This collection is about a week old, and it isn't all of the cans I've consumed either.
You can also see a few other things I drank, like beer and Mountain Dew, as well as some things I didn't drink, like deodorant, Glade, and a telephone.
Printable View
This collection is about a week old, and it isn't all of the cans I've consumed either.
You can also see a few other things I drank, like beer and Mountain Dew, as well as some things I didn't drink, like deodorant, Glade, and a telephone.
Wasabi Green Peas... mmmmm.
Yeah.. it's like that with me and Dr. Pepper.
Word.
Part of the rationale is that I hate drinking anything with sugar, and I hate water, so I just find myself drinking diet anything. I like Propel but I usually go through that shit like lightning.
Just for the taste of it, huh.
I go through 24 cans of pretty much any kind of soda in a few days. I've taken a liking to diet colas though, something about the muted flavor in some of them is neat.
I was always under the impression that diet soda has more sugar in it than regular soda.Quote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
I'd rather have sugar-soda and water rather than that asparatine crap they put in all the diet sodas. That stuff rots your brain over time, don't drink it.
An alternative would be drinks made with Splenda. It's a sweetener based on sugar, but there's not much sugar in it. I don't know of any drinks off-hand that use it, although those Blue Bunny ice cream bars do, and they're good. Also check into fruit juices, like orange juice, apple juice, etc. To-go bottles are not much more expensive than a 20 oz. soda, though there's a bit less in them. Getting off caffine will do some good too -- most of the citrus drinks (Sprite, Slice, etc.) don't have it, as do things like Mug root beer (Barqs has caffine, oddly enough).
You really ought to get used to drinking more water though, it's better for you in the long run.
Isn't Propel flavored water?
Your a slob..
I used to drink insane amounts of soda too. I drank Coke/Dr.Pepper and would put back as much as that pic in a matter of days, but a few months ago I just decided that I didn't want to keep doing that, and pretty much quit on the spot and started drinking water. That isn't to say I drink water exclusively, I still drink Coke whenever I eat out, but other than that it's pretty much just water. I'm such a hippy.
There are two kinds of people who drink diet sodas: women and homos.
And the kind that dont are fat asses...
There is a syrupyness to non-diet sodas that you aren't aware of until you stop drinking them. Drinking coke feels like drinking slightly diluted honey to me. I don't like soda much. I like canned coffee.
A lot of days, I'll drink maybe 6 or 7 cups of coffee a day. Over the course of a week, that's almost 3 gallons.
That looks like me and bottles of water at school as it's all I have. I got through like five or six a day, they add up. But when I'm home we always have a ton of diet coke and my desk starts to look like that.
Did you drink the pokeball next to the phone too?Quote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lhadatt
I drink a ton of Diet Rite and it's the only soda I know of that uses Splenda. The cola & tangerine (tastes like orange soda) are the only ones I like though. But water is still my beverage of choice.
Stop being a pussy and just drink water.
My roommate refuses to drink water without a soda chaser. It's sad.
This country's like a spoiled bitch production machine.
No one has commented on his Pokeball next to the phone?
Gotta catch em all, eh Burgundy?
Exactly, I drink water but when I do drink sodas I drink diet.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mzo
Sugar makes my weight go up and with what im doing I cant have that.
5 posts above.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lobo
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr-K
Grody.
Drink water bitches!
What the fuck, are you people aspartame rights activists?
What do you care what I drink?
Well, ok then. I hope your brain rots and you get alzheimer's by age 35.
Oh, and also that you suffer death by heart explosion due to caffine.
Is that better?
;_; we love you burgundy, we don't want you to get the brain damage.
Aspartame turns into formaldehyde (sic?) in your body. I stay away from the stuff like the plague.
wtf???
I drink mostly Snapple, although my local supermarket refuses to extend its variety beyond more than about 6 flavors.
Peach ice tea is heaven in a bottle. :)
http://www.holisticmed.com/aspartame/damage.txt
http://www.holisticmed.com/aspartame/
Quit drinking soda with aspartame.
You tried the lime flavored Diet Coke yet?
It pwns.
:lol:
You're going to die from formaldehyde in the brain.
Good.
I hear its faster than cigarettes.
Not really. My mom's been drinking Diet Dr. Pepper for years, yet she's not dead yet. Cigs may be faster.
I smoke a pack a day, and drink at least 40oz of diet soda a day.
How much longer do I have left?
*Reads some of that aspertame stuff
Fantastic, is there ANYTHING is this world that won't fuck us all up?
The garbage in my room is always filled to the top with Poland Spring bottles. I rule. No liquid gets into by body that isn't alcoholic or water.
Cigarettes.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeremy
Yes. My dick.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeremy
Send all bitches.
What about jizz... you ass crusading shit vampire.Quote:
Originally Posted by Rich
......... *writes that one down*Quote:
Originally Posted by Icepick
FUCKFUCK!
I'm actually really suspicous about this "aspartame = death" thing... just by the kind of websites it's found on. I'm gonna go check some medical journals.
Yeah, it's all bullshit.
There's this FUCKING huge literature review. 20+ doctors from many different specialties reviewed 550+ seperate research studies, and they found that: "The safety testing of aspartame has gone well beyond that required to evaluate the safety of a food additive. When all the research on aspartame, including evaluations in both the premarketing and postmarketing periods, is examined as a whole, it is clear that aspartame is safe, and there are no unresolved questions regarding its safety under conditions of intended use."
There's actually about twelve or so letters reported in journals that discuss the problem of "Internet misinformation regarding aspartame.".
EDIT: Oh wait... shit... hmmm... I just checked out the organisation that the first four contributors are a part of: The NutraSweet Company, Mt. Prospect, Illinois... so incredibly dodgy :\
Fat slob or brain dead bafoon...
Hmm.. wtf happened to Homer Simpson then? What did he drink...
Do steer clear of Diet Coke or Diet Pepsi. Aspartame is like MSG on horse steroids in some of its effects. On the other hand, Diet Rite no longer contains that junk. It in fact uses Splenda and Sunette.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lhadatt
Aspartame is definitely not safe. Not only are you getting formaldehyde from its methanol content, but it's made of aspartic acid and phenylalanine. Double whammy. Aspartic acid & glutamate are both excitatory neurotransmitters- they do exist in the brain but if you raise the concentration too much, you are asking for excitotoxicity (the culprit in the typical MSG reaction).
MSG doesn't truly make your food taste better- in fact, the stuff tastes quite horrid from what I hear. It tricks your tastebuds into supposedly perceiving more taste from the food. Canned soup makers often use it to get away with adding less meat, herbs, and spices to soup.
I'd rather drink hot green tea than a diet soda- green tea tastes a lot better and is better for you.
Beer.Quote:
Originally Posted by JMET
uhh... :lol:Quote:
Originally Posted by Icepick
Phenylalanin is still an essential amino acid. It's funny the way the basis of all alternative therapies is Hormesis, yet they all seem to have this mentality that there are "good" things and "bad" things and it's not just a matter of dose. Ironic.
Soda is bad for you mind and body, teeth etc and yes I still
enjoy it but hope to be soda free someday.
Burgundy maybe if you cut the Diet soda out, you won't be
so iritable and bitter on the boards? Joking aside the stuff
in Diet soda can change a persons personality.
When faced with drinking a 12 oz can of Diet Coke or a shot of urine, I would probably drink the shot. Diet Coke is simply the worst shit ever.
I used to not be able to drink water but now I drink Perrier like a fiend. I'll also have one Dr. Pepper or Pepsi pretty much every day.
I actually picked up a 12 of Diet Rite and not only is it better than Diet Coke but it's cheaper too. So Diet Rite it will be from now on.
My burning contempt comes from deep within. Diet soda just helps me hate without empty calories.
What are the prescription drugs at the back?
That's because you're crazy, Mel.Quote:
Originally Posted by Stone
Hah, drinkin Diet Rite as I'm typing. 5th can today.
Im switching to the diet stuff too, I drink waaaaaaaay to much soda. I could usualy polish off a pair of 2 liters a day....Been hunting for a diet soda I can stand. So far I found any Diet cola tastes awful. So far the only diet drinks Ive found to like were Diet Mountian Dew, Diet Cherry 7-up and Diet Seirra Mist.
I'm doing the water thing too, but water just doesnt do it for me all the time, I need somthing with a little flavor now and then..
I hear ya. I tried going cold turkey on drinking soda, and switched to water for about two days. Still, for pure refreshment on a hot day, nothing can top a nice, cold glass of Brita water.
I can tell if I have had MSG at a restaurant. It gives me the shakes and makes me feel sick afterwards. It's a very specific sick feeling. Icepop gets it too. MSG also apparently makes my sister's arm go numb. That's some bad shit. :(Quote:
Originally Posted by gameoverDude
As for diet soda/soda/etc, I never drank that much but I quit last month and now I am a water fiend. I feel so much better mentally and physically. My appreciation for water continues to grow, which is nice. Now I don't even crave soda. I also drink milk, and the occasional apple juice, or gatorade. The only time I have had soda in the past month was at a fast food restaurant. :p
I gave up on sodas a few months ago. Well, not completely, but where I used to drink 1-2 sodas a day, I now drink maybe 1-2 a month. Usually only occasionally when I'm out for lunch. I generally feel more balanced throughout the day and don't have cravings for the unnecessary calories and syrups in sodas. I go with juices and water now.
I've also scaled back my coffee consumption and replaced it with green tea, for a large part. And when I say "scaled back", I mean reduced to only one cup a day. I've still yet to ween myself away enough that I can function at 7:00 AM without coffee.
I drink WAY too much liquid in a day. There was a time when I would go through 4 litres of soda a day.
Diet Rite Cola. It's suprisingly good.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lhadatt
EDIT: Wow... beaten well to the punch.
For a second I thought you said "helps me hate out the calories," which wouQuote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
lf have been much funnier.
For the most part the jury is still out on this one. My dad is a doctor and he has recently 1/2 his diet coke consumption and switched mainly to diet rite. Partly because of the aspartame and mainly because it is cheaper.Quote:
Originally Posted by AstroBlue
I swear i wish i could take a picture of the area next to my friend's computer. he does nothing but play everquest while his girlfriend works and has been doing it since 2001. The amount of canned sodas and 3-liter soda bottles around his comp is ridiculous. He drinks more soda in a week than your average family does in a month.
There is defintly some refined crack in that aspartame shit, soccer moms drink that shit like there is no tommorrow.Quote:
Originally Posted by FPM
HISTORY OF ASPARTAME:
How Aspartame Became
Legal - The Timeline
From Rich Murray
rmforall@att.net
12-24-2
From Norfolk Genetic Information Network (Taken from Welcome to the Spin Machine by Michael Manville http://www.freezerbox.com/archive/2001/04/biotech/ http://www.freezerbox.com/ )
In 1985 Monsanto purchased G.D. Searle, the chemical company that held the patent to aspartame, the active ingredient in NutraSweet. Monsanto was apparently untroubled by aspartame's clouded past, including a 1980 FDA Board of Inquiry, comprised of three independent scientists, which confirmed that it "might induce brain tumors."
The FDA had actually banned aspartame based on this finding, only to have Searle Chairman Donald Rumsfeld (currently the Secretary of Defense) vow to "call in his markers," to get it approved.
On January 21, 1981, the day after Ronald Reagan's inauguration, Searle re-applied to the FDA for approval to use aspartame in food sweetener, and Reagan's new FDA commissioner, Arthur Hayes Hull, Jr., appointed a 5-person Scientific Commission to review the board of inquiry's decision.
It soon became clear that the panel would uphold the ban by a 3-2 decision, but Hull then installed a sixth member on the commission, and the vote became deadlocked. He then personally broke the tie in aspartame's favor. Hull later left the FDA under allegations of impropriety, served briefly as Provost at New York Medical College, and then took a position with Burston-Marsteller, the chief public relations firm for both Monsanto and GD Searle. Since that time he has never spoken publicly about aspartame.
The Aspartame/NutraSweet Timeline
http://www.swankin-turner.com/aspartame.html http://www.swankin-turner.com/hist.html
Aspartame/NutraSweet: The History of the Aspartame Controversy
By James Turner, ESQ. Director of the National Institute of Science, Law, and Public Policy (NISLAPP)
National Institute of Science, Law, and Public Policy 1400 16th Street, NW, Suite 330, Washington, DC 20036 (202) 462-8800 Fax: (202) 265-6564 nislapp@swankin-turner.com
Timeline
December 1965-- While working on an ulcer drug, James Schlatter, a chemist at G.D. Searle, accidentally discovers aspartame, a substance that is 180 times sweeter than sugar yet has no calories.
Spring 1967-- Searle begins the safety tests on aspartame that are necessary for applying for FDA approval of food additives.
Fall 1967-- Dr. Harold Waisman, a biochemist at the University of Wisconsin, conducts aspartame safety tests on infant monkeys on behalf of the Searle Company. Of the seven monkeys that were being fed aspartame mixed with milk, one dies and five others have grand mal seizures.
November 1970-- Cyclamate, the reigning low-calorie artificial sweetener -- is pulled off the market after some scientists associate it with cancer. Questions are also raised about safety of saccharin, the only other artificial sweetener on the market, leaving the field wide open for aspartame.
December 18, 1970-- Searle Company executives lay out a "Food and Drug Sweetener Strategy' that they feel will put the FDA into a positive frame of mind about aspartame. An internal policy memo describes psychological tactics the company should use to bring the FDA into a subconscious spirit of participation" with them on aspartame and get FDA regulators into the "habit of saying, "Yes"."
Spring 1971-- Neuroscientist Dr. John Olney (whose pioneering work with monosodium glutamate was responsible for having it removed from baby foods) informs Searle that his studies show that aspartic acid (one of the ingredients of aspartame) caused holes in the brains of infant mice. One of Searle's own researchers confirmed Dr. Olney's findings in a similar study.
February 1973-- After spending tens of millions of dollars conducting safety tests, the G.D. Searle Company applies for FDA approval and submits over 100 studies they claim support aspartame's safety.
March 5, 1973-- One of the first FDA scientists to review the aspartame safety data states that "the information provided (by Searle) is inadequate to permit an evaluation of the potential toxicity of aspartame". She says in her report that in order to be certain that aspartame is safe, further clinical tests are needed.
May 1974-- Attorney, Jim Turner (consumer advocate who was instrumental in getting cyclamate taken off the market) meets with Searle representatives to discuss Dr. Olney's 1971 study which showed that aspartic acid caused holes in the brains of infant mice.
July 26, 1974-- The FDA grants aspartame its first approval for restricted use in dry foods.
August 1974-- Jim Turner and Dr. John Olney file the first objections against aspartame's approval.
March 24, 1976-- Turner and Olney's petition triggers an FDA investigation of the laboratory practices of aspartame's manufacturer, G.D. Searle. The investigation finds Searle's testing procedures shoddy, full of inaccuracies and "manipulated" test data. The investigators report they "had never seen anything as bad as Searle's testing."
January 10, 1977-- The FDA formally requests the U.S. Attorney's office to begin grand jury proceedings to investigate whether indictments should be filed against Searle for knowingly misrepresenting findings and "concealing material facts and making false statements" in aspartame safety tests. This is the first time in the FDA's history that they request a criminal investigation of a manufacturer.
January 26, 1977-- While the grand jury probe is underway, Sidley & Austin, the law firm representing Searle, begins job negotiations with the U.S. Attorney in charge of the investigation, Samuel Skinner.
March 8, 1977-- G. D. Searle hires prominent Washington insider Donald Rumsfeld as the new CEO to try to turn the beleaguered company around. A former Member of Congress and Secretary of Defense in the Ford Administration, Rumsfeld brings in several of his Washington cronies as top management.
July 1, 1977-- Samuel Skinner leaves the U.S. Attorney's office and takes a job with Searle's law firm. (see Jan. 26th)
August 1, 1977-- The Bressler Report, compiled by FDA investigators and headed by Jerome Bressler, is released. The report finds that 98 of the 196 animals died during one of Searle's studies and weren't autopsied until later dates, in some cases over one year after death. Many other errors and inconsistencies are noted. For example, a rat was reported alive, then dead, then alive, then dead again; a mass, a uterine polyp, and ovarian neoplasms were found in animals but not reported or diagnosed in Searle's reports.
December 8, 1977-- U.S. Attorney Skinner's withdrawal and resignation stalls the Searle grand jury investigation for so long that the statue of limitations on the aspartame charges runs out. The grand jury investigation is dropped.
June 1, 1979-- The FDA established a Public Board of Inquiry (PBOI) to rule on safety issues surrounding NutraSweet.
September 30, 1980-- The Public Board of Inquiry concludes NutraSweet should not be approved pending further investigations of brain tumors in animals. The board states it "has not been presented with proof of reasonable certainty that aspartame is safe for use as a food additive."
January 1981-- Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of Searle, states in a sales meeting that he is going to make a big push to get aspartame approved within the year. Rumsfeld says he will use his political pull in Washington, rather than scientific means, to make sure it gets approved.
January 21, 1981-- Ronald Reagan is sworn in as President of the United States. Reagan's transition team, which includes Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of G. D. Searle, hand picks Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes Jr. to be the new FDA Commissioner.
March, 1981-- An FDA commissioner's panel is established to review issues raised by the Public Board of Inquiry.
May 19, 1981-- Three of six in-house FDA scientists who were responsible for reviewing the brain tumor issues, Dr. Robert Condon, Dr. Satya Dubey, and Dr. Douglas Park, advise against approval of NutraSweet, stating on the record that the Searle tests are unreliable and not adequate to determine the safety of aspartame.
July 15, 1981-- In one of his first official acts, Dr. Arthur Hayes Jr., the new FDA commissioner, overrules the Public Board of Inquiry, ignores the recommendations of his own internal FDA team and approves NutraSweet for dry products. Hayes says that aspartame has been shown to be safe for its' proposed uses and says few compounds have withstood such detailed testing and repeated close scrutiny.
October 15, 1982-- The FDA announces that Searle has filed a petition that aspartame be approved as a sweetener in carbonated beverages and other liquids.
July 1, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association (NSDA) urges the FDA to delay approval of aspartame for carbonated beverages pending further testing because aspartame is very unstable in liquid form. When liquid aspartame is stored in temperatures above 85 degrees Fahrenheit, it breaks down into DKP and formaldehyde, both of which are known toxins.
July 8, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association drafts an objection to the final ruling which permits the use of aspartame in carbonated beverages and syrup bases and requests a hearing on the objections. The association says that Searle has not provided responsible certainty that aspartame and its' degradation products are safe for use in soft drinks.
August 8, 1983-- Consumer Attorney, Jim Turner of the Community Nutrition Institute and Dr. Woodrow Monte, Arizona State University's Director of Food Science and Nutritional Laboratories, file suit with the FDA objecting to aspartame approval based on unresolved safety issues.
September, 1983-- FDA Commissioner Hayes resigns under a cloud of controversy about his taking unauthorized rides aboard a General Foods jet. (General foods is a major customer of NutraSweet) Burson-Marsteller, Searle's public relation firm (which also represented several of NutraSweet's major users), immediately hires Hayes as senior scientific consultant.
Fall 1983-- The first carbonated beverages containing aspartame are sold for public consumption.
November 1984-- Center for Disease Control (CDC) "Evaluation of consumer complaints related to aspartame use." (summary by B. Mullarkey)
November 3, 1987-- U.S. hearing, "NutraSweet: Health and Safety Concerns," Committee on Labor and Human Resources, Senator Howard Metzenbaum, chairman.
i don't understand this part. If the soft drink industry was against aspertame why did they use it? Even though the FDA approved it no one was forced to start using it in products, yet they did, even when they didn't want it approved?Quote:
July 1, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association (NSDA) urges the FDA to delay approval of aspartame for carbonated beverages pending further testing because aspartame is very unstable in liquid form. When liquid aspartame is stored in temperatures above 85 degrees Fahrenheit, it breaks down into DKP and formaldehyde, both of which are known toxins.
July 8, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association drafts an objection to the final ruling which permits the use of aspartame in carbonated beverages and syrup bases and requests a hearing on the objections. The association says that Searle has not provided responsible certainty that aspartame and its' degradation products are safe for use in soft drinks.
grrr... well good thing i gave up pop for lent! :D
Its killing me!! hahah i'm always tired and have headaches every 20 minutes.....
what should i do besides drinking pop again?
Lots of water... and some milk. :nod:Quote:
Originally Posted by Chemist
Chill your water in the fridge using either a 2-liter soda bottle or milk jugg, that takes the horrid taste out and makes it enjoyable.
2 years ago I was living on soda almost daily, never felt so shitty in my life.
I notice you didn't give up talking like a fag.Quote:
Originally Posted by Chemist
Its called soda.
I don't know, both sound pretty gay. You have drinks, and then you have types of booze. There is no room for fagnastiness like Soda or pop.Quote:
Originally Posted by Icepick
I don't understand why people even bother with diet coke. If you're fat it's not like that's going to do any good. And it tastes like crap.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cigsthecat
I agree - the taste alone is enough to make me want to gag. I remember when I was younger bragging to my grandparents(who always had a massive stock of Coke) how much I loved coke and that there never would be a type I didnt like --- How wonderful for all the 'Diet' brands to come out and prove me wrong. I mean are the calories really all that much lower that people put up with that shit aftertaste just for it?
It tastes bad initially but I acclimated it to it rather quickly. Now most non-diet sodas taste like syrup to me.Quote:
Originally Posted by cigsthecat
And I lost a good 10 pounds after switching to diet drinks. It's not going to help a morbidly obese person, but what would?
A diet soda has zero calories. So it's a pretty huge difference, yeah.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jetman
I say "soft-drink" like a real man.Quote:
Originally Posted by IronPlant
I just call all of it ' coke' - Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Sunkist, Root Beer, whatever - its all 'coke' to me. Its weird because I have friends from work who are from the north - Michigan, Ohio, and they use the term 'pop'. I guess theres a lot of fagnastiness up north :pQuote:
Originally Posted by AstroBlue
Shit, here's one link I just found:
http://www.glome.org/000061.html
Maybe NONE of these other sweeteners are good for you- not even Splenda (chlorinated sugar!) or Sunette. :wtf: At least they're not as bad as aspartame.
It's a shame they can't use Stevia herb for this purpose. You can find that at Vitamin World or GNC however for a fair price.
http://www.holisticmed.com/acek/
http://www.holisticmed.com/splenda/
Nothing's perfect but they still all beat the hell out of sugar.
I went cold turkey on soda about two years ago. In college I used to do (on average) two huge bottles of Mountain Dew each day. Later, at my job, I'd run to the free soda fridge several times a day. If there's one thing video game nerds don't need it's hundreds of extra calories per day. Switching to bottled water was surprisingly easy ... I guess I wasn't too addicted.
Just last week I bought a Brita filter pitcher, so now I'm happily chugging down refrigerated filtered tap water. It's saving me a bundle on bottled water, plus I'm getting some fluouride again. I highly recommend this setup.
I prefer the taste actually... and if you drink a shitload of soda drinking diet makes a difference.Quote:
Originally Posted by cigsthecat
I prefer diet sodas because I'm not gay.
Quote:
Originally Posted by gameoverDude
Its a shame they cant just make a Blunt Bull....
Quit fuckin around people, admit what you want, ya wanna get high...but in moderation.
People who drink diet soda and are worried about their health are idiots. Soda, any sort of pop, isn't good for you.
It's fucking soda. Anyone who calls it "pop" or "coke" has teh gay.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jetman
It's known as a "happy medium."Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew
Fence riding pussies. Pick a side. Either drink the high-calorie, high-caffeine stuff or drink water.Quote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
Now I'm gonna drink a Diet Rite just for you, sweetie.
come down off your mountain top, majesty.
I'm the king of the fucking world, baby.
ya, well, I so totally own my backyard. It's covered in dog fecies but it's mine.
Crazy amount of cola...fuck you need help :lol: J/K...lol Try drinking some juice, milk or such instead man.
Juice and milk are packed with sugar. I do drink soy milk once or twice a day, though.
so what's wrong with normal sugar?
I'm lazy. Did anyone say anything about taking Chaser before you drink?
I like alcohol just as much as the next guy, but I've never had a hangover. I just don't drink that much, I guess.
Did you post in the wrong thread? This one is about soda, not hang overs. That one is about 4 doors down on your right.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike
He's lazy.
Nothing if you're underweight or right on weight.Quote:
Originally Posted by stormy
But sugar is the definition of empty calories, and cutting out sweets is probably the easiest way to cut calories and thus pounds.
Quote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
Sheesh.Quote:
Originally Posted by Me
So lazy.
Alright leave me alone I'm canadian, up here its called 'pop' not soda, or soft-drinks.. its pop.. I have never heard it called anything else, except when i come here..Quote:
Originally Posted by Icepick
Most of america called it "pop" too. In 1950.
Well, I stand corrected. Must be a hell of a lot of soda though.Quote:
Originally Posted by burgundy
Lately I've been realizing I'm not that into soda anymore. Like I'd go "Hey yeah, I'll have a soda!" Then halfway into it I'm already wishing I hadn't. I seem to be drinking a lot of water these days. Cheaper too.