Though I am still surviving on wrongfit bras. I'm a 34G at last check and none of those tried are oriented right, while my old lane byrant's, with their wrong band size and cups suffice. They are at least located where my real estate is. But they slip around too much.
My dress ladies can fix them for you!!! Not sure how much they charge but they do alterations and they make things FIT like you would not believe.
Don't remember if I said but, Steph, I am so sorry for your loss.
"fell so short of living say, past 110 or so."
That's just idiotic. Living to 110 is just an extreme outlier. Hell, living to 96 is an outlier. You can't draw conclusions from one guy living to 96 or 110 or whatever.
I think that the value of diet and exercise has a lot to do with individual characteristics. My grandfather and his brothers were all extremely tall (grandfather was 6'8") and fairly thin. He got no exercise (other than hard work) and a typical breakfast for him was 1/2 a package of pillsbury crescent rolls baked flat and covered with syrup, with a side of 4-5 slices of bacon. He lined to be 94.
Also, wasn't he extremely active like a guy decades younger at least into his 80s? I was always seeing him running around in track suits on infomercials. If proper diet and exercise "only" bought him 20+ extra years of good health that's still doing pretty damn well.
Also, wasn't he extremely active like a guy decades younger at least into his 80s?
Absolutely. Diet and exercise may not only have extended his life but made the quality of it much better.
My maternal grandfather went to work in the coal mines of Eastern Kentucky at 11. He smoked non-filtered cigarettes most of his life, made his own moonshine, drank HEAVILY--and by heavily, I mean he was hospitalized at age 80 for alcohol poisoning after a bender--and ate a lot of bacon. He was diabetic and a gambler who was dirt poor most of his life.
He lived to be 88, died with a full head of hair surrounded by his 11 living children, 60 grandchildren, 35 great grandchildren and had 2 great-great grandchildren on the way.
I think it was good genes. If you discount the gambling addiction and the alcoholism.
Also, wasn't he extremely active like a guy decades younger at least into his 80s?
Absolutely. Diet and exercise may not only have extended his life but made the quality of it much better.
Exactly this. I remember watching him on TV when I was a wee little kid in Oregon. He had one of those perfect TV personalities, like Mr. Rogers or Oprah. Warm and energetic and likable.
He had one of those perfect TV personalities, like Mr. Rogers or Oprah
Mr. Rogers was a minion of Satan. My sisters and I agree, and many people I've talked to agreed that he creeped them out.
Just had a student come in - she spells her name: Mandii. Yes, two i.s at the end.
My DH and I are trying to coordinate calendars - he gets to go to Beijing in February - and he just insisted he's got a meeting in NYC on February 31.
I am never going to let him live this down.