3 months
Drinking heavy cream
Hopefully a long term heavy cream drinker could tell you, unfortunately a lot of people seem to lose the energy to keep drinking heavy cream after 2 weeks, or lose the energy to keep reporting on it. Ive been going on 5 weeks so far and the last 3 weeks stuff keeps coming up to disturb me. It seems the sharp short term gain happens to everyone, I'm going to assume that it goes down and the plateaus into a lower constant weight gain?
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
BallinBot:
Hopefully a long term heavy cream drinker could tell you, unfortunately a lot of people seem to lose the energy to keep drinking heavy cream after 2 weeks, or lose the energy to keep reporting on it. Ive been going on 5 weeks so far and the last 3 weeks stuff keeps coming up to disturb me. It seems the sharp short term gain happens to everyone, I'm going to assume that it goes down and the plateaus into a lower constant weight gain?
Hamp:
Thanks for the answer.
Yes I feel it now at it has started to come up more and more, and I’m relly unsure if I will continue drinking. But I have feel I have been more jiggly and that’s a positive
Hopefully a long term heavy cream drinker could tell you, unfortunately a lot of people seem to lose the energy to keep drinking heavy cream after 2 weeks, or lose the energy to keep reporting on it. Ive been going on 5 weeks so far and the last 3 weeks stuff keeps coming up to disturb me. It seems the sharp short term gain happens to everyone, I'm going to assume that it goes down and the plateaus into a lower constant weight gain?
Hamp:
Thanks for the answer.
Yes I feel it now at it has started to come up more and more, and I’m relly unsure if I will continue drinking. But I have feel I have been more jiggly and that’s a positive
I will add that you should be careful not to overdo it on the heavy cream and not to go for more than a month straight.
In my experience as an extreme feeder, overdoing it on the heavy cream can cause digestive issues and make you feel sluggish. It's also not good to have elevated blood triglyceride levels for extended periods.
This is purely anecdotal, so take this next part with a grain of salt. I've noticed that when gainers or feedees push themselves to gain as much as possible, their bodies start to have issues around the two-week to one-month mark. I am not sure why that is, but I've seen it a lot.
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
Munchies:
This is purely anecdotal, so take this next part with a grain of salt. I've noticed that when gainers or feedees push themselves to gain as much as possible, their bodies start to have issues around the two-week to one-month mark. I am not sure why that is, but I've seen it a lot.
This is purely anecdotal, so take this next part with a grain of salt. I've noticed that when gainers or feedees push themselves to gain as much as possible, their bodies start to have issues around the two-week to one-month mark. I am not sure why that is, but I've seen it a lot.
Issues like what? My gain has been rather slow so I don't think this applies to me but I'm still curious
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
Munchies:
This is purely anecdotal, so take this next part with a grain of salt. I've noticed that when gainers or feedees push themselves to gain as much as possible, their bodies start to have issues around the two-week to one-month mark. I am not sure why that is, but I've seen it a lot.
SumoSized:
Issues like what? My gain has been rather slow so I don't think this applies to me but I'm still curious
This is purely anecdotal, so take this next part with a grain of salt. I've noticed that when gainers or feedees push themselves to gain as much as possible, their bodies start to have issues around the two-week to one-month mark. I am not sure why that is, but I've seen it a lot.
SumoSized:
Issues like what? My gain has been rather slow so I don't think this applies to me but I'm still curious
Indigestion, bloating, loose stools, fatigue, brain fog, joint pain from gaining too fast, and high blood pressure are the more common one I've noticed.
Also, it's not really good to have elevated blood triglycerides for extended periods of time.
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
SumoSized:
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
SumoSized:
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
💯
It is fun to gain like 5 to ten lbs a week, but just as losing more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is really unhealthy regardless of how much it might fuel motivation to keep losing or gaining, it is not sustainable in the long run.
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
SumoSized:
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
Anjou:
💯
It is fun to gain like 5 to ten lbs a week, but just as losing more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is really unhealthy regardless of how much it might fuel motivation to keep losing or gaining, it is not sustainable in the long run.
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
Anjou:
💯
It is fun to gain like 5 to ten lbs a week, but just as losing more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is really unhealthy regardless of how much it might fuel motivation to keep losing or gaining, it is not sustainable in the long run.
Gaining that fast sure sounds dreamy though.
2 months
Drinking heavy cream
SumoSized:
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
Anjou:
💯
It is fun to gain like 5 to ten lbs a week, but just as losing more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is really unhealthy regardless of how much it might fuel motivation to keep losing or gaining, it is not sustainable in the long run.
Torchcacti:
Gaining that fast sure sounds dreamy though.
Holy hell that's insane, I can see why that would scare people away from gaining more. Do you have a recommended speed for gaining , like eat X amount of calories above your metabolic rate per day to gain healthily, or is it dependent per person?
Munchies:
Doctors recommend those who are gaining weight to shoot for 1 to 2 lbs a week. This comes out to 52 - 104 lbs a year.
Most people will not be able to achieve such consistent gaining - especially as they grow heavier. Some might even need to tap out or slow down after some point as well.
Honestly, it's best to gain to your comfort. When you start having complications, that's a good sign to slow down or even take a gaining break. A lot of gainers/feedees will ignore their body's warning signals because they want to be super fat ASAP. However, this short-sided behavior is a good way to end up abandoning your fattening journey and losing the weight later.
Anjou:
💯
It is fun to gain like 5 to ten lbs a week, but just as losing more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is really unhealthy regardless of how much it might fuel motivation to keep losing or gaining, it is not sustainable in the long run.
Torchcacti:
Gaining that fast sure sounds dreamy though.
Dreamy being the key word.
Keep it in that realm.
2 months