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What are your unpopular opinions about health / fitness?

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Replies

  • VintageFeline
    VintageFeline Posts: 6,771 Member
    I am so not clicking that link.

    Good choice. Headline says enough and we give no money to the Daily Fail.
  • nutmegoreo
    nutmegoreo Posts: 15,532 Member
    annaskiski wrote: »
    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.html

    Hahahahahaha. I took one for the team and clicked (not just cause I'm a perv). I hope there was no one else in the gym at the time. I also hope he finds a more suitable place to stick the wee man in future. Poor firefighters, although it gives them an entertaining story.
  • nutmegoreo
    nutmegoreo Posts: 15,532 Member
    Bry_Lander wrote: »
    annaskiski wrote: »
    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.html

    Bad journalism - they state how much the plate was, 2.5k, but not the weight of the bar

    Without the pieces in front of me, I can't be certain, but it doesn't appear to be a 2" oly plate, so I'm guessing it was a smaller bar.
  • GottaBurnEmAll
    GottaBurnEmAll Posts: 7,722 Member
    edited September 2017
    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.

    When I worked in a university back in the 80's, we either got danish or bagels. I preferred the bagels even though the danish were exceptional as danish go.

    My boss sometimes sprung for a platter of both.
  • earlnabby
    earlnabby Posts: 8,171 Member
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    earlnabby wrote: »
    bpetrosky wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 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.

    You mean the Space Race was a billion dollar effort to defend our cake culture? I thought the Apollo program was all about the Moon Pies.

    I had an eclipse party for the last solar eclipse. Discovered that the only place in SE Wisconsin to find Moon Pies was Stop and Go stores (attached to BP gas stations). At least the Sun Chips were easier to find, but I did get enough Moon Pies for everyone who attended.

    I've never had a moon pie.

    ETA: Never mind, I just searched and it looks like a wagon wheel. I've had them. What kind of booze did you have?

    Luna di Luna wine and Blue Moon beer.
  • nutmegoreo
    nutmegoreo Posts: 15,532 Member
    earlnabby wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    earlnabby wrote: »
    bpetrosky wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 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.

    You mean the Space Race was a billion dollar effort to defend our cake culture? I thought the Apollo program was all about the Moon Pies.

    I had an eclipse party for the last solar eclipse. Discovered that the only place in SE Wisconsin to find Moon Pies was Stop and Go stores (attached to BP gas stations). At least the Sun Chips were easier to find, but I did get enough Moon Pies for everyone who attended.

    I've never had a moon pie.

    ETA: Never mind, I just searched and it looks like a wagon wheel. I've had them. What kind of booze did you have?

    Luna di Luna wine and Blue Moon beer.

    I assume the post office misplaced my invitation. :disappointed:
  • earlnabby
    earlnabby Posts: 8,171 Member
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    earlnabby wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    earlnabby wrote: »
    bpetrosky wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 wrote: »
    Macy9336 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.

    You mean the Space Race was a billion dollar effort to defend our cake culture? I thought the Apollo program was all about the Moon Pies.

    I had an eclipse party for the last solar eclipse. Discovered that the only place in SE Wisconsin to find Moon Pies was Stop and Go stores (attached to BP gas stations). At least the Sun Chips were easier to find, but I did get enough Moon Pies for everyone who attended.

    I've never had a moon pie.

    ETA: Never mind, I just searched and it looks like a wagon wheel. I've had them. What kind of booze did you have?

    Luna di Luna wine and Blue Moon beer.

    I assume the post office misplaced my invitation. :disappointed:

    There is still the housewarming coming up in a few weeks.
This discussion has been closed.