She told me (AGAIN) to eat more veggies and less carbs. I told her veggies have been going through me VERY quickly lately. She said to take Imodium if I have to.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
Outta here early to see the dr. She will yell at me for not losing enough weight.
My own Nutritionist weighed me at EVERY monthly meeting and I had to write a food log of everything I ate. Simple food substitutions have helped me lose 50 lbs since January!! I am working hard NOT to find them again!! She said English Muffin instead of a biscuit, love both so no problems there. She said wrap instead of 2 pieces of bread, again no problems. She then said MORE veggies than carbs for dinner, THAT was a problem but I am working on it. She also said thin crust pizza with veggies and SOME meats is also better than the 'hand tossed thick crust all the meats' kind too, YES I CAN have pizza too, just NOT every week though!!!
Here is something you might like: Preheat your oven (I use an easy-bake counter top oven) to 450 (or its pizza setting). Place a flour tortilla on a nonstick pizza pan and put it in to crisp it (never take your eyes of of it). It will begin to blister. Remove, ladle pizza sauce, a layer of cheese, peperoni (if allowed) and return it to the oven. Watch until done. I like thin crust so this fits for me although there is nothing better then a true Italian pizza dough.
I will try that, thanks!! And yes meats, veggies and cheese ARE allowed for me, of course the less fatty the better. But 'protein' is a good thing, with only a few carbs alongside.
@David yes veggies do that, I eat 2 'chewable fiber' tablets 3 times a week to help prevent that.
I refuse to go to female doctors, they treat you like a little kid! Luckily my surgery are all male. Except of course for the obligatory battleaxes on reception. They train them especially for the NHS! Entry requirements to the course are - late 50's, spinster, face like the back of a bus, attitude problem, and very basic computer skills.
But of course their main job is to discourage people from coming in unless they are seriously ill. Then the government wonder why all the A & E depts. are full of people with minor ailments.
Waiting for Godot & salvation :-)
Why do doctors have to practice?
You'd think they'd have got it right by now
I know I said I would tell you everything I know about reverse psychology today, and I'm sure I will, but it will probably be later than now now...
...and I was righter than even I expected :)
But first there are some loose ends that need knotting.
Quote:
If that's Ireland, what's the odd-looking lump next to Britain?
*try to see what David is seeing* That would be the rest of the world, David... and Scotland. It's sort of how we looked at things in those days. So sorry. Or it could be Ireland itself. I can't say for sure because I don't know what your light apertures are fixating on. Or Europe. Or where someone spilled their rum. Or the Isle of wight as Chris said. But I won't labour the point. Gary did a lovely job of reiterating Ireland's Irishness... which I see you finally accepted... Thank you, Gary :)
Quote:
Did nobody have a sense of direction then?
We were much more into "see a lump... stick a flag into it" to worry too much about which way was up. That only became important when we tried to find where we'd put them.
Quote:
Surely you're not looking for St. Padraigh, are you?
No. I'm not. So neither should you be.
Quote:
(Inquires the American who only knows enough European history to be dangerous.)
*make note of potentially VERY useful American quality* :)
I did consider asking you about your missing points, Mike... till I saw what you spawned with the ones that weren't missing... *slow blink at Chris, Richard and the one who started it all* Oh... and if you could time your most excellent ideas a little better next time, NOT LATE... I would appreciate it.
@Phil I am very sorry to hear of your tree's demise :( I suppose it served it right for having the audacity to grow near humans. Hope it all well went and that you're back crunching again though :)
@TL Hmm... with your RAC so low, this would be the perfect time to direct wildly inaccurate questions at you like... have you given up chewing shoes yet? :) *pause to smack hand very hard* I'm sorry :) it would just be nice to have you here...
@Nutrition corner: Hi Mikey! :) Hi Robl! :) Oh, and well done on the weight loss, David
@ChrisMy, that is a large broom you're sweeping with there :) Being of the female species, I cannot entirely agree with you on everything you've said, but as to looking like anything at any age, I think the backend of a bus is far preferable to say, the rear-end of a warthog - which is what I'm planning to look like in a decade. I hope you won't mind...? :)
Right. I think that's all the knots sorted :) More to the point... we are approaching my winning post number faster than my winning answer... so may I remind you all of our thread title:
Quote:
LPTPW 17 -animal,vegetable,and/ora minerally type chemically thing, and maybe some otherthings aswell, yes
You've done very well with the vegetable... and decidedly badly at everything else. Take for example the gentleman to the right of the frilly dude...
first seen here. He worked very hard at getting the Paris Faculty of Medicine to declare potatoes fit for human consumption (in 1772) but lost his job and the church-owned land he was growing them on as a result.
So he embarked on some potato stunts. YAY! One was to present potato flowers to Louis and Marie - who loved them so much, they gave him some land to grow them on :) So he did, and then fed the tubers to people like the father of modern chemistry and another father... a founding one of the United States - but it was the poor and famine-stricken he wanted to feed them to. And that's where the reverse psychology came in :) He had his potato fields heavily guarded during daylight hours - and sent the guards home at night... :) Nowadays, his name is associated with almost all potato dishes that originated in his home country. I could tell you it, but I'm not going to. It's not essential to the winning answer either, more of a guide to where my thought processes took me...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
All right, just to be clear, the blob circled in green is what we have all agreed is Ireland (where Iceland should be).
The other blob I'm asking about is the one circled in pink (where Ireland should be).
(If you insist, you could say the blobs are ovaled rather than circled, but I will maintain that oval is not a verb, and I think Chris will agree with me.)
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
Y-e-e-e-s... the map I posted that showed Europe was kind of in the traditional orientation of right way up, and the one I posted of Ireland was more right-side down than anything else... making the blob in the pink triangle a right way up Ireland, and the one in the green rhombus, a right way up Iceland... which if it HAD been included in the right-side down map of Ireland, would have appeared left-side up.
Did that help? :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
Taking yet another gander at it, the closeup map of sideways Ireland is not more than roughly the same shape as either the Iceland or the Ireland on the Europe map. I'm sure you will be pleased to know, therefore, that I remain as confused as ever. However, I think that it's largely irrelevant, since we have already determined that you were hinting at Ireland, whatever it looks like.
Rutabaga.
[edit]
And with that, I'm going to bed.
With my blankets.
And my computers, the broken one and the one I'm grooming to replace it. Which is rather heavier, perhaps prohibitively so for the carry-it-around-in-the-camera-bag use for which I intend it.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
Of course there was a lot of emigration to north America around that time.
Then there was the story of my 5X great grandmother on a day back then when a lady who wore potato flowers in her hat, well her head upon a pole was thrust into grannies face when she opened the second story window to see what the commotion on the street was all about.
Oh my. I imagine that created quite a bit of commotion indoors too. After all, it's not exactly the sort of thing you then go straight back to doing what you were doing before you popped your head out is it? Like dusting.
Well, I'm very glad your 5x great grandmother managed to keep her head off a pole, Gary :) and yes - the man who succeeded in persuading France and ultimately Europe to eat potatoes was Parmentier.
I'm now so happy, I'm going to get straight down to preparing the next important clue for you all - which I will post up later today... who knows, we may even have a winner as early as the weekend :)
edit@Rutabaga - is that what we call swedes? Or turnips? No. Definitely swedes.
*disturbed thought* I wonder how the Swedish feel about that? Or perhaps they came from Sweden... the vegetable I mean, not the people - who do come from Sweden, I know that...
oh no... off to wiki again...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
She told me (AGAIN) to eat
She told me (AGAIN) to eat more veggies and less carbs. I told her veggies have been going through me VERY quickly lately. She said to take Imodium if I have to.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
RE: RE: RE: Outta here
I will try that, thanks!! And yes meats, veggies and cheese ARE allowed for me, of course the less fatty the better. But 'protein' is a good thing, with only a few carbs alongside.
@David yes veggies do that, I eat 2 'chewable fiber' tablets 3 times a week to help prevent that.
RE: @David yes veggies do
She also said to switch to whole grain pasta.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
I refuse to go to female
I refuse to go to female doctors, they treat you like a little kid! Luckily my surgery are all male. Except of course for the obligatory battleaxes on reception. They train them especially for the NHS! Entry requirements to the course are - late 50's, spinster, face like the back of a bus, attitude problem, and very basic computer skills.
But of course their main job is to discourage people from coming in unless they are seriously ill. Then the government wonder why all the A & E depts. are full of people with minor ailments.
Waiting for Godot & salvation :-)
Why do doctors have to practice?
You'd think they'd have got it right by now
RE: I know I said I would
...and I was righter than even I expected :)
But first there are some loose ends that need knotting.
*try to see what David is seeing* That would be the rest of the world, David... and Scotland. It's sort of how we looked at things in those days. So sorry. Or it could be Ireland itself. I can't say for sure because I don't know what your light apertures are fixating on. Or Europe. Or where someone spilled their rum. Or the Isle of wight as Chris said. But I won't labour the point. Gary did a lovely job of reiterating Ireland's Irishness... which I see you finally accepted... Thank you, Gary :)
We were much more into "see a lump... stick a flag into it" to worry too much about which way was up. That only became important when we tried to find where we'd put them.
No. I'm not. So neither should you be.
*make note of potentially VERY useful American quality* :)
I did consider asking you about your missing points, Mike... till I saw what you spawned with the ones that weren't missing... *slow blink at Chris, Richard and the one who started it all* Oh... and if you could time your most excellent ideas a little better next time, NOT LATE... I would appreciate it.
@Phil I am very sorry to hear of your tree's demise :( I suppose it served it right for having the audacity to grow near humans. Hope it all well went and that you're back crunching again though :)
@TL Hmm... with your RAC so low, this would be the perfect time to direct wildly inaccurate questions at you like... have you given up chewing shoes yet? :) *pause to smack hand very hard* I'm sorry :) it would just be nice to have you here...
@Nutrition corner: Hi Mikey! :) Hi Robl! :) Oh, and well done on the weight loss, David
@Chris My, that is a large broom you're sweeping with there :) Being of the female species, I cannot entirely agree with you on everything you've said, but as to looking like anything at any age, I think the backend of a bus is far preferable to say, the rear-end of a warthog - which is what I'm planning to look like in a decade. I hope you won't mind...? :)
Right. I think that's all the knots sorted :) More to the point... we are approaching my winning post number faster than my winning answer... so may I remind you all of our thread title:
You've done very well with the vegetable... and decidedly badly at everything else. Take for example the gentleman to the right of the frilly dude...
first seen here. He worked very hard at getting the Paris Faculty of Medicine to declare potatoes fit for human consumption (in 1772) but lost his job and the church-owned land he was growing them on as a result.
So he embarked on some potato stunts. YAY! One was to present potato flowers to Louis and Marie - who loved them so much, they gave him some land to grow them on :) So he did, and then fed the tubers to people like the father of modern chemistry and another father... a founding one of the United States - but it was the poor and famine-stricken he wanted to feed them to. And that's where the reverse psychology came in :) He had his potato fields heavily guarded during daylight hours - and sent the guards home at night... :) Nowadays, his name is associated with almost all potato dishes that originated in his home country. I could tell you it, but I'm not going to. It's not essential to the winning answer either, more of a guide to where my thought processes took me...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
All right, just to be clear,
All right, just to be clear, the blob circled in green is what we have all agreed is Ireland (where Iceland should be).
The other blob I'm asking about is the one circled in pink (where Ireland should be).
(If you insist, you could say the blobs are ovaled rather than circled, but I will maintain that oval is not a verb, and I think Chris will agree with me.)
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
Y-e-e-e-s... the map I posted
Y-e-e-e-s... the map I posted that showed Europe was kind of in the traditional orientation of right way up, and the one I posted of Ireland was more right-side down than anything else... making the blob in the pink triangle a right way up Ireland, and the one in the green rhombus, a right way up Iceland... which if it HAD been included in the right-side down map of Ireland, would have appeared left-side up.
Did that help? :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
Taking yet another gander at
Taking yet another gander at it, the closeup map of sideways Ireland is not more than roughly the same shape as either the Iceland or the Ireland on the Europe map. I'm sure you will be pleased to know, therefore, that I remain as confused as ever. However, I think that it's largely irrelevant, since we have already determined that you were hinting at Ireland, whatever it looks like.
Rutabaga.
[edit]
And with that, I'm going to bed.
With my blankets.
And my computers, the broken one and the one I'm grooming to replace it. Which is rather heavier, perhaps prohibitively so for the carry-it-around-in-the-camera-bag use for which I intend it.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
Antoine Parmentier
Antoine Parmentier https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_potato
Of course there was a lot of emigration to north America around that time.
Then there was the story of my 5X great grandmother on a day back then when a lady who wore potato flowers in her hat, well her head upon a pole was thrust into grannies face when she opened the second story window to see what the commotion on the street was all about.
Oh my. I imagine that created
Oh my. I imagine that created quite a bit of commotion indoors too. After all, it's not exactly the sort of thing you then go straight back to doing what you were doing before you popped your head out is it? Like dusting.
Well, I'm very glad your 5x great grandmother managed to keep her head off a pole, Gary :) and yes - the man who succeeded in persuading France and ultimately Europe to eat potatoes was Parmentier.
I'm now so happy, I'm going to get straight down to preparing the next important clue for you all - which I will post up later today... who knows, we may even have a winner as early as the weekend :)
edit@Rutabaga - is that what we call swedes? Or turnips? No. Definitely swedes.
*disturbed thought* I wonder how the Swedish feel about that? Or perhaps they came from Sweden... the vegetable I mean, not the people - who do come from Sweden, I know that...
oh no... off to wiki again...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.