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What are your unpopular opinions about health / fitness?
Replies
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annaskiski wrote: »GottaBurnEmAll wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »deannalfisher wrote: »oh how I would love to write my psych dissertation on cake culture in the workplace....haha!
Why not? Another theme would be how it intersects with the individualism of American culture...hence the primary defence being along the lines of "it's your choice to eat or not eat the cake" "just say no" etc. How does cake culture play out in societies that value conformity over individualism?
I'm not American. It intersects with my culture of being a human who has always, throughout history, shared food as social bonding.
May I ask, what you are then? Although many cultures have commonalities, there is no one 'human' culture.
Can you tell me of a human culture where sharing of food in times of celebration isn't a thing?
In China, the traditional food to celebrate a birthday are peaches and noodles, not cake.
But still food...........
Yes. Ok, I didn't want to go there but honestly, you are not using the term "culture" correctly. The definition of culture is the customs, practices and beliefs of a particular people or society. By definition, there can be no universal human "culture". So your point that all humans share food is merely pointing out a commonality between cultures. Sorry, but there it is.
Of course you didn't.
I don't expect you to understand. After all you are a layman so are not as sensitive to the misuse of technical terminology.
Something was niggling at me after reading this, and the search function helped my memory out a bit. My memory isn't as faulty as I sometimes think it is.
You've posted that you're retired from working for 20 years in the Air Force on space program stuff and also that you worked as a grants officer with unlimited authority with academia at some point.
I'm not sure where you are fitting in a claim to being an anthropologist now, or where the "cake culture" comes in either of these scenarios.
This person is obviously very young, that retort was very juvenile.
...and claiming to be a rocket man, then academic 'supervisor', then anthropologist confirms it...
Well, something else was niggling at me about this poster in this whole discussion, and this came down to the claims of pretending to eat the cake and why she bothered going through that charade in the first place. I thought I remembered her saying she was allergic to the bleaching agents in flour.
The search function once again came to the rescue. She did indeed say that she has that issue.
I can't imagine not simply telling her coworkers that she had a food allergy rather than playing a silly game of pushing food around a plate.
That makes no sense at all. For example, I have celiac disease. I go to gatherings all the time and it's quite simple to tell people why I'm refusing food. I've never had a problem.21 -
Do you suppose she's the one who flagged all of the posts that called her on her bullshite??
As for the current argument, moon pies suck and cake is wonderful (unless it's carrot cake, and then it sucks ).8 -
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cmriverside wrote: »
Roller grill food may be the term you've heard. Typically found at convenience stores and truck stops.
The food sits on the rollers which are heated and turn the food slowly to cook/keep it warm it.3 -
Packerjohn wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »
Roller grill food may be the term you've heard. Typically found at convenience stores and truck stops.
The food sits on the rollers which are heated and turn the food slowly to cook/keep it warm it.
LOL! That picture is NASTY!1 -
I bet they have Moon Pies. Now I want a corn dog.
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VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »deannalfisher wrote: »oh how I would love to write my psych dissertation on cake culture in the workplace....haha!
Why not? Another theme would be how it intersects with the individualism of American culture...hence the primary defence being along the lines of "it's your choice to eat or not eat the cake" "just say no" etc. How does cake culture play out in societies that value conformity over individualism?
I'm not American. It intersects with my culture of being a human who has always, throughout history, shared food as social bonding.
May I ask, what you are then? Although many cultures have commonalities, there is no one 'human' culture.
Can you tell me of a human culture where sharing of food in times of celebration isn't a thing?
In China, the traditional food to celebrate a birthday are peaches and noodles, not cake.
Hmmm My Chinese boyfriend and his family celebrates with cake. Never heard of this.10 -
Packerjohn wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »
Roller grill food may be the term you've heard. Typically found at convenience stores and truck stops.
The food sits on the rollers which are heated and turn the food slowly to cook/keep it warm it.
Yummy! Corn dog please5 -
I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.23 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
You should have fired them.3 -
annaskiski wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
You should have fired them.
Nah, I'll just shake them into submission.2 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
Bagel culture is strong in my office. Most of the time when food is brought in, it's bagels and coffee and it usually goes pretty quickly.
And I love bagels, so I usually make room for one.1 -
annaskiski wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
You should have fired them.
I was going to suggest throwing the bagels at them and yelling until they have been eaten.6 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
Should have gotten more cinnamon crunch bagels, those always go first. Although then there's always the jerk who takes the top part and leaves the sad bottom in the box.6 -
On the bright side, this way I get to announce their presence to the rest of the department and thus be a REALLY big jerk!!4
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Nony_Mouse wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »deannalfisher wrote: »oh how I would love to write my psych dissertation on cake culture in the workplace....haha!
Why not? Another theme would be how it intersects with the individualism of American culture...hence the primary defence being along the lines of "it's your choice to eat or not eat the cake" "just say no" etc. How does cake culture play out in societies that value conformity over individualism?
I'm not American. It intersects with my culture of being a human who has always, throughout history, shared food as social bonding.
May I ask, what you are then? Although many cultures have commonalities, there is no one 'human' culture.
Can you tell me of a human culture where sharing of food in times of celebration isn't a thing?
In China, the traditional food to celebrate a birthday are peaches and noodles, not cake.
But still food...........
Yes. Ok, I didn't want to go there but honestly, you are not using the term "culture" correctly. The definition of culture is the customs, practices and beliefs of a particular people or society. By definition, there can be no universal human "culture". So your point that all humans share food is merely pointing out a commonality between cultures. Sorry, but there it is.
Of course you didn't.
I don't expect you to understand. After all you are a layman so are not as sensitive to the misuse of technical terminology.
You pulled that definition from the dictionary. Not actually what you will find written in any even first year anthropology text. If you're going to try to pretend you're an anthropologist, maybe make sure there isn't someone who actually is one in the room...
So what if I used a dictionary? I don't have any of my "first year" Anthropology texts back from 1989. And yeah, I have other degrees too, I went into forensics as in forensic anthropology as in skeleton and bodies and s*t like that. Not an anthropologist, well how about you inform the UN that I was a complete fraud whilst working on the mass graves of slaughtered innocents after the Bosnian war? Or when I shipped off to ground zero post 9/11 with the D MORT? You're just a random bunch of people on the internet and you know nothing.25 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »deannalfisher wrote: »oh how I would love to write my psych dissertation on cake culture in the workplace....haha!
Why not? Another theme would be how it intersects with the individualism of American culture...hence the primary defence being along the lines of "it's your choice to eat or not eat the cake" "just say no" etc. How does cake culture play out in societies that value conformity over individualism?
I'm not American. It intersects with my culture of being a human who has always, throughout history, shared food as social bonding.
May I ask, what you are then? Although many cultures have commonalities, there is no one 'human' culture.
Can you tell me of a human culture where sharing of food in times of celebration isn't a thing?
In China, the traditional food to celebrate a birthday are peaches and noodles, not cake.
But still food...........
Yes. Ok, I didn't want to go there but honestly, you are not using the term "culture" correctly. The definition of culture is the customs, practices and beliefs of a particular people or society. By definition, there can be no universal human "culture". So your point that all humans share food is merely pointing out a commonality between cultures. Sorry, but there it is.
Of course you didn't.
I don't expect you to understand. After all you are a layman so are not as sensitive to the misuse of technical terminology.
You pulled that definition from the dictionary. Not actually what you will find written in any even first year anthropology text. If you're going to try to pretend you're an anthropologist, maybe make sure there isn't someone who actually is one in the room...
So what if I used a dictionary? I don't have any of my "first year" Anthropology texts back from 1989. And yeah, I have other degrees too, I went into forensics as in forensic anthropology as in skeleton and bodies and s*t like that. Not an anthropologist, well how about you inform the UN that I was a complete fraud whilst working on the mass graves of slaughtered innocents after the Bosnian war? Or when I shipped off to ground zero post 9/11 with the D MORT? You're just a random bunch of people on the internet and you know nothing.
Oh boy, that must have been after NASA...
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Carlos_421 wrote: »annaskiski wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I brought in Panera bagels for my team this morning. As they entered the conference room for our team meeting, I enthusiastically encouraged each of them to take a bagel.
I'm such a jerk.
Side note: Only 2 out of 11 accepted and the rest went to the kitchen to go for grabs. I was not offended by the 9 people who refused a bagel. I guess bagel culture is not as strong as cake culture.
You should have fired them.
Nah, I'll just shake them into submission.
And, getting to the important issue, you should have threatened them with this...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4892552/Man-freed-firefighters-sticking-penis-weight.html2 -
I am so not clicking that link.6
This discussion has been closed.
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