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"...I'm sorry, you seem to be speaking a dialect I don't understand.
We call it "sarcasm and humor"...:rockin:
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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: