You know you're too fat
sabadabada
5,966 Posts
When you order delivery for just you, and they put two sets of forks and knives in the bag.
Comments
I'm actually somewhat thin, but have bad cholesterol, my blood pressure is fine, but I'm not exercising too much these days. Still, I can't stop eating pork, cheese, cream, and all that good stuff. My wife is forever cautioning me, to which I say, what if I get hit by a bus tomorrow and had a salad for lunch instead of the carnitas burrito with extra sour cream and cheese, would St. Peter still let me into heaven?
I hate to tell you, but unless you're taller than 6'3" your BMI is higher than 30.0, putting you in the sadly ever growing ranks of people who are actually medically considered "obese"
Fortunately, I'm 6'5", but its still kind of gross.
Have you considered bulimia? It's not just for women anymore.
I feel you. Since cutting down drastically on beer consumption, carnitas is pretty much the only thing standing between myself and thinness.
So at 6'1", 240 lbs., Dhani Jones is obese?
BMI is probably a decent indicator of obesity for the non-athletic population, but for people who work out with any regularity, body fat percentage is a much more accurate indicator.
So Saba, get some calipers and find out how fat you really are.
My spare tire has gone from mountain bike to almost Honda Civic or maybe a Kia. Plus I had a dinner party at Carmines last night and the associate lunch today is BBQ. There is no escaping it.
Rumor has it your Oxfords shudder when you take them out of the closet and wince in pain with every step you take.
Half a bottle of BBQ sauce? I guess we'll see you on The Biggest Loser in a few months along with Saba.
Word. We're gonna have to change your name to Macadamia.
I've heard this several times as an argument against BMI - "Well, that would mean that Mike Tyson / Barry Bonds / etc is obese!" and always thought it was kind of bogus. I guess the concern is that BMI, as an over-simplified index, will falsely convince somebody that they're overweight. However, the tiny fraction of people who reach a 30 BMI with low body fat got there by hard work and careful eating. They know exactly where they stand.
And likewise, what's the chance that somebody who's not paying attention to diet and exercise gets concerned about their BMI only to discover that, who could have guessed, they're actually solid muscle?
I agree that body fat percentage is a more useful measurement, but I don't think the edge cases invalidate BMI as a diagnostic tool. For me the main place it gets problematic is if health insurers start using BMI in their risk calculations without taking other indicators of fitness into account.
Body Mass Index is a statistical measure of weight based on weight and height.
BMI=mass(kg) / height(m)squared
BMI=mass(lb)(703) / height(in)squared
Saba is (243lbs)(703) / (77in)(77in) = 28.8 which classifies him as overweight. At 30 he would be in Obese Class 1.
Wiki or Google it; BMI is an extremely popular and widely used measure. My criticism of BMI is that statistically I don't think it can be applied to other populations (fat in Cambodia is not the same as fat in Philadelphia). Japan and Singapore have slightly different classifications (Saba would be obese in those countries). Also, it doesn't apply to all body types (i.e. athletes as mentioned above). Anyone else annoyed by statistically normalized shit that is skewed in favor of an already unhealthy population? According to the index I can gain 40 pounds and still be in the "normal" range (I'm 63 in and 100 lb). Bullshit. Stats people speak up!
Mental health problems, maybe. I mean, when the Godfather came back with that bullsh*t, Hollywood-ized, mid-80s showfunk and turned up in a Rocky moovee wearing that gaudy-as-fu*k, glittery USA cape, I damn near lost my mind.
Sorry but that statement made me cringe pretty hard... Have you ever been in Cambodia ? They have way more serious issues to solve before calculating their BMI...
That was my intent. We calculate our BMIs and consider ourselves "normal" and "overweight" based on an index that fails to take into account other populations and the unequal distribution of resources/wealth/food across other regions of the globe. Places like Cambodia should highlight the fact that our perceptions are skewed by an internal sense of averageness reflected in a normal distribution that is not transitive. I think the BMI should be renamed the American BMI, and that the WHO should NOT use it. Furthermore, I was speaking from a statistical point of view (in the academic sense of the word), and was not necessarily making political implications.
And no, I have not been to Cambodia. But I have been to India and Singapore (not the same as Cambodia, I know) and am grateful for the infrastructure and resources I am surrounded with.
Yea me too - 5'2" - 125lbs
I'M PHAT.
kind of expected to be underweight, or something. tall n lanky related
big ol cosign
our food culture has basically been turned over to processed foods manufacturers.
coca cola, heinz ketchup, aunt jemima
corn derivative garbage lowest common denominator cheap byproduct industrial trash
but people think its dope cause it has nice packaging, lots of sweetners and a bangin add campaign
this is all common knowledge at this point (to any decently educated individual). its a governmental issue, period.