Already packed those Amy. I think I still have some sheets that I haven't packed.
'Safe'
Natter 72: We Were Unprepared for This
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Hugs for aurelia and msbelle, and crossed fingers for Dana.
I just read a disturbing article that claims a diet moderate to high in protein in middle age, esp animal-based protein, raises your risk of cancer to the same degree that smoking does. Yipes! Study comes out of 'SC.
I just read a disturbing article that claims a diet moderate to high in protein in middle age, esp animal-based protein, raises your risk of cancer to the same degree that smoking does. Yipes! Study comes out of 'SC.
I saw that, too, Burrell. Which is why my salad at lunch had no chicken in it (although I forgot to tell them to skip the blue cheese...)
Nooo! You can't take my cheese from me!
I can't keep up, though. Every day something new is bad for you. I figure if I eat everything in moderation, I'm sort of covering my bases.
I can't keep up, though. Every day something new is bad for you. I figure if I eat everything in moderation, I'm sort of covering my bases.
My feeling as well.
And like shrift, you'll never take my cheese (or seafood or cake) from me anyway.
I've been told to shift toward higher protein, lower carb. It does keep me from binge snacking.
I can't keep up, though. Every day something new is bad for you. I figure if I eat everything in moderation, I'm sort of covering my bases.
Yep. Plus, no way in hell am I giving up cheese or bacon.
I just read a disturbing article that claims a diet moderate to high in protein in middle age, esp animal-based protein, raises your risk of cancer to the same degree that smoking does.
Less sensational take on the research: [link]
Also, it's based on a recall study. Never trust a recall study. Even the authors note:
There are some limitations to our study, which should be acknowledged. First, the use of a single 24 hr dietary recall followed by up to 18 years of mortality assessment has the potential of misclassifying dietary practice if the 24 hr period was not representative of a participant's normal day.