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Anonymous
>>305430
Oh, yeah. Another example I'd like to make:
If you've ever had an anatomy class, you might have learned that fat does NOT burn completely evenly off of your body. This is also a reason why people perceive "loose skin". It works like this: __________________ ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
Those are fat cells under the skin on your stomach, for example, and the line is the skin above. When fat burns from your body, it happens when the mitochondria in your cells needs emergency energy, so it asks for fat from the fat cells. It does not ask for fat to come in order of the cells, it does not care. Thus, fat often burns off like this:
____ __ __ __ ( ) ( ) \ /( )\ /( )\ /( )
And, thusly, the skin tries to adapt inwards, but adjacent fat cells that have not been depleted yet still hold the skin up in other areas. This explains "saggy" or "dimply" looking skin.
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