Confession Time! ((ABSOLUTELY NO JUDGEMENT))
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SilverRose89 wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Those are great ideas, but I'm hoping to do something outside the kitchen with her. One of the reasons I take my son grocery shopping is to demonstrate that the gender roles society has placed on us are artificial and that we can break them with our actions. I'm hoping to do something similar with my daughter.
I freaking love this.
Me too. How about taking her to the DIY store and every time buying an item towards a long term project. Or if you know about cars teaching her some mechanics.
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tincanonastring wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Every Sunday, I take my son to do the grocery shopping. At one of the stores, we get a bottle of Mexican Coke and a Tastycake pie (his choice: Cherry, Apple, or French Apple) and sit on the tailgate to share them. Coke-and-Pie Day almost never gets logged.
That's the cutest thing ever.
Agreed! And because you're creating a memory with your son that he will remember forever it doesn't count as calories!
The memories will end up being more delicious than the pie, methinks. Now I just have to think of something similar to do with his sister!
How old is she and what kinds of things does she like? (sorry if you've already answered this; I'm a page or 2 behind on this thread)
No worries. She's only 4 months, so I've got some time to think of something. I just want to make sure I don't wait too long.
Maybe she can be your buddy whenever there's a home improvement store run?
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LouisaM162 wrote: »Italian_Buju wrote: »cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »Italian_Buju wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »Italian_Buju wrote: »momspective wrote: »I went on a cruise with my husband last month. I gained ten pounds, he didn't gain an ounce. I was so pissed I told him I had a UTI and couldn't have sex for ten days.
I laughed so hard at this, the dogs came over with concerned looks on their faces.
I've eaten premade frosting out of the jar before. I also eat cookie butter out of the jar. In fact, that's how 1.5 jars of cookie butter got consumed in this house... all but the 1/2 jar I used in a recipe.
What is cookie butter? BTW - great profile photo!
Imagine if peanut butter was made with ground up cookies instead. Now wipe the drool off your chin
where do you get that?!?!?!?!?!?!
Are you in the US? Even Wal-Mart now has Biscoff spread in the peanut butter section:
No, I am in Canada.....
Thank your lucky stars we don't have that stuff here!!!!
Wish there was a like button! I am also glad it is not available in Canada. Also, I love Jif peanut butter and it is no longer available in Canada...a great thing, since I can easily say no to any other brand.0 -
Jojomotivated wrote: »I was looking at some cute gym guys the other day and nearly fell off the elliptical =(
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girldownsouth wrote: »SilverRose89 wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Those are great ideas, but I'm hoping to do something outside the kitchen with her. One of the reasons I take my son grocery shopping is to demonstrate that the gender roles society has placed on us are artificial and that we can break them with our actions. I'm hoping to do something similar with my daughter.
I freaking love this.
Me too. How about taking her to the DIY store and every time buying an item towards a long term project. Or if you know about cars teaching her some mechanics.
I love it too. My dad took me and my brother fishing in the summer & skating in the winter. Loved doing both0 -
VanillaBeanSeed wrote: »I sometimes save calories so I can drink a whole bottle of wine
It's already open, right?!
I scanned the barcode on a bottle of wine last week. It came up "serving size- 1/2 bottle", so I drank 1/2 the bottle.
I always make allowance for wine on Friday and Saturday.
And I love your thinking Ceci_O_K!0 -
girldownsouth wrote: »SilverRose89 wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Those are great ideas, but I'm hoping to do something outside the kitchen with her. One of the reasons I take my son grocery shopping is to demonstrate that the gender roles society has placed on us are artificial and that we can break them with our actions. I'm hoping to do something similar with my daughter.
I freaking love this.
Me too. How about taking her to the DIY store and every time buying an item towards a long term project. Or if you know about cars teaching her some mechanics.
I like the idea of a long term project. I've got next to no knowledge on cars, but I do have several friends who can build one with their eyes closed. I've been thinking I might get a beat-to-*kitten* muscle car and have her rebuild it with me, then give it to her when she gets a driver's license. The only problem is that it's not something we can start until she's a older.
Someone else mentioned model rockets, and that's a great idea. I'd love to foster some interest in STEM as they are typicaly male-dominated fields. Rocketry is something we could do early on, too.0 -
tincanonastring wrote: »girldownsouth wrote: »SilverRose89 wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Those are great ideas, but I'm hoping to do something outside the kitchen with her. One of the reasons I take my son grocery shopping is to demonstrate that the gender roles society has placed on us are artificial and that we can break them with our actions. I'm hoping to do something similar with my daughter.
I freaking love this.
Me too. How about taking her to the DIY store and every time buying an item towards a long term project. Or if you know about cars teaching her some mechanics.
I like the idea of a long term project. I've got next to no knowledge on cars, but I do have several friends who can build one with their eyes closed. I've been thinking I might get a beat-to-*kitten* muscle car and have her rebuild it with me, then give it to her when she gets a driver's license. The only problem is that it's not something we can start until she's a older.
Someone else mentioned model rockets, and that's a great idea. I'd love to foster some interest in STEM as they are typicaly male-dominated fields. Rocketry is something we could do early on, too.
My dad and I built model rockets, took fishing trips, did float trips down a local river, and always rode bikes or rollerbladed every Sunday. (We did a whole buncha stuff--especially every backyard sport possible--and he coached a bunch of my church league sports teams, but those were "our things".)
Now we don't live in the same state, but we set up equivalent bike routes on Strava and compete. He usually wins.
ETA: My confession is that my dad is far cooler in one minute than I will ever be over the course of my whole life.0 -
snarlingcoyote wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »Another confession I have after being on these boards a little while is I HATE the question "Do you weigh everything you eat?" I want to scream every time I see it asked.
HELLL NO....I DONT weigh everything. That is simply not sustainable for the rest of my life. Sure I know that losing or maintaining will have to be a lifelong effort and I will work towards it but the whole weighing EVERYTHING is simply too much for me.
We have a baby shower at work today. Am I supposed to pull out a scale and weigh a slice of cake? I don't think so.
Carry on...
But if someone is complaining that they are doing EVERYTHING, and they are not losing or are gaining weight, the best thing to do is get a realistic idea of what they are actually consuming in calories. Most people get a real wake up call. It's the easiest answer for a frequently asked question.
I don't think that situation is the problem. The issue is really people who have to weigh every single thing they eat AND think everyone else should too. It's a good learning method if you are stalled with your weight loss, and yeah, there's a scale in my kitchen for times when eyeballing really isn't going to work but you shouldn't try to weigh everything the rest of your life. It's bound for failure, long-term.
Insert thumbs up emoticon here.0 -
I judge the workouts that I see other people do at the gym. Not because I hate what they are doing, but because I want to see them actually work for it. I saw this girl doing weighted squats, and I wanted to tell her to go lower or to put on more weights. She made it look easy.
But then there's that guy that comes in and does really weird workouts, and they don't look like they are beneficial, but everyone's body is different.
I guess I want to try and push people harder at the gym, but I hate talking to other people.0 -
AgentOrangeJuice wrote: »Remember how Dustin Hoffman in the movie Rain Man could recall stuff from the phone book?
I'm like that with 90's music.
I think that's awesome!0 -
I want to scream at the people on the treadmills at the gym to stop holding the bar because it burns less calories when you do...1
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tincanonastring wrote: »
Heh. I suspect we should both get off MFP and have a life. But brrr, so cold outside!0 -
arditarose wrote: »sigh...When I found that I couldn't eat peanut butter in moderation, and had to get it out of my apartment ASAP, I not only threw it away-I drowned the jar in water first so I wouldn't be tempted...
I can't believe I shared that.
I have the same problem!! I completely understand.0 -
I found myself wondering earlier if a food scale would accurately weigh my boobs. Decided not to bother since I have no clue what they 'should' weigh.
Depends on what your scales max weight is. Mine only goes up to 3lbs and I know my boobs would make it say error if I tried that. Just have your husband/boyfriend/significant other hold them up while you stand on the regular scale. That works pretty well for me.0 -
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tincanonastring wrote: »girldownsouth wrote: »SilverRose89 wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Those are great ideas, but I'm hoping to do something outside the kitchen with her. One of the reasons I take my son grocery shopping is to demonstrate that the gender roles society has placed on us are artificial and that we can break them with our actions. I'm hoping to do something similar with my daughter.
I freaking love this.
Me too. How about taking her to the DIY store and every time buying an item towards a long term project. Or if you know about cars teaching her some mechanics.
I like the idea of a long term project. I've got next to no knowledge on cars, but I do have several friends who can build one with their eyes closed. I've been thinking I might get a beat-to-*kitten* muscle car and have her rebuild it with me, then give it to her when she gets a driver's license. The only problem is that it's not something we can start until she's a older.
Someone else mentioned model rockets, and that's a great idea. I'd love to foster some interest in STEM as they are typicaly male-dominated fields. Rocketry is something we could do early on, too.
As a girl with a chemistry degree working in the nuclear industry I 100% support this. Your daughter is lucky to have a father who believes she can do anything she wants to0 -
Last night it was close to midnight and I was under 1200 but not hungry, so I ate a big spoonful of peanut butter.
Then I was hungry an hour later.0 -
tincanonastring wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »tincanonastring wrote: »Every Sunday, I take my son to do the grocery shopping. At one of the stores, we get a bottle of Mexican Coke and a Tastycake pie (his choice: Cherry, Apple, or French Apple) and sit on the tailgate to share them. Coke-and-Pie Day almost never gets logged.
That's the cutest thing ever.
Agreed! And because you're creating a memory with your son that he will remember forever it doesn't count as calories!
The memories will end up being more delicious than the pie, methinks. Now I just have to think of something similar to do with his sister!
How old is she and what kinds of things does she like? (sorry if you've already answered this; I'm a page or 2 behind on this thread)
No worries. She's only 4 months, so I've got some time to think of something. I just want to make sure I don't wait too long.
My grandpa took me fishing, that would be along the lines of breaking the typical gender roles. (as long as you don't take her brother with you too) I still love to go fishing!0 -
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MaggieLoo79 wrote: »I wear spanx all the time. I never leave the house without something to keep my tummy held in.
Me too. Even to the gym- I wear tank top sports bras. Year round.
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obscuremusicreference wrote: »Last night it was close to midnight and I was under 1200 but not hungry, so I ate a big spoonful of peanut butter.
Then I was hungry an hour later.
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Yes, the ghrelin gremlin!0
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I don' t have any friends on here, and after seeing quite a few people in other threads talk about how some of their "friends" made actual comments about what they ate or if they exercised, Im afraid to add anyone. If I ate 2 servings of Doritos I already know it's bad, I don't need some stranger to comment on it!0
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