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Anonymous
>>192480 >OH NO, THEY HAVE TO EAT MORE DELICIOUS FOOD!
Alright then, everyone in this thread. Let's trade places for a moment. Imagine the first pang of that sensation that signals you're full. Pretty satisfying, yes? Now take that a step onward, the uncomfortable bloated feeling you get, say, at a party or restaurant where you've eaten too much. Not so great, perhaps tolerable, if only because you can space out your next meal appropriately. But not if you're trying to gain weight. Take it further; think about carrying more physical weight in the mid-section of your body than you've ever been used to, ever increasing.
Imagine forcing that shit down 24/7, gagging on oversized portions at every fucking meal, always frequent, because anything else is a step back. If you miss one, suddenly your hyped metabolism burns through whatever it has and you feel inexplicably hungry at the most inconvenient times. Imagine how much it suddenly costs to keep up this kind of diet in places where large portions of anything, let alone anything appetising, are hard to come by (i.e. anywhere but the U.S.). Imagine having to stretch that pathetic little bag you call your stomach at every turn, working your ass off in the gym, just as hard as anyone else, then weighing yourself at the end of every month to find you've not moved at all, or some months, even actually gone down.
Speaking as a 150lb guy who has to continually choke on so many calories to just maintain my current position and can't spare much money for overpriced weight gain supplements (though I buy whey powder), I'm not saying it's more or less difficult to start on one side of the scale or the other here, if only because I've never experienced how it is to be overweight, but never imply it's easy, because it's sure as hell not.
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