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New Water weight is a thing...
...but not that much of a thing (outwith certain medical conditions).

Losing weight is tough, especially when you get over the initial novelty and early gains from a caloric deficit, and into the long haul of maintaining self-discipline. It becomes very tempting to rationalise away one’s failure to lose a kilo this week on “water weight”, but it’s much more likely you just ate (or, if you’re not a diet pop person, drank) more than you thought or wanted to think.

You’re right - breakfast cereal is ridiculous and those “serving suggestions” are misleading at best. Other prime offenders are pop (soda), coffee (many people load their coffee with milk and cream and syrup and a myriad other things, none of which have any business being in a cup of joe), and of course processed food - even if you set aside the “ultra processed” issue, a lot of processed food is extraordinarily calorie-dense.

It doesn’t help that The Internet stands ready and willing to tell you that your weight is not your fault, you can and indeed should eat whatever you like, whenever you like. Furthermore it’s fine to be fat, because fat people are just as healthy (until they hit fifty and their knees and hearts and whatever all say “fuck you, I’m ruined”).

It’s all horseshit, of course. Anyone can lose weight at a caloric deficit. It requires a lot of self-discipline in the face of a epicurean environment designed to thwart you at every turn, and depending on where you live (food deserts suck) it can be really hard. But ultimately it can be done, and the alternative is worse. I think of all the things I fear in later life, losing my sight and my mobility* are top of the tree, other than dementia.

No-one says “oh, I know you shouldn’t smoke, but giving up is hard, and intuitive smoking is fine anyway, and grandma smoked a hundred a day well into her nineties. And grandad took heroin every day for fifty years and it didn’t do him any harm!”, so I’m not sure why being addicted to food gets a free pass the way it does.
* Weight-related failure modes: joint failure, COPD, heart issues, just being too damn fat to walk any distance, etc. At the extremes, losing limbs and appendages to diabetes sure does seem like it’d suck. Quick and permanent weight loss though, so; to-may-to, to-mar-to.
Expand Edited by pwhysall June 20, 2024, 01:55:19 AM EDT
New We get trained to ignore satiation.
     Who decided on serving sizes? - (drook) - (17)
         Over-eating is the curse of the west - (pwhysall) - (5)
             I blame breakfast cereal. - (Another Scott) - (2)
                 Water weight is a thing... - (pwhysall) - (1)
                     We get trained to ignore satiation. -NT - (static)
             Everybody's deficit looks different as well - (malraux) - (1)
                 Absolutely - (pwhysall)
         I have been eating kids meals for years, can barely finish them. Rare occation when I do fast food -NT - (boxley) - (10)
             Yup, kids meal was the regular size in the 50s - (drook) - (9)
                 man I cant even finish a small fries anymore -NT - (boxley) - (8)
                     We all got old - (crazy) - (7)
                         I'm eating the "right" amount these last couple weeks - (drook) - (6)
                             Go hang out in Jim's second floor - (crazy) - (5)
                                 I'm gonna say the most Philly thing I can - (drook) - (4)
                                     I am a tourist - (crazy) - (3)
                                         They moved Rocky to a theater over on Walnut, what a disappointment -NT - (drook) - (2)
                                             Yep, a bummer - (crazy) - (1)
                                                 I want to take the wife, but at TLA - (drook)

> USE RUBBER PIPE ON DARL MONSTER
87 ms