H.Johnson
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,562
- Location
- Midlands, UK
10 Kg for every ten years??? Are you sure about that figure? That means that a man of 80 would weigh 135 pounds more than he did at 20. That seems incredible to me. Is it true?
H.Johnson said:Forgive me for pointing this out, but there is no reason (other than a reduction in activity and an increase in food consumption) why a man should not fit into the same clothes in his eighties as he did in his youth.
tonyb said:Now, I'm comfortable in a 36-inch waist, although a 35 is OK (yes, you can get some brands in odd-numbered sizes) and a 34 would do in a pinch (it might pinch me itself), but I'd definitely skip dessert.
H.Johnson said:You mean the section of that website that says,"In men, body weight generally increases until their mid-fifties; then it decreases, with weight being lost faster in their late sixties and seventies. In women, body weight increases until the late sixties and then decreases at a rate slower than that of men"? [My underlining]
I know many men in their eighties who are lighter and thinner than they were in their fifties, which appears to bear this out. Equally, I know a number of men in my own age group (sixties) who are no larger than they were in their twenties. I can only speak personally, but I still wear jeans (30 waist 32 leg) that I bought in my teens. I would fully expect to be able to fit into the same clothes in my eighties. In fact they will probably be too loose, as both my father and grandfather lost weight in their seventies.
tonyb said:Consider yourself fortunate, but don't pretend to an expertise you don't actually have. There isn't a person here who couldn't offer his own anecdotes. But making blanket assertions ("there is no reason") based on nothing more substantial than that, well, that's just plain wrong.
H.Johnson said:I don't consider myself fortunate - there is nothing special about being thin or being fat, it's just the way people are.
Thank you for your correction. If you read my original posting, you will see that I actually said. 'No reason other than a reduction in activity and an increase in food consumption'.
I take it you have medical qualifications to be so authoritative?
tonyb said:No I don't, but neither do you, obviously. That still doesn't change the simple truth that, contrary to what you wrote, there are indeed reasons other than "a reduction in activity and in increase in food consumption why a man should not fit into the same clothes in his eighties as he did in his teens." This is indeed what you "actually said." And it's wrong.
Hear, hear!BellyTank said:H Johnson, I admire your politeness.
Another area where others can learn from you.
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Mrs. Merl said:Anyway, I thought this thread was about pants?
BellyTank said:Fast food and lazy lifestyle are the tell-tale problem of this era, though.
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Well, the Prince did make a recent switch from Anderson & Sheppard (bespoke) to Turnbull & Asser (made-to-measure) in a cost cutting effort, saving around £1500 per suit.dit dah said:Shame the Prince's son isn't as thrifty.
dit dah said:Shame the Prince's son isn't as thrifty. He's probably got pants/ trou/ trews/ breeches made from organic wheat paid for with his enormous and ever increasing budget and from the proceeds of his over priced but very scrummy organic biscuits (cookies).