• stevedidwhat_infosec@infosec.pub
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    5 months ago

    Captain bummer here:

    Most people if this were a guy, would immediately call this out as toxic, manipulative, and abusive behavior

    I’ll err on the side of optimism and assume this was just a joke pic, but I did want to shed light on the fact that fucking with your partners food without their knowledge and consent is abusive and manipulative.

    • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      The litmus test of determining if there is bigotry involved is to change the terms in contention. If it is bigoted in one direction, it is fundamentally bigoted in both.

      You hit the nail on the head when you posited “if this was a guy doing it to his girlfriend” it would be toxic, manipulative, and abusive.

      Let’s make misandry as unacceptable as misogyny. Because true equality will be impossible until we do.

    • MBM@lemmings.world
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      5 months ago

      Most people if this were a guy, would immediately call this out as toxic, manipulative, and abusive behavior

      …is anyone implying that this is fine, if it wasn’t a joke?

    • Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      So it’s been sort of a joke that my current fiancee and my ex both didn’t want me to lose weight because they think I look hot chubby. Both have said that they would leave me if I ever did get skinny. As a joke of course, so I assume this is a joke too.

  • teft@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Butter aint gonna do shit. Add sugar to everything he eats. That will pack the pounds on.

      • Luccus
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        5 months ago

        Fats are quite difficult for the body to break down. But carbs, especially sugars, are really easy to digest. If one eats a lot of fat, it may actually make its way out unchanged.*

        *I’m not a nutritionist, I just drank 250ml of olive oil after loosing a bet.

        • earlgrey0@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          Ok, I am going to need more details about this played out. I am morbidly curious about what that much olive oil does to one’s insides and how bad of a stomach ache that was. Also, how fast can a person actually consume that much olive oil? Is it possible to attempt to chug it or is it too viscous? I have so many questions!

          • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I did something similar on a long backpacking trip. I brought olive oil in a plastic bottle which I had chopped some small peppers into so I could add fat/ calories/flavor to backpacking food. On day eight, two days before we were hiking out, I was out of trail snacks, so I finished off the plastic bottle of oil because I was super hungry. It had about 200ml of oil in it I would say, so I just drank it, figuring what the hell, I need some calories.

            I had stomach cramps so bad I couldn’t walk, I had to lie down. My backpacking partner had to put up my hammock for me, and after lying there in excruciating pain for about 90min, I then shit everything out of my stomach and bowels, which also hurt. Felt a little better but still had bad cramps. All in all, probably three hours of misery. We lost a whole afternoon of hiking, basically by the time I was ok again, we got about 2mi down trail for a better camp spot and just called it a day.

            10/10 would recommend.

              • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                The peppers were pickled and then I chopped them up and added them. The pickling is really why they add flavor.

                I regularly pickle my own peppers (and make my own fermented hot sauce), so I imagine that made a difference in terms of botulism. Still, good to know and thanks for the info.

          • Luccus
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            5 months ago

            Maybe a bit late, but the worst thing about it was the texture while drinking and… wiping… because oil really needs soap to come off.

            But other than that, it was pretty uneventful. But I also have a pretty non-problematic stomach that rarely complains.

            • earlgrey0@sh.itjust.works
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              5 months ago

              Respect that you took the time to reply, even if it’s late. I had a feeling the texture of oil would be better problematic, but wasn’t expecting it to cause issues on both ends.

      • teft@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        There are more calories sure but he’s going to be full from eating fatty pasta. Feeding him sugar is going to put his glycemic response into overdrive and make him hungry again in a few hours.

      • Transporter Room 3@startrek.website
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        5 months ago

        Lol that’s some awardspeechedit content right there.

        Now it really IS like being on r*ddit again.

        Edit: to anyone wondering about the deleted comment, the guy was being pedantic about wording implying a different meaning, and then whined in an edit that this place is just like the other place because he got “downvoted for providing scientific fact” or something along those lines.

          • Zyansheep@programming.dev
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            5 months ago

            The context of the post is someone trying to get someone else fat. The context of the comment you replied to is talking about how sugar would be a better than fat towards that goal. Sugar is relevant because while you are correct that if you ate an additional equal weight of fats vs sugars, assuming equality of nutrient absorption, the person who ate additional fats would in theory gain weight. The issue here is that this theory does not reflect reality well enough. In reality, we observe patterns like how eating sugar will make you hungrier, causing you to eat more overall, and potentially creating a self-reinforcing cycle of weight gain. This argument is why people are talking about sugar and why it is relevant to the conversation’s context.

      • cm0002@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It’s not all about the calories. It’s true butter is dense in calories, but it’s dense in calories your body will convert the bulk of into useful things it needs.

        Sugar OTOH, also adds a lot of calories, but your body will only use a small portion of it and convert the rest to fat for later use.

        For nearly all of human evolution, sugar was a rarity and your body treated it as such, the wide access we have to sugar nowadays has only been a thing for a tiny blip of time as far as evolution is concerned

    • Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      It does say meal prep, maybe he adds the sauce the day he’s gonna eat it. Otherwise it might get extra soggy just sitting there absorbing the sauce. He could also keep various proteins prepped in other containers and he cna just mix and match based on what he’s feeling.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Calories in/calories out. Butter is fat and some sugar and protein. Pasta is mostly carbs. But they all become calories, and if you eat more calories than you burn, they will be stored as fat.

      The poster above is correct thay sugar is the easiest for your body to turn into calories, and carbs are basically complex sugars. Fat is also fairly easy for your body to convert to calories, and it is usually more dense. Protein is the hardest, but even protein will make you fat if you eat enough of it.

      If you want to lose weight, burn more calories than you consume. Everything else is nuance.

      • Nikls94@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        As someone who’s quit sugar and vegetable oils: this food will have more calories with the butter, but it will keep full for longer

      • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If you want to lose weight, burn more calories than you consume. Everything else is nuance.

        The dumbing down of nutritional science and metabolic understanding so we can teach high schoolers a “health” class has resulted in disastrous knock-on effects from which it will take decades for the human body to recover.

        • molten@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          What? This isn’t suggested or taught in any high school curriculum I know of. Not only that but it is technically true and most people who actually diet do more research than “starve yourself” because who is too lazy to do research but not too lazy to make a huge lifestyle change and constantly exert control over their purchasing/prep/eating habits? Decades for the body to recover? I mean, if you literally starve yourself to near death to the point where you cause organ damage you might never fully recover I guess, but seriously, nobody is doing that without already having severe issues beforehand. The overarching suggestion of “eat less calories if you want to be less fat” is effective and non-harmful advice as the majority of people who remain overweight tend to overeat. Which is unhealthy and can take decades for the human body to recover.

      • englislanguage@lemmy.sdf.org
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        5 months ago

        Your comment is incorrect in many different ways.

        Butter is fat and some sugar and protein.

        No. The butter in my fridge has almost no sugar (0.6g in 100g) and almost no protein (0.7 g in 100g).

        Pasta is mostly carbs.

        For comparison: The pasta I have at home have more sugar (most have roughly 3g in 100g) and way more protein (12g in 100g).

        they all become calories, and if you eat more calories than you burn, they will be stored as fat.

        Are you sure you’re not simplifying too much?

        Also, “just” eating less or more calories is not that easy if you ignore the side-effects. Carbohydrates will make you hungry very soon unless mixed (or eaten after) fibers, fat and protein. Which you should do anyways for health reasons.

        • OutsizedWalrus@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I think the person you’re trying to correct was making the same point as you.

          They were simply trying to demonstrate that butter isn’t 100% fat.

    • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 months ago

      Butter has 4.5x more calories than pasta by weight. It has roughly 100 calories per Tbsp.

      If she adds 2 Tbps of butter to his meal preps daily, he would gain (or at least, not lose) 1 lb of body fat roughly every 16 days.