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Will You Let it Eat You Alive?

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Replies

  • 2essie
    2essie Posts: 2,861 Member
    Back in the '80s I was the same as OP until I realised I was going to be the fittest corpse in the graveyard.
  • JaneSnowe
    JaneSnowe Posts: 1,283 Member
    2essie wrote: »
    Back in the '80s I was the same as OP until I realised I was going to be the fittest corpse in the graveyard.

    But OP is saying to be healthy, enjoy life and not sweat the small stuff; she's not saying to do everything you can to live as long as possible
  • CycleCoast42
    CycleCoast42 Posts: 20 Member
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.
  • DamePiglet
    DamePiglet Posts: 3,730 Member
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.

    Maybe I missed it, but I don't remember anyone saying that he or she is NOT concerned about our planet.
    Many people simply do not have the resources to always buy organic. I think that fact was discussed in the OP.

    In fact, she discussed how challenging it is to always TRY to do the "right" thing. Are we reading the same thread?
  • NorthCascades
    NorthCascades Posts: 10,968 Member
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.

    That's one reason I don't have children. It's also a smaller part of why I don't eat meat.
  • ksamp39
    ksamp39 Posts: 20 Member
    You could eat the cleanest diet in the world work out till your blue in the face and still get hit by a bus, die of cancer etc etc.....in my opinion and my experience that perfect weight bf% dosent exist if your obsessed and that's a shame :(
  • zamphir66
    zamphir66 Posts: 582 Member
    Carlos_421 wrote: »

    I would say that when someone continues to bring up the subject or create opportunities to say "don't eat it! It'll kill you!! Toxins!! Remove all sugar from your diet!!" and continues to boldly proclaim these things as though they're true and eliminating what they did is necessary for health and/or weight loss despite all the voices saying that it isn't necessary and providing them with credible sources of information which demonstrate the error in their claims, that person is acting as a radical evangelist for their cause.

    Here's a simple test I learned. Ask the person, "What would it take to change your mind about X?" If the answer is "Nothing, my mind's made up," then they've left their critical reasoning behind and are operating from emotion.

  • wizzybeth
    wizzybeth Posts: 3,578 Member
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.

    My biggest concern over buying organic is the lack of follow up from the government to assure me that when I am paying $X amount of dollars for something that SAYS it is organic, I can know that it is 100% organic. I used to pay more for Horizon milk, because it was supposedly 100% organic. Then Dean's Foods took over and surprise...it may not actually truly really be organic. And I cannot buy at a farmer's market all the time and even that I don't know if they're REALLY organic or not. Come on...people have lied to make a profit for years.

    I'm not against buying organic when I can, and when I can afford it, but I am against being duped into buying psuedo-organic food.

    Right now the only "organic" labeled food I buy on purpose is Stonyfield Farms Organic Yogurt, not because I care that it's organic, but it's the ONLY yogurt I actually LIKE that does not have artificial sweeteners in it.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    wizzybeth wrote: »
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.

    My biggest concern over buying organic is the lack of follow up from the government to assure me that when I am paying $X amount of dollars for something that SAYS it is organic, I can know that it is 100% organic. I used to pay more for Horizon milk, because it was supposedly 100% organic. Then Dean's Foods took over and surprise...it may not actually truly really be organic. And I cannot buy at a farmer's market all the time and even that I don't know if they're REALLY organic or not. Come on...people have lied to make a profit for years.

    I'm not against buying organic when I can, and when I can afford it, but I am against being duped into buying psuedo-organic food.

    Right now the only "organic" labeled food I buy on purpose is Stonyfield Farms Organic Yogurt, not because I care that it's organic, but it's the ONLY yogurt I actually LIKE that does not have artificial sweeteners in it.

    I've seen a lot of posts on MFP from people that seem to think that all produce at a Farmer's Market is grown organically. In my experience most of it is not. I even had one experience with a farmer at the market who said her produce was grown organically then later in the conversation said she used Sevin. Honestly IDK if Sevin is approved as organic by the FDA but she said she thought the definition of organic was "home grown".
  • wizzybeth
    wizzybeth Posts: 3,578 Member
    edited June 2016
    ^YES!!! Some may not deliberately lie, but some may not even know what constitutes organic farming anyway. I would rather buy direct from a local farmer when I can regardless, but to assume it's organic is foolish.
  • vivmom2014
    vivmom2014 Posts: 1,649 Member
    Think of all the juicer machines gathering dust...

    I *almost* drank the Koolaid after watching "Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead" a couple years ago, but thankfully I did not buy a $400 juicer.

    Great post, OP.

  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    wizzybeth wrote: »
    ^YES!!! Some may not deliberately lie, but some may not even know what constitutes organic farming anyway. I would rather buy direct from a local farmer when I can regardless, but to assume it's organic is foolish.

    Yeah, me too. I grow most of our vegetables but I still visit the Farmer's Market to see what they have. Local and fresh tastes better.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    I also choose the farmers market (and a CSA) because of the local aspect and that I like to support small farmers (my grandparents were, so this is largely sentimental).
  • ForecasterJason
    ForecasterJason Posts: 2,577 Member
    wizzybeth wrote: »
    Someone has to be concerned about the future of Our Planet Earth for our children's children. There is no Planet B. One person can do their part in their own way, and if we all try we can leave a better planet to the future generations. Educate yourself, buying Organic is not just about avoiding Cancer.

    My biggest concern over buying organic is the lack of follow up from the government to assure me that when I am paying $X amount of dollars for something that SAYS it is organic, I can know that it is 100% organic. I used to pay more for Horizon milk, because it was supposedly 100% organic. Then Dean's Foods took over and surprise...it may not actually truly really be organic. And I cannot buy at a farmer's market all the time and even that I don't know if they're REALLY organic or not. Come on...people have lied to make a profit for years.

    I'm not against buying organic when I can, and when I can afford it, but I am against being duped into buying psuedo-organic food.

    Right now the only "organic" labeled food I buy on purpose is Stonyfield Farms Organic Yogurt, not because I care that it's organic, but it's the ONLY yogurt I actually LIKE that does not have artificial sweeteners in it.

    I've seen a lot of posts on MFP from people that seem to think that all produce at a Farmer's Market is grown organically. In my experience most of it is not. I even had one experience with a farmer at the market who said her produce was grown organically then later in the conversation said she used Sevin. Honestly IDK if Sevin is approved as organic by the FDA but she said she thought the definition of organic was "home grown".
    Agreed. I happen to be at one of my local farmer's markets every week for other reasons, and one day I went around to the various farms that sell produce and inquired about whether they were organic or not. Out of 4 farms I asked, it was split 50-50 between the farms that were organic and the ones that weren't.

  • MissusMoon
    MissusMoon Posts: 1,900 Member
    ....aaand it's derailed.