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Post by TTN on Oct 12, 2012 22:50:06 GMT
Adverts to fit perceived life styles
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 13, 2012 9:12:09 GMT
Alright im goin monday!!
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Post by Hugh on Oct 13, 2012 14:51:17 GMT
Already bin and goin' today; I'm within five pounds of my fightin' weight woo-hoo!
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 15, 2012 7:54:56 GMT
Tuesday... im still too tired from Saturday..
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Post by phillyj on Oct 15, 2012 12:58:51 GMT
who you fightin' Hugh?
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 15, 2012 14:50:35 GMT
Hes fightin himself..
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Post by Hugh on Oct 15, 2012 16:43:31 GMT
I did this scientific calculation that 135 was my fighting weight should I have ever climbed into the ring. I'm 140 and Floyd Mayweather size right now
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 16, 2012 7:47:42 GMT
Barbaric..
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Post by Hugh on Oct 16, 2012 13:37:55 GMT
Scientific
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 16, 2012 14:14:29 GMT
Painful way too earn a living a bit like my job..
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Post by Hugh on Oct 16, 2012 16:37:58 GMT
Turns out the typical prolonged sitting of an office job is deadly to ones health
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 24, 2012 9:21:20 GMT
Gym was good this mornin, Sauna ,n, Steam room working! Swam 6 lengths..
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Post by Hugh on Oct 24, 2012 15:14:39 GMT
Time to walk Lola Dr. Emma G. Wilmot of the University of Leicester picks up a theme first highlighted by the pioneering work in the early 1950s by a British researcher, Dr. Jeremy Morris. Morris was the first to connect physical exertion and health. In seeking to determine whether there was an association between the type of work people do and heart disease, he stumbled upon groundbreaking data. Morris combed through the health records of 31,000 bus drivers and conductors in London. The conductors had significantly less heart disease than the drivers. The only variable that consistently distinguished one group from the other was activity level. Only recently has this work generated new research. Wilmot's group reviewed studies that doBanana Milkshakeented sedentary time and health outcomes. Gathering data from 18 studies with a total of 794,577 subjects, they doBanana Milkshakeented the increased health risk associated with increasing sedentary time. When comparing the greatest sedentary time group with the lowest, a doubling of the risk for diabetes, an approximate two-and-a-half-fold increase in the risk of cardiovascular events, a 90 percent rise in risk of cardiovascular death, and a 49 percent higher risk of death by any cause. www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-spector-md/sitting-health_b_1971401.html
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Post by roddy byers on Oct 25, 2012 9:45:09 GMT
Felt faint in the steam room? Fadin away?
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Post by phillyj on Oct 25, 2012 9:47:10 GMT
in there too long?
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