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Negative aspects of gaining a turnon for some


WhoDat

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Some of the effects of gaining a lot of weight are familiar to many, i.e. getting out of breath, being unable to easily bend over and various aches and pains.  Some find the negative health aspects to rapid deliberate weight gain are part of the extreme, primal pleasure of "letting yourself go" or "overeating with the intention to fatten."

I have spoken to both male and female gainers who say something like "When my back hurts after being on my feet for a few hours, I lie down and masturbate thinking about that."  

Got this email from a longtime friend who gained over 100 pounds in two years with a feeder, most of it in her belly, which went from perfectly flat to looking like she was 12 months pregnant:  

"I started getting a lot of back pain and knee pain and didn't have the energy or drive i used to have to 'get up and go". Having been pretty athletic as a teenager; my chiropractor explains that it's the result of the combination of the natural curve in my spine, which is exaggerated, though not scoliosis, and my weight gain out front having forced everything to stretch so much and so quickly that now the vertebrae can arch up and touch each other with the looseness now created.  I know it's not supposed to turn you on but it turned me on, all of it. I just kept getting bigger and bigger. You would never, ever guess I was the captain of the volleyball team just 5 years ago."

Fascinating...

 

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Guest An Optimist
7 hours ago, WhoDat said:

Fascinating...

 

Not really.

The human mind is boring. Anything can turn it on. The people who get off on being fat, the health issues are, in their brain, connected to the 'being fat' concept. Associated. Thus the brain can learn to get turned on from that too. 

 

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Fully agreed on the fascinating part. I remember being told a story once by a girl that was formerly very athletic that had put on roughly 30 pounds from her physical prime. She was describing, in grand detail, how much of a struggle it was for her to make it up the three flights of stairs to her office and even her apartment. There was a particular emphasis on feeling significantly weaker the bigger she got. Those subtle details have always been very interesting to me, especially when those details are a result of transitioning from being very physically fit to sedentary and out of shape.

I ended up going hiking with this girl within the last year, now probably 45-50 pounds past her peak condition. It didn't take long for her to tire quickly and lament, under her breath several times, that she was really out of shape. We didn't even make it to the top of the mountain that day, but instead opted to turn around roughly 2/3rds of the way up after stopping at a hut for a breather. On the way back down, she mentioned that her sister-in-law (who is much fitter) had invited her to join a CrossFit gym to get back into shape. She balked at that idea and instead mentioned that she would take to walking to help get back into shape. Even that approach is interesting, as she was well past the point of using just walking to shed any of that bulk. It's like her definition of an exercise plan had changed entirely (or, maybe she was regretting deciding to on a hike in middle of summer when she was so out of shape).

10 hours ago, WhoDat said:

"I started getting a lot of back pain and knee pain and didn't have the energy or drive i used to have to 'get up and go". Having been pretty athletic as a teenager; my chiropractor explains that it's the result of the combination of the natural curve in my spine, which is exaggerated, though not scoliosis, and my weight gain out front having forced everything to stretch so much and so quickly that now the vertebrae can arch up and touch each other with the looseness now created.  I know it's not supposed to turn you on but it turned me on, all of it. I just kept getting bigger and bigger. You would never, ever guess I was the captain of the volleyball team just 5 years ago."

That little anecdote sums it all up quite nicely.

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On 5/15/2017 at 3:58 PM, An Optimist said:

Not really.

The human mind is boring. Anything can turn it on. The people who get off on being fat, the health issues are, in their brain, connected to the 'being fat' concept. Associated. Thus the brain can learn to get turned on from that too. 

 

"The human mind is boring."   I might remind you, my apparently jaded friend, that the computer you typed your response on was the product of someone's mind. The artificial heart going into an otherwise-doomed patient this morning, ditto, as well as the artificial leg or arm on the badly wounded soldier being affixed, probably right this second. The food in your fridge, too, is there because someone's mind had the idea of mass-producing food to be farmed, harvested, processed and delivered to be sold in supermarkets as opposed to you having to venture outside to milk a cow, gather eggs or slaughter something, pluck it, dismember it, cook it and eat it. The toilet you peed in after your post? There because of someone's mind, after thousands of years of privvies in the freezing cold and boiling heat and unbelievable stink.

You get the point.

"Anything can turn it on." Try putting me in bed with a 22-year-old Sports Illustrated model. I will probably offer to read her a story or, if she wishes, lick her pussy. But my flag won't salute such a creature, try as I may, and I have tried. Put the same person in bed with me having gained, oh, 30 to 50 pounds and I turn into a fucking cave man.

Thank you for your perspective, though. 

 

 

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Guest Reluctantfatlover
46 minutes ago, WhoDat said:

"Anything can turn it on." Try putting me in bed with a 22-year-old Sports Illustrated model. I will probably offer to read her a story or, if she wishes, lick her pussy. But my flag won't salute such a creature, try as I may, and I have tried.

You can pass her on if you will. I'm very open-minded.

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Yeah I love the physical aspect mostly and nothing to serious health-wise.

Like girls getting stuck or being in VERY tight spaces. But I mean normal every day spaces like doors, baths rooms, chairs and so on. There just aren't though photos and videos of that around. It's all kinda irrelevant stuff like getting stuck in playground equipment.

I love you think about how she needs to get new furniture to adapt to get size or a new bath. Or maybe even have a door removed. But on the smaller scale, to see a girl booking two seats on the plane or being painfully tight in one seat. Or in a booth at McDonald's.

They don't have to be huge but they just need to be genuinely too big and either VERY tight or stuck.

I saw a photo a few years back of a BBW model sitting on the floor in the kitchen stuffing get face. Her ass was so big that it filled the area between the fridge and the cupboard. She looked like it wouldn't be long until she was truly stuck. A few months even. Never saw that photo again.

And there was a video of a model showing around her home and how things were getting too small. Staircase. Doors. Bath. Never saw that again either.

Can't find shutting anything like them either.

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Guest An Optimist
20 hours ago, WhoDat said:

"Anything can turn it on." Try putting me in bed with a 22-year-old Sports Illustrated model. I will probably offer to read her a story or, if she wishes, lick her pussy. But my flag won't salute such a creature, try as I may, and I have tried. Put the same person in bed with me having gained, oh, 30 to 50 pounds and I turn into a fucking cave man.

 

You don't get it. 

 

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