What is "woo"
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PeachyCarol wrote: »Alternately, it's often seen in the company of "hoo".
I'll get my coat.
LOL! Not quite sure why I found this so funny.0 -
PeachyCarol wrote: »Alternately, it's often seen in the company of "hoo".
I'll get my coat.
Oh, Yoo!0 -
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Hold up, though. How does it affect blood sugars (like diabetes, I mean); does anyone know? I miss my rice, lol!
I thought y'all were just kidding, because it's another coconut oil tip0 -
If I want to eat rice with only have 1/2 of the caloric intake then I eat 1/2 of the recommended portion. Not rocket science.0
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cafeaulait7 wrote: »Hold up, though. How does it affect blood sugars (like diabetes, I mean); does anyone know? I miss my rice, lol!
I thought y'all were just kidding, because it's another coconut oil tip
I am not saying that this is something anyone should do. It's just something that was trialed - and they didn't even reveal which kind of rice they used. To only save 10% of your calories by doing this is hardly worth all of the extra effort, and waiting 12 hours for the rice to cool, as well as not knowing if reheating changes anything in the caloric value.0 -
Close, but not quite0 -
cafeaulait7 wrote: »Hold up, though. How does it affect blood sugars (like diabetes, I mean); does anyone know? I miss my rice, lol!
I thought y'all were just kidding, because it's another coconut oil tip
I am not saying that this is something anyone should do. It's just something that was trialed - and they didn't even reveal which kind of rice they used. To only save 10% of your calories by doing this is hardly worth all of the extra effort, and waiting 12 hours for the rice to cool, as well as not knowing if reheating changes anything in the caloric value.
If you eat it uncooked, it has even less calories. Fact.0 -
I think of 'woo' as encompassing a lot of non-science based beliefs... Most of this is indeed pure bunk but some 'woo' of the traditional cultural ilk has been eventually scientifically verified. So I keep an open, critical & intuitive mind.0
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According to Gallup's Clifton Strength Finder. WOO is an acronym for winning others over.
http://www.gallup.com/businessjournal/721/woo.aspx0 -
It's some made up word that people use to try to shame others into their way of thinking. It's basically calling someone stupid but in an attempt to appear less offensive. Don't let people shame your personal decisions with words like woo. It used to be derp but that's become too much of a pejorative. The same will happen with woo. Next people will use the next "clever" in an attempt to disguise thier mean spiritedness.
Maybe something like sipsy. It sounds harmless enough until people wise up to what others are doing.0 -
PeachyCarol wrote: »Alternately, it's often seen in the company of "hoo".
I'll get my coat.
@PeachyCarol: *rimshot*
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It's some made up word that people use to try to shame others into their way of thinking. It's basically calling someone stupid but in an attempt to appear less offensive. Don't let people shame your personal decisions with words like woo. It used to be derp but that's become too much of a pejorative. The same will happen with woo. Next people will use the next "clever" in an attempt to disguise thier mean spiritedness.
Maybe something like sipsy. It sounds harmless enough until people wise up to what others are doing.
shoo?0 -
It's some made up word that people use to try to shame others into their way of thinking. It's basically calling someone stupid but in an attempt to appear less offensive. Don't let people shame your personal decisions with words like woo. It used to be derp but that's become too much of a pejorative. The same will happen with woo. Next people will use the next "clever" in an attempt to disguise thier mean spiritedness.
Maybe something like sipsy. It sounds harmless enough until people wise up to what others are doing.
It is actually a real word. It isn't supposed to be used to make people feel stupid; if someone does use it that way then they are being rude and shouldn't do so.
Typically it is used to mean that a particular plan that someone talking about, like the fad cleanse or detox of the moment, is not something that is going to work or should be used. It's not meant to shame but to show that something is another part of the long list of fads that don't work and should be avoided.0 -
It's some made up word that people use to try to shame others into their way of thinking. It's basically calling someone stupid but in an attempt to appear less offensive. Don't let people shame your personal decisions with words like woo. It used to be derp but that's become too much of a pejorative. The same will happen with woo. Next people will use the next "clever" in an attempt to disguise thier mean spiritedness.
Maybe something like sipsy. It sounds harmless enough until people wise up to what others are doing.
It is actually a real word. It isn't supposed to be used to make people feel stupid; if someone does use it that way then they are being rude and shouldn't do so.
Typically it is used to mean that a particular plan that someone talking about, like the fad cleanse or detox of the moment, is not something that is going to work or should be used. It's not meant to shame but to show that something is another part of the long list of fads that don't work and should be avoided.
If it was meant to inform, they'd use informative words like dangerous, harmful or misleading. They don't use those words. They use this made up word with some ambiguous meaning. If people are constantly having to ask what it means then its intent isn't to inform but to confuse. That's not what we should be doing as a helpful community. There's enough confusing diet and fitness information out there already for people to sift through without introducing an ambiguous word meant to ninja insult those that are simply less informed0 -
What I say when I'm running down down a hill with my arms in the air!0
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If it was meant to inform, they'd use informative words like dangerous, harmful or misleading. They don't use those words.
Personally if I'm going to describe something as woo, using one of those alternatives would lend it far more credence than it deserves.
Where something is unsubstantiated bollocks nonsense then sometimes ridiculing the information is an entirely appropriate response.
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nakedraygun wrote: »A little history lesson here.
The term "woo" (if I recall correctly ) was originally coined by James Randi as woo-woo."James Randi is the founder of the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). Randi began his career as a magician, but when he retired at age 60, he switched to investigating paranormal, occult, and supernatural claims, which he collectively calls "woo-woo." Although often referred to as a "debunker," Randi rejects that title owing to its perceived bias, instead describing himself as an "investigator". He has written about the paranormal, skepticism, and the history of magic. He was a frequent guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and is occasionally featured on the television program Penn & Teller: *kitten*!."
Randi just recently retired from the organization which bares his name "The James Randi Educational Foundation." A big component of the JREF was to test paranormal claims by offering a million dollars to prove if you indeed possess any supernatural powers. Many tried, all failed.
His busting of the fraud Yuri Gellar and exposing cold reading for what is classic skepticism in action.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9w7jHYriFo
Randi is personal hero of mine, right up there with Carl Sagan.
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