P
peeonme
Guest
@ aristomaniac,
You have put some real thought in to your post, I never had weight gain to speak of until I was in my late 60's. As a boy in the residential school I ate a lot, at 13-15 I was at about 105 lbs. and around 5'2" tall. At 21 I was 5'7" and 130 lbs. I stayed in that range until my 50's.
But back to my point, at 13-15 all of us boys ate the same. We were very active with work and exercise. There were no snack foods to speak of, no soda pop. I never saw a fat kid lose weight in the 18 months that I was there. Not one. There were 180 of us there, the fat guys stuck out like a sore thumb.
No one was cheating or goofing off, it was a controlled environment. I grew much stronger while there, but didn't accumulate body mass. I was bench pressing 120 lbs, I weighed 105. My body responded well to the good diet and activity. Some were not that fortunate.
I knew one guy at that place who weighed 145, he was benching over 200 lbs. I saw a recent pic of him some 50 years later and he is fat, he is about 68 now. I am sure that his metabolism has slowed down but his eating habits have not changed.
So it seems that genetics plays a role, just as it does with some disease. Outside of epilepsy I have never has any health issues outside of some worn out joints from years of work, that is excluding mental health problems.
When one is prone to obesity I believe that it should not be ignored, but controlled. For some it is easier than others.
You have put some real thought in to your post, I never had weight gain to speak of until I was in my late 60's. As a boy in the residential school I ate a lot, at 13-15 I was at about 105 lbs. and around 5'2" tall. At 21 I was 5'7" and 130 lbs. I stayed in that range until my 50's.
But back to my point, at 13-15 all of us boys ate the same. We were very active with work and exercise. There were no snack foods to speak of, no soda pop. I never saw a fat kid lose weight in the 18 months that I was there. Not one. There were 180 of us there, the fat guys stuck out like a sore thumb.
No one was cheating or goofing off, it was a controlled environment. I grew much stronger while there, but didn't accumulate body mass. I was bench pressing 120 lbs, I weighed 105. My body responded well to the good diet and activity. Some were not that fortunate.
I knew one guy at that place who weighed 145, he was benching over 200 lbs. I saw a recent pic of him some 50 years later and he is fat, he is about 68 now. I am sure that his metabolism has slowed down but his eating habits have not changed.
So it seems that genetics plays a role, just as it does with some disease. Outside of epilepsy I have never has any health issues outside of some worn out joints from years of work, that is excluding mental health problems.
When one is prone to obesity I believe that it should not be ignored, but controlled. For some it is easier than others.

