toyotathon posted:winebaby posted:month seven of ovoveganism, just finished a 36-hour juice cleanse, soon i shall be my ideal weight (birth weight)
was there any one thing or two things that flipped the switch for you? that's like a life-goal, not the birth weight thing, your diet
Not exactly. It helps that the substitute food has become good enough that it isn't a serious lifestyle impediment. Also that I have a durable palette and am not addicted to e.g. sugar. Also that where I live has a lot of vegan-friendly restaurants. A lot of my friends are going vegan in response to climate crises, which means less problems in group dining scenarios. And I think I've reached a point in my life (13 m.o.) where I ought to be taking generally better care of myself. Basically, bourgeois reasons.
c_man posted:if i go swimming every week my times get mostly worse but if i stop going for several months if feels like they get better. seems fishy to me.
Sounds like you're not eating enough.......
Belphegor posted:Started working in a kitchen again. I get back pain, I think because I'm too tall for the standard surface heights and I have bad posture
What can I do to protect my back?
Wear insoles in your shoes, and get brighter lights on the kitchen surfaces so you don't feel like you have to stoop down to see what you're doing
karphead posted:i snowshoe'd ten miles, how you like me now
that sounds awful. today was 23c and sunny. daffodils are done, irises are blooming
karphead posted:i snowshoe'd ten miles, how you like me now
i like you..................... a lot!!!!
whose recipes do you use? my friend's wife swears by Maangchi and she's only lead me wrong once before, the batter on the fried chicken (or whatever else you want to batter and fry) recipe just doesn't work for me.
The most important change was mental, though, in that i finally embraced body-fascism. Sitting at my computer for several hours a day pushing myself to extinguish the desire to eat sugars and breads actually began to pay off around the second week. I'm angrier, now, I think. My clothes from late college fit (still another 20 pounds to go for early college) and I feel better all the time, minus the subtle but powerful desire to avoid contact with people who, out of the goodness their heart, want me to relapse and become their big fat friend again.
The most important change was mental, though, in that i finally embraced body-fascism. Sitting at my computer for several hours a day pushing myself to extinguish the desire to eat sugars and breads actually began to pay off around the second week. I'm angrier, now, I think. My clothes from late college fit (still another 20 pounds to go for early college) and I feel better all the time, minus the subtle but powerful desire to avoid contact with people who, out of the goodness their heart, want me to relapse and become their big fat friend again.
shriekingviolet posted:korean is pretty affordable too, though it might be good to try to tone down the sugar and salt content in some of the recipes (and I say this as a person who unapologetically cooks lots of salty rich foods.) its also a very good culinary tradition to learn to expand your vegetarian repertoire. learning to make your own kimchi is a good life skill, mine still comes out a little too alkaline but its not ruined. just could be better.
whose recipes do you use? my friend's wife swears by Maangchi and she's only lead me wrong once before, the batter on the fried chicken (or whatever else you want to batter and fry) recipe just doesn't work for me.
Yeah I'm vegetarian so I really appreciate that Korean food is easy to leave meat out of. Even when fish or shrimp are needed you can usually just use extra kelp or soy sauce or whatever. I mostly learn from Maangchi and Future Neighbor on youtube. Haven't tried making kimchi yet though.
gay_swimmer posted:is there a place for good korean recipes where i specifically don't have to watch a youtube video
yes, it's called the democratic people's republic of korea
gay_swimmer posted:is there a place for good korean recipes where i specifically don't have to watch a youtube video
Maangchi has a website full of regular text recipes that are pretty reliable, I've never watched one of her videos. The only video recipes you should ever watch are Cooking With Dog
cars posted:somebody stole my sweet roll
get off your ass and do some
The #CIA had a classified copy of a young Mao Zedong's exercise routine https://t.co/CCUcyKL4VZ pic.twitter.com/wIb94G8heo
— MuckRock (@MuckRock) May 6, 2019
CIA: Got 'im. Put it in the file
presently i am in the worst shape of my life, >50 lbs heavier; still walk a lot but i've lost all my strength and high-intensity endurance. pretty sure i'm gonna die on the toilet or something.
as of this week i am re-equipped with a gym membership. i've got a renewed sense of urgency. i've got new playlists.
time to shred
Edited by Constantignoble ()
Apparently when the Berlin Wall came down and the youth from the west first partied with the youth from the east they were amazed at how strange and idiosyncratic they all were... GDR II When?
toyotathon posted:got an exercise that takes about 5 mins and kills your arms p good and it costs 2 socks and 5lbs of US coinage, whichever worthless token you want to fill the socks with. i'd cashed my previous deposit at the owner's bank and you can just get whatever amount of coinage you want, like a reverse coinstar, which turns your coinage into gift cards. how generous that my landlord, gave me my own money back, so i got $100 in quarters, which is exactly U$ 5 lbs to one part in 1000. You Put the quarters into 2 socks or whatever. then for 5 minutes you toss your bag of loot back and forth until rendered exhausted in the shoulders. also exercises hand-eye coordination w/o enduring a video game. i think this, and jump rope, is a good workout for people in prison or under work- and house-arrest.
E: Misread your post, thought your landlord paid you back in quarters like some asshole