Holiday weight gain: good news, bad news
The good news is that, despite reports that people gain as much as 5 to 10 pounds during the holidays, the average person “only” gains .81 pounds.
The bad news is that they never, ever, lose it.
The good news is that, despite reports that people gain as much as 5 to 10 pounds during the holidays, the average person “only” gains .81 pounds.
The bad news is that they never, ever, lose it.
[ c h u c k l e ]
M J R
Guilty.
Does this study indicate how many pounds the “average” person gains over a lifetime, and then divide it by the average number of years lived?
Is it based upon that individuals’ body mass index?
does it differentiate for ethnic groups? by state?
;-D Lying with statistics again…just trying to make us feel good!
Additional weight provides a better gravity well weapon, so long as body coordination and power to mass acceleration ratios are maintained.
I always lose 5 or so before thanksgiving, and break even by New Years. Dieting during the holidays ruins the whole thing. But you need to be a lifelong nut-job like me to keep it up.
How much is that in dog years?