Poll | 10/28/2009 1:00 am
One study from Yale says that women are evolving to become shorter and fatter. In recent years have you shrunk or gotten fatter?
Our witty, fun friends at Lemondrop.com recently highlighted a study by Yale scientists that said in the future women will be shorter and fatter. Are you concerned about this study?























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It took us years to get "long" jeans and now they want to take them away! :)
I’m suppose I’m less concerned about being shorter and fatter, but the study did say that we’d be having more children earlier in life. Didn’t we already do this? Instead of evolving, this sounds cyclical to me.
10 generations - huh? Something to look forward to for our future family females. As for me - I have shrunk from 5’3 1/2" to 5’2", but my weight has gone from 118 to 108, so I am slowly disappearing. Someday I will merely be a puddle on the ground.
Lizzie, you made me laugh out loud! I’ve lost stature myself in the past ten years or so - from almost 5’5" down to a little under 5’4", and I, too, have lost a considerable amount of weight. Will I also disappear eventually? And do you remember our own wonderful Lily Tomlin’s great film about the "Incredible Shrinking Woman"? Perhaps we will end up living in a dollhouse! Have a great day, and walk tall, my dear!
OMG I am dying laughing from that question (sorry!!!!!!!!) The answer:
HELL YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!
(To both parts)
I’m the shortest in a long line of Tall People - "only" 5’ 8" - compared to my cousins. The women average 5’ 10" to 6’ 3" and the men start at 6’ 2" and go up to 6’ 8". I suspect that some of their children are taller than they are.
As for losing height, I have no intention of doing so. I had a hysterectomy three years ago and have been on hormones ever since. I have no intention of ever stopping them, and I do a fair amount of weight-bearing exercise, so losing bone mass won’t be an issue. I have genetics on my side there, too.
Weight IS entirely in your control, barring medical issues. A friend recently pointed out that the usual trend of gaining a pound or two a year amounts to a big whack of extra weight by the time we’re in our 50s, and she’s right. Doctors don’t want to talk about weight and are inclined to "forgive" 20 or 30 pounds extra, but that doesn’t make it all right.
Losing height is largely a matter of losing bone mass, and as much as i truly hate working out, weight-bearing exercise is the absolute best way to maintain your bones. According to my doctor, you can take calcium and supplements until you’re blue in the face, but exercise is the only way to make a real impact.
Hormones help. Were it not for good old Premarin, millions of women would be almost completely disabled as they age. The recent and false hype around any kind of hormone treatment being dangerous has caused more damage than actually taking the drugs can possibly can. I recently had an appointment with my gynecologist. She told me that you have a higher risk of getting breast cancer if you smoke than if you take hormones for forty years.
There are dangerous side effects of your good old Premarin especially if taken for many years. One has to weigh these risks with whatever benefits you think you are getting. Here’s a link you might find helpful.
http://menopause.peruvian-maca.com/hormone-replacement-therapy.htm