I've been posting at this shit hole for almost 20 fuckin' years :olo: :dts:Doombrain wrote:I can’t believe he’s 18. I can recall your post announcing the birth.YourGrandpa wrote:My son is 18. He's started riding at a very young age and still occasionally rides a neighbor's dirt bike (2 stroke 250). He's mentioned several times that he wants a street bike. But I've told him he needs more experience driving a car (learning and understanding the roadways) before he gets a bike. He only got his license last October.
What is new in your little world?
Re: What is new in your little world?
Re: What is new in your little world?
Captured a 4-alarm warehouse fire from my balcony last night :paranoid:
[lvlshot]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/tbkgxj0f2h7pbyd/2019-06-06%2020.21.30.jpg[/lvlshot]
[lvlshot]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/tbkgxj0f2h7pbyd/2019-06-06%2020.21.30.jpg[/lvlshot]
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- Posts: 17509
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Re: What is new in your little world?
So, I've gotten fat.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.
Re: What is new in your little world?
You can do itDon Carlos wrote:So, I've gotten fat.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.

This book might help: The Leangains Method: The Art of Getting Ripped. Researched, Practiced, Perfected
You can do high protein, just work out your diet. I'm at 1950 cal per day, 257g protein. My day consists of is a big shake, meat & veggies, fruit, and a greek yogurt in the evening.

Re: What is new in your little world?
I'm about the same, want a challenge so we stay motivated? I've been trying on and off to lose weight now this year with mixed success. I need something to motivate me more.Don Carlos wrote:So, I've gotten fat.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.
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- Posts: 10074
- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
Losing weight beyond your mid to late 30's is difficult for most. However difficult losing the weight may be, keeping it off is even more difficult and requires lifestyle changes. Below are some of the changes I've made that help me keep my weight in check.
1. Cut out the daily consumption of sodas or sugary drinks. Drink water throughout the day.
2. Cut out the cookies, candies, ice creams, etc. Deserts are a waste of caloric intake.
3. Don't eat more than 3 times a day, no snacking between meals. Those meals should be reasonable with normal size portions.
4. Cut down the carbs. Don't eat extra bread with dinner. Replace things like french fries/chips with vegetables.
5. Move more. Go to the gym. Go for a walk. Do something on a regular basis.
You have to start thinking about eating as more for necessity than a reward. Once you lose the weight, developed better daily eating habits, started a workout routine and put on several pounds of muscle, you can loosen the reigns a bit. Because by then you and your body will be at a point where know what you can and can't do, and you don't want to jeopardize the results of all the hard work.
1. Cut out the daily consumption of sodas or sugary drinks. Drink water throughout the day.
2. Cut out the cookies, candies, ice creams, etc. Deserts are a waste of caloric intake.
3. Don't eat more than 3 times a day, no snacking between meals. Those meals should be reasonable with normal size portions.
4. Cut down the carbs. Don't eat extra bread with dinner. Replace things like french fries/chips with vegetables.
5. Move more. Go to the gym. Go for a walk. Do something on a regular basis.
You have to start thinking about eating as more for necessity than a reward. Once you lose the weight, developed better daily eating habits, started a workout routine and put on several pounds of muscle, you can loosen the reigns a bit. Because by then you and your body will be at a point where know what you can and can't do, and you don't want to jeopardize the results of all the hard work.
Re: What is new in your little world?
This pretty much covers the essentialsYourGrandpa wrote:1. Cut out the daily consumption of sodas or sugary drinks. Drink water throughout the day.
2. Cut out the cookies, candies, ice creams, etc. Deserts are a waste of caloric intake.
3. Don't eat more than 3 times a day, no snacking between meals. Those meals should be reasonable with normal size portions.
4. Cut down the carbs. Don't eat extra bread with dinner. Replace things like french fries/chips with vegetables.
5. Move more. Go to the gym. Go for a walk. Do something on a regular basis.
If you can make 50% of your calories come from protein when you're running a deficit, you'll have a much easier time regarding hunger.
Also try to eat at the same time every day for hormonal entrainment. You'll get hungry at that specific time, not in between.
By the way, the reason people past mid-30's get fat is because they move less not because of metabolism changes. Fitness trackers help see how many steps you took, as a minimum.
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- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
I believe the 5 things I listed are conscious decisions that are easy to make and keep track of in the beginning. I think it's important for people who are just starting to make these changes keep it simple. Don't overwhelm yourself with counting calories, measuring portions or tracking progress. All of those things will obviously increase or speed up your results. But they're not for the typical beginner. Jut get in there, get started and get some positive results. If you decide you want to take it to the next level, break out your scale and your fit-bit...
Re: What is new in your little world?
just go keto or close to keto...it's way healthier and its easy to lose weight cuz ur never hungry...lost 26 pounds in 48 days...
remember morons...we have been fed bullshit for 60 years that fat is bad...reality is just the opposite...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX1vBA9bLNk
remember morons...we have been fed bullshit for 60 years that fat is bad...reality is just the opposite...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX1vBA9bLNk
Re: What is new in your little world?
lol at gramps saying to cut down on carbs and also cake and cookies...those are all carbs dumbo...
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- Posts: 17509
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 12:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
Nice - I am close to you on figures; 2300 calories a day with 240g protein, 201g carbs and 57g fat. I am usual over on the protein but under on overall calories, which isn't a bad thing for the start of the journey. As long I don't dip too low and it deprives me of energy for training, I am good.ToxicBug wrote:You can do itDon Carlos wrote:So, I've gotten fat.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.
This book might help: The Leangains Method: The Art of Getting Ripped. Researched, Practiced, Perfected
You can do high protein, just work out your diet. I'm at 1950 cal per day, 257g protein. My day consists of is a big shake, meat & veggies, fruit, and a greek yogurt in the evening.
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- Posts: 17509
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 12:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
You are on. I started on May 28th (that is when I weighed in at 101kg). I am weighing in every two weeks, so:Κracus wrote:I'm about the same, want a challenge so we stay motivated? I've been trying on and off to lose weight now this year with mixed success. I need something to motivate me more.Don Carlos wrote:So, I've gotten fat.
I have taken up training again to try and offset the last two years of food and drink abuse I have subjected my body to. I weight in at 101kg (223lbs) and for someone as vertically challenged as I am, that is not good.
So I started about 10 days ago and I have given myself a challenge of dropped 8% body fat and 10kg (22lbs) in overall weight by September 1st. Then by the end of the year I hope to drop a further 10kg (22lbs) to get back down to my fighting weight of 80kg (176lbs).
It's a struggle on the fitness side of things, as I didn't quite grasp just how unfit I had become. Also running at a calorie defect with a high(ish) protein based diet is a struggle. I think I will be able to hammer the first 4 weeks of the strict diet before I ease it off a little, while still maintaining my training. Anything more on the diet front will end up leaving me without the energy I need to push myself and burn the calories I need to shift some of this fat.
Wish me luck, I think I am going to need it.
June 11th
June 25th
July 9th
July 23rd
August 6th
August 20th
September 3rd - this is goal day
Let's see what you got :ninja:
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- Posts: 17509
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 12:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
100% on this, Gramps.YourGrandpa wrote:Losing weight beyond your mid to late 30's is difficult for most. However difficult losing the weight may be, keeping it off is even more difficult and requires lifestyle changes. Below are some of the changes I've made that help me keep my weight in check.
1. Cut out the daily consumption of sodas or sugary drinks. Drink water throughout the day.
2. Cut out the cookies, candies, ice creams, etc. Deserts are a waste of caloric intake.
3. Don't eat more than 3 times a day, no snacking between meals. Those meals should be reasonable with normal size portions.
4. Cut down the carbs. Don't eat extra bread with dinner. Replace things like french fries/chips with vegetables.
5. Move more. Go to the gym. Go for a walk. Do something on a regular basis.
You have to start thinking about eating as more for necessity than a reward. Once you lose the weight, developed better daily eating habits, started a workout routine and put on several pounds of muscle, you can loosen the reigns a bit. Because by then you and your body will be at a point where know what you can and can't do, and you don't want to jeopardize the results of all the hard work.
So I don't really drink many sugary drinks and I do at least 500ml of water a day anyway. Since starting this I have been doing 1500ml.
I also don't really do much in the way of deserts when I eat, so not too much to change there either.
What I will do is reach for that extra bit of bread or just smash a shit load of pasta on my plate.
And then there is my biggest weakness; the drink. I love a beer or a wine or a gin. And unfortunately for me, alcohol sticks to me. So this is going to be my biggest challenge; staying away from the beer. Not easy when you have one of the best breweries in the UK a stones throw away from your home. I'd think nothing of smashing in 4 or 5 pints of high calorie IPA down my neck on a weekend or a glass or two of wine with my aforementioned pasta based dinner. In all honesty, what I need to do is to drop the alcohol for a few months, but I know this isn't realistic. So I am limiting myself to a few beers every few weeks. And I need to be at a calories defect for a few days before hand to ensure my overall weekly intake doesn't go over my goal.
Training 4 times a week will also make a big difference. Once I have dropped some weight, I can also start going for small runs again. I hate running, but I know it's benefits so I will push myself to do a few short, gassy runs a week by week 8 of my plan, hopefully expediting the weight loss and compounding cardiovascular fitness.
Re: What is new in your little world?
Alcohol isn't a big deal. You just need to keep drinking down to once a week and adjust your diet on drinking days.Don Carlos wrote:And then there is my biggest weakness; the drink. I love a beer or a wine or a gin. And unfortunately for me, alcohol sticks to me. So this is going to be my biggest challenge; staying away from the beer. Not easy when you have one of the best breweries in the UK a stones throw away from your home. I'd think nothing of smashing in 4 or 5 pints of high calorie IPA down my neck on a weekend or a glass or two of wine with my aforementioned pasta based dinner. In all honesty, what I need to do is to drop the alcohol for a few months, but I know this isn't realistic. So I am limiting myself to a few beers every few weeks. And I need to be at a calories defect for a few days before hand to ensure my overall weekly intake doesn't go over my goal.
Re: What is new in your little world?
Hard liquor is the healthiest... And contain zero carbs... Time to grow up chumps...
Re: What is new in your little world?
My mp3 player died, well the battery doesn't hold juice for too long after charging for hours so I fired up and old iPhone 4. It was a spare my Mum inherited from a grand niece sometime ago
IOS is totally new for me as I have been in the Android world. Learning all the time
IOS is totally new for me as I have been in the Android world. Learning all the time

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- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
Re: What is new in your little world?
I guess it's the really little, little, almost insignificant things...
Re: What is new in your little world?
Minutiae of life I guess. As all these small things like Lego bricks make for full and interesting days :p
[color=#FFBF00]Physicist [/color][color=#FF4000]of[/color] [color=#0000FF]Q3W[/color]
Re: What is new in your little world?
You are on. I started on May 28th (that is when I weighed in at 101kg). I am weighing in every two weeks, so:Don Carlos wrote:
I'm about the same, want a challenge so we stay motivated? I've been trying on and off to lose weight now this year with mixed success. I need something to motivate me more.
June 11th
June 25th
July 9th
July 23rd
August 6th
August 20th
September 3rd - this is goal day
Let's see what you got :ninja:[/quote]
Sounds good bro.

Re: What is new in your little world?
That link is on my read list now as I need to read.ToxicBug wrote:Alcohol isn't a big deal. You just need to keep drinking down to once a week and adjust your diet on drinking days.
TLDR, I too am on the weigh loss thing but not as before.
Short story is I was nudging 100kg and yes a while ago. I went to WW (Weight Watchers) as it worked for me in the past and well. I started at 97kg and got down to 83kg. Recently, probably because of the taste I have for the amber fluid over spirits
I know it is nothing like the loss you people in recent posts are looking at but I wanted to give you some encouragement. Just do it. You can if I did and can again. I find, once you stick and do it for a few days, these lead to weeks, then it become so much easier.
Example, this morning I had an omelette for breakfast and no toast (usually I'd add 2 slices and lots of butter). In WW land this equated to zero points providing a little leeway for later if needed.
Personally I love my carbs and I know I just need to account for what I eat.
Good luck

[color=#FFBF00]Physicist [/color][color=#FF4000]of[/color] [color=#0000FF]Q3W[/color]
Re: What is new in your little world?
Improved the layout in my home office and finally added an m.2 to my rig, not gonna tinker with it anymore...for now.








Re: What is new in your little world?
looks great!
Re: What is new in your little world?
Yes it does 

Member: [url=http://www.nad.org]NAD[/url]&[url=http://www.bta4bikes.org/]BTA[/url]
Your Friendly Neighborhood Quake Addict
Your Friendly Neighborhood Quake Addict
Re: What is new in your little world?
so when do you start twitch streaming?
Re: What is new in your little world?
I was never interested in that and barely have any time for gaming as it is.