In article <dr6dnblYgZH9EFfYnZ2dnUVZ_qninZ2d@scnresearch.com>, Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Indeed. I'm much higher on the BMI index than either of you, but I'm very, very slow to break a sweat under any circumstances - even, for instance, sitting in a sauna. Always have been. Even hot flashes, the bane of the middle-aged female's existence, just...
David Weinshenker wrote: Tiger Spot wrote: On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:41:11 -0800, Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Even hot flashes, the bane of the middle-aged female's existence, just make me feel hot and ready, not sweaty. I can't believe I wrote "hot and ready." I meant "hot and red-faced." That may be my ...
Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Lars Fischer wrote: Good. However, I suggest there's more to it than clothing and BMI. In my experience, there's a lot of difference in how much people will sweat, even for people with similar BMI. Indeed. I'm much higher on the BMI index than either of you, but I'm very, very ...
Tiger Spot wrote: On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:41:11 -0800, Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Even hot flashes, the bane of the middle-aged female's existence, just make me feel hot and ready, not sweaty. I can't believe I wrote "hot and ready." I meant "hot and red-faced." That may be my worst (or best) typo ever. ...
Tiger Spot wrote: On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:41:11 -0800, Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Even hot flashes, the bane of the middle-aged female's existence, just make me feel hot and ready, not sweaty. I can't believe I wrote "hot and ready." I meant "hot and red-faced." That may be my worst (or best) typo ever. ...
Lars Fischer <spam@suk.dk> wrote (on Wed, 7 Feb 2007 12:07:46 +0100): On Tue, 06 Feb 2007 16:51:21 -0500, Ryk wrote: I think our 1980 Accord (http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~wstef/ for sample pic and not to be confused with more recent models) was a little bigger than a 323 Bigger than this one, I'm sure: http://www.flickr.com/photos/surelars/382626179/ (a picture ...
On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:41:11 -0800, Pat Kight <kightp@peak.org> wrote: Pat Kight wrote: Even hot flashes, the bane of the middle-aged female's existence, just make me feel hot and ready, not sweaty. I can't believe I wrote "hot and ready." I meant "hot and red-faced." That may be my worst (or best) typo ever. I was wondering about that. --Theresa ...
Serene wrote: On 7 Feb 2007 14:32:06 GMT, Irfon-Kim Ahmad <irfon@ambienautica.com> wrote: And yet, the last time I went to the doctor, I passed every test with flying colours. No cholesterol problems, no signs of diabetes, no blood pressure problems, a resting heart rate low enough that he checked it two or three times because he refused to believe it was real for ...
Pat Kight wrote: Lars Fischer wrote: Good. However, I suggest there's more to it than clothing and BMI. In my experience, there's a lot of difference in how much people will sweat, even for people with similar BMI. Indeed. I'm much higher on the BMI index than either of you, but I'm very, very slow to break a sweat under any circumstances - ...
Ryk wrote: I never got into the trailer thing for biking along the RMD when we lived alongside. It's flat enough that even a very young child can cover fairly long distances on his own bike. My choice was to put the toddler in the backseat of the bike to sleep while the 4-year-old pedalled hard on his own bike. We've used the trailer a lot. When the kid was a toddler, we'd ...