156
While I'd take that with a bit of a grain of salt, it has the very obvious benefit of stopping late night snacking which keeps from eating more than I planned and also usually leads to a better night's sleep since I'm not going to bed with a bunch of food or drink churning in my stomach.
3. Regular exercise: There's evidence that exercise doesn't do as much for losing weight as one thinks, but there are other obvious psychological benefits (and weight maintenance benefits) to getting back into the habit of regular exercise. Besides recommitting to regularly running - I have a 10k coming up on Thanksgiving and I've been talking to the missus about signing up for my first full marathon next year - I've rotated weight lifting into the mix this year, which has been great. I'm finally leaning into the 80s hardcore punk aesthetic I've surrounded myself with all my life, lol. I have some buddies who hit the gym regularly, and so we can use it as a way to socialize on the reg which is a good motivator too - I've definitely felt the "hard to spend time with friends" bug bite in adulthood. We have a pretty nice municipal rec center that's a 5 minute drive from me too, which helps. Great steam room and sauna for when we wrap up, which is a nice treat.
Anyways, this has been pretty effective for me. I definitely do better when I have some sort of structure with which to think about health choices I'm making but without a ton of rules (like, around eating and such) that I'll inevitably break. I'd say the difference between now and the last time I went on a weight loss jaunt is that this time I'm incorporating the intermittent fasting as a way to curb snacking and I jettisoned some daily, short meditating I'd been doing and stopped feeling like I was getting a lot of value out of. I think "meditating apps" and the like have some uses but probably ultimately aren't as satisfying as a real medidation session led by someone with experience, so I might stick to finding some of those occasionally.
i gained some weight over the last six months (the broken foot really knocked the wind out of sails in the spring and then recovery was taking place in the summer combined with some mental and phsyical lethargy from job woes) but I've been pretty good and disciplined for the last month or so, hitting the gym and running just about every day and really tightening up the diet (in the sense of general food consumption, not going on a diet per-se) and I've already lost about half the weight I put back on. I've been using three techniques:
1. Calorie tracking for food intake: I use MyFitnessPal on my phone to track what I eat. While it's basically obvious to a person when they've eaten enough or too much or whatever, forcing some focus on eating decisions pays dividends for me at least. I did this in my initial bout of losing weight and it was probably the single most effective thing I did. When I get out of the habit, there's a tendency for drinking 1-2 beers to turn into 3-5, you know how it goes...
2. Intermittent fasting: Not in the sense of skipping eating for 1 or more days at a time, but trying to not eat for 13-16 hours nightly, mostly while I sleep. There's some evidence that this form of fasting is helpful for accelerating weight loss and regulating appetite: https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/int ... 8062914156
While I'd take that with a bit of a grain of salt, it has the very obvious benefit of stopping late night snacking which keeps from eating more than I planned and also usually leads to a better night's sleep since I'm not going to bed with a bunch of food or drink churning in my stomach.
3. Regular exercise: There's evidence that exercise doesn't do as much for losing weight as one thinks, but there are other obvious psychological benefits (and weight maintenance benefits) to getting back into the habit of regular exercise. Besides recommitting to regularly running - I have a 10k coming up on Thanksgiving and I've been talking to the missus about signing up for my first full marathon next year - I've rotated weight lifting into the mix this year, which has been great. I'm finally leaning into the 80s hardcore punk aesthetic I've surrounded myself with all my life, lol. I have some buddies who hit the gym regularly, and so we can use it as a way to socialize on the reg which is a good motivator too - I've definitely felt the "hard to spend time with friends" bug bite in adulthood. We have a pretty nice municipal rec center that's a 5 minute drive from me too, which helps. Great steam room and sauna for when we wrap up, which is a nice treat.
Anyways, this has been pretty effective for me. I definitely do better when I have some sort of structure with which to think about health choices I'm making but without a ton of rules (like, around eating and such) that I'll inevitably break. I'd say the difference between now and the last time I went on a weight loss jaunt is that this time I'm incorporating the intermittent fasting as a way to curb snacking and I jettisoned some daily, short meditating I'd been doing and stopped feeling like I was getting a lot of value out of. I think "meditating apps" and the like have some uses but probably ultimately aren't as satisfying as a real medidation session led by someone with experience, so I might stick to finding some of those occasionally.
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle like a bowl of soup
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle like a rolling hoop
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle like a ton of lead
Wiggle - you can raise the dead
Pex Lives!
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle like a rolling hoop
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle like a ton of lead
Wiggle - you can raise the dead
Pex Lives!
- Marky Dread
- Messiah of the Milk Bar
- Posts: 59039
- Joined: 17 Jun 2008, 11:26am
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Sounds like you are proper on it mate. Good luck with everything.Flex wrote: ↑15 Nov 2019, 3:21pmSince this is the thread for it, here's sharing some of my recent exploits:
i gained some weight over the last six months (the broken foot really knocked the wind out of sails in the spring and then recovery was taking place in the summer combined with some mental and phsyical lethargy from job woes) but I've been pretty good and disciplined for the last month or so, hitting the gym and running just about every day and really tightening up the diet (in the sense of general food consumption, not going on a diet per-se) and I've already lost about half the weight I put back on. I've been using three techniques:
1. Calorie tracking for food intake: I use MyFitnessPal on my phone to track what I eat. While it's basically obvious to a person when they've eaten enough or too much or whatever, forcing some focus on eating decisions pays dividends for me at least. I did this in my initial bout of losing weight and it was probably the single most effective thing I did. When I get out of the habit, there's a tendency for drinking 1-2 beers to turn into 3-5, you know how it goes...
2. Intermittent fasting: Not in the sense of skipping eating for 1 or more days at a time, but trying to not eat for 13-16 hours nightly, mostly while I sleep. There's some evidence that this form of fasting is helpful for accelerating weight loss and regulating appetite: https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/int ... 8062914156
While I'd take that with a bit of a grain of salt, it has the very obvious benefit of stopping late night snacking which keeps from eating more than I planned and also usually leads to a better night's sleep since I'm not going to bed with a bunch of food or drink churning in my stomach.
3. Regular exercise: There's evidence that exercise doesn't do as much for losing weight as one thinks, but there are other obvious psychological benefits (and weight maintenance benefits) to getting back into the habit of regular exercise. Besides recommitting to regularly running - I have a 10k coming up on Thanksgiving and I've been talking to the missus about signing up for my first full marathon next year - I've rotated weight lifting into the mix this year, which has been great. I'm finally leaning into the 80s hardcore punk aesthetic I've surrounded myself with all my life, lol. I have some buddies who hit the gym regularly, and so we can use it as a way to socialize on the reg which is a good motivator too - I've definitely felt the "hard to spend time with friends" bug bite in adulthood. We have a pretty nice municipal rec center that's a 5 minute drive from me too, which helps. Great steam room and sauna for when we wrap up, which is a nice treat.
Anyways, this has been pretty effective for me. I definitely do better when I have some sort of structure with which to think about health choices I'm making but without a ton of rules (like, around eating and such) that I'll inevitably break. I'd say the difference between now and the last time I went on a weight loss jaunt is that this time I'm incorporating the intermittent fasting as a way to curb snacking and I jettisoned some daily, short meditating I'd been doing and stopped feeling like I was getting a lot of value out of. I think "meditating apps" and the like have some uses but probably ultimately aren't as satisfying as a real medidation session led by someone with experience, so I might stick to finding some of those occasionally.
Forces have been looting
My humanity
Curfews have been curbing
The end of liberty
We're the flowers in the dustbin...
No fuchsias for you.
"Without the common people you're nothing"
Nos Sumus Una Familia
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116696
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
Good work, K. It really is a structure thing, so that acting out of the norm—whether it's overindulgence or skipping exercise—feels off. Much as I hate the grind of biking five or six days a week, it's such a part of my daily ritual that skipping a day nags at me. You'll be back to where you were before you know it.
"I used to bullseye womp rats in my T-16 back in Whittier, they're not much bigger than two meters.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
- WestwayKid
- Unknown Immortal
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- Joined: 20 Sep 2017, 8:22am
- Location: Mill-e-wah-que
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
If I could just give up soda I'd be happy...
"They don't think it be like it is, but it do." - Oscar Gamble
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116696
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Middle age health thread for fatties
How much do you drink?
"I used to bullseye womp rats in my T-16 back in Whittier, they're not much bigger than two meters.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft