My desire to brew has given me a LOT of beer in the basement. With all that stock, I feel compelled to have a beer every day. At my age (40), I think it's making me fat. Maybe I'll stop eating to reserve more calories for beer.
Could always break down and exercise. One beer isn't that much.
Please translate, I don't understand what you are trying to say.
Not really a good analogy...if the skinny people are all hungry they'll gang up on you and run a fat person into the ground during the chase.Just think of it as storage for a bad winter.
While the skinny people are eating each other you can sit back and relax for the long haul.
I'll say it slowly....
get...off...your...ass...and...take...a...walk.
We call it "sarcasm and humor"... :rockin:I'm sorry, you seem to be speaking a dialect I don't understand.
We call it "sarcasm and humor"... :rockin:
I'm sorry, you seem to be speaking a dialect I don't understand.
I know what you mean. I am very active (physical labor) and was still gaining. So last Feb. I quit drinking any alcoholic beverages and have lost 30 lb. When the brewery is set up again, it's going to be just CAP for me.When I first started brewing, my friend Micheal developed a microbrew-belly. Up to that point he was rail thin (6'2"/170lb). Homebrew can pack a lot of Calories in a pint. Me, I've always been on the border of over-weight. One of the reasons I prefer to make small beers.
My desire to brew has given me a LOT of beer in the basement. With all that stock, I feel compelled to have a beer every day. At my age (40), I think it's making me fat. Maybe I'll stop eating to reserve more calories for beer.
To believe that fat people are "unhealthy" & skinny people are "healthy" is a myth. I live to have a quality of life rather than quantity. What good is it to live to 110 if you exercise and eat rice cakes all day & still end up ****ing in an adult diaper in a nursing home being feed baby food?
:fro:
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