Consequences of gaining???

One thing I do know is that true feedees and feeders, regardless of how we try to control these deep-seated urges, will always give in to our desires. And since most of your pics are of you eating, I'd say continually gaining is what you want. It also helps to have someone in your life when things like outgrowing a bus seat happens, someone with whom you can share the experience and who will make you feel better about it...even using it as erotic play, as in, "just another change to deal with, now what's for dinner." I would love to see some "before" pics of you 100 lbs ago!
14 years

Heavy duty super obese patients growing

I didn't have a problem with the references to smell or being too obese to reach the remote b/c those were at least based on fact and statements from medical responders. But the descriptions by the author were overboard and unnecessary, 'hoisting hundreds of extra pounds of blubber." And it's one of those weekly newspapers, so they love salacious stories like this and love even more the negative responses.
14 years

Heavy duty super obese patients growing

I posted this in General but it fits--so to speak--here. I find it oddly arousing but it also very clearly shows the realities of being superobese. But, man, do I love the quote about the woman with a belly so big she needs a footstool to rest it!

www.riverfronttimes.com/2010-03-03/news/heavy-duty-back-weary-st-louis-emts-struggle-transport-portly-patients/
14 years

Heavy duty patients article

Why do I find this article oddly arousing? Especially the line about the woman with a abdomen so big she has to rest it on a footstool
www.riverfronttimes.com/2010-03-03/news/heavy-duty-back-weary-st-louis-emts-struggle-transport-portly-patients/
14 years

Fat and horny feeding frenzy

Oh god yes, fat horny feeding frenzies are the deepest most sexual satisfying sensation there is for me. I love to feed and fatten but I also have very deep desires to mutually gain and grow as fat as possible.
14 years

New dsm eating disorder category

The DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) is being revised. The Eating Disorder category will now include Binge Eating Disorder. www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx

One definition states: "5. feeling disgusted with oneself, depressed, or very guilty after overeating."
I would add "6. feeling sexually aroused with oneself, elated, or very satisfied after overeating."
14 years

Is it healthy to gain 5 lbs. within a week?

oh I don't know if it's too fast. I had a feedee girlfriend who once gained 10 lbs during a very very fattening feeding weekend....and most of it stayed a few days later. And hello fellow St. Louisan.
14 years

Study says women with mate get heavier

Now this is the type of research worthy of public support!

www.nytimes.com/2010/01/05/health/05weight.html

Study Says Women With Mate Get Heavier
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By NICHOLAS BAKALAR
Published: January 4, 2010
It is widely known that women tend to gain weight after giving birth, but now a large study has found evidence that even among childless women, those who live with a mate put on more pounds than those who live without one.

After adjusting for other variables, the 10-year weight gain for an average 140-pound woman was 20 pounds if she had a baby and a partner, 15 if she had a partner but no baby, and only 11 pounds if she was childless with no partner. The number of women with a baby but no partner was too small to draw statistically significant conclusions.

There is no reason to believe that having a partner causes metabolic changes, so the weight gain among childless women with partners was almost surely caused by altered behavior. Moreover, there was a steady weight gain among all women over the 10 years of the study.

This does not explain the still larger weight gain in women who became pregnant. The lead author, Annette J. Dobson, a professor of biostatistics at the University of Queensland in Australia, suggested that physiological changes might be at work.

“Women’s bodies may adjust to the increased weight associated with having a baby,” Dr. Dobson said. “There may be a metabolic adjustment that goes on when women are pregnant that is hard to reverse. This would be more consistent with our findings than any other explanation.”

The study covered more than 6,000 Australian women over a 10-year period ending in 2006.

At the start, the women ranged in age from 18 to 23. Each woman periodically completed a survey with more than 300 questions about weight and height, age, level of education, physical activity, smoking status, alcohol consumption, medications used and a wide range of other health and health care issues.

By the end of the study, published in the January issue of The American Journal of Preventive Medicine, more than half the women had college degrees, about three-quarters had partners and half had had at least one baby. Almost all of the weight gain happened with the first baby; subsequent births had little effect.

Also by the end of the study period, there were fewer smokers and risky drinkers than at the beginning, more women who exercised less and a larger proportion without paid employment.

But even after adjusting for all of these factors and more, the differences in weight gain among women with and without babies, and among women with and without partners, remained.

Despite the study’s limitations — weight was self-reported, for example, and the sample size diminished over time because people dropped out — other experts found the results valuable.

“It’s interesting and brings out some important points,” said Maureen A. Murtaugh, an associate professor of epidemiology at the University of Utah who has published widely on weight gain in women. Perhaps, she suggested, a more active social life may help explain why women with partners gain more weight.

“Think of going to a restaurant,” Dr. Murtaugh said. “They serve a 6-foot man the same amount as they serve me, even though I’m 5 feet 5 inches and 60 pounds lighter.”

The study included only women, but the researchers cited one earlier study that showed an increase in obesity among men who had children, adding further evidence that social and behavioral factors are part of the explanation.

Dr. Dobson said the finding of weight gain among all the women, with families or without, was troubling.

“This is a general health concern,” she said. “Getting married or moving in with a partner and having a baby are events that trigger even further weight gain.

“From a prevention point of view, one can look at these as particular times when women need to be especially careful.”
14 years

My gain

so what happened? gotta know
14 years