Published on
Jan 22,
2015
Traisinseuksalai Kajornachaikul1 year ago
Bob, may I make a technical suggestion about your videos?
Would you kindly move the camera back several feet?
It's overwhelming to see your head and your short, pudgy fingers (when you are pointing) fill my entire computer screen.
Thank you.
Cordially,
Whippersnapper in Christ
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John Andrews
John Andrews1 year ago (edited)
Before you lecture anybody on demons you had better learn to spell it correctly in your title. I am surely dumber after having watched this! Here's some prophecy for you.
Deadly sin, gluttony, head line reads: "
Stupid man in
Ohio eats himself to death on mislabeled
Amish sausage and world is now a better place!
Autopsy finds cause of death: full of toxic crap." I
OWN YOU!
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mharbott701 year ago
Going hungry is not having ANY food, no bread, no green beans, no yellow beans
. In the example you cited you had food, it might not have been food you wanted to eat for an entire week, but it was food nonetheless. And looking at your food hoarding, going hungry is not something you really have much risk of - sure you might not want to eat some of that food, but if you ever find yourself truly going hungry you'll be glad to have anything of sustenance.
Still, I'm not surprised that you continue to have health issues, as you provide evidence that your choices are directly responsible for the condition of your gastric problems. Your breakfast the other day (6 slices of bacon and a large stack of hash browns) was sufficient to feed at least 3 adults, though you should probably have added a slice or two of whole wheat bread (or a whole wheat muffin) to balance out the nutritional content. I do recall you saying that your doctor recommended that you eat 6 small meals per day, and that breakfast was at least 3 times the size of what would be considered to be "small".
While I commend you for trying to eat healthy, it's obvious from your choice of location on where you live, is going to limit your access to fresh vegetables.
We are in a similar predicament with living a fair distance from a good grocery store, so we supplement with frozen vegetables as they have a longer shelf life than fresh, I would suggest you throw out the nutritionally questionable packets of sliced "cheese" you have in your freezer in order to make some room for more healthy food options. I'd also recommend not accepting things like marshmallows and oreo cookies from the food pantry as these are really bad choices for a diabetic - we found just having them in the home is just too much temptation, and you end up regreting eating them when you check your blood sugars the next morning.
We've found that if you
Really make an effort to eat right, you can reduce the occurences and severity of gastric issues.
Completely cut out the bad stuff - the aforementioned marshmallows and oreo cookies would be a start, and I'm sure you can find other stuff in that food hoard you have there. Cut back on the less than ideal foods, treat them as a special occassion food item - I'd put things like bacon, sausage, potatoes, and other higher fat, processed and/or starchy foods in this category - we've had potatoes twice in the last 8 months:
Thanksgiving and
Christmas. But as with everything in life, you need to want it so badly that you're going to do anything in your control to get there, no excuses. Cut back on the amount of food you eat at any single meal, browse the internet for good low fat healthy (and cheap) food options, and concentrate on eating only from the list the doctor gave you - if it's not on the list you should just not eat it. My husband and I made this decision 8 months ago, and it's not been easy, but today our blood sugars are always at a normal level, our blood pressure is under control, my husbands
GERD is in remission and he no longer has to take medication to relieve it. We taking far fewer medications (reducing our spending), our grocery bill is 2/3's what it used to be, and between us we're 140lbs lighter. But it wasn't us complaining on youtube that we were having health issues, and that the world was attacking us, and that our food choices were approved by our doctor and weren't really bad for us - it was us realizing that our problems were entirely self made, taking ownership and making the decision to change all that.
Yeah we still have those underlying health issues, so we'll never be able to eat like we used to, it's a daily battle to stay on the right path - very similar to the fight against sin, the path is narrow and it's easy to fall off it, so we must remain vigilant.
- published: 10 Apr 2016
- views: 0