Message from @Grenade123

Discord ID: 517389511869595655


2018-11-28 17:13:49 UTC  

I've gotten it down to a couple sodas a week rather than two a day

2018-11-28 17:14:21 UTC  

I usually just have one on Friday night magic

2018-11-28 17:14:32 UTC  

Just stop drinking it unless you go out for dinner, and then largely stop doing that

2018-11-28 17:14:40 UTC  

@Aperture Tech stuff like this got me to quit almost all sugar heavy stuff https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4728084/

2018-11-28 17:15:04 UTC  

After a couple weeks of not doing thing, you'll crave thing a lot less/won't crave it at all

2018-11-28 17:15:29 UTC  

basically just means that the more sugar you intake, the greater your resistance to it at the mitochondrial level and the greater your overall level of fatigue

2018-11-28 17:16:11 UTC  

essentially the more sugar you eat the more fatigued you will feel

2018-11-28 17:16:19 UTC  

@Misomania thanks

2018-11-28 17:17:15 UTC  

used to drink way to much coca cola myself, I really regret it

2018-11-28 17:17:28 UTC  

I did so for a couple years, then cut it out

2018-11-28 17:17:30 UTC  

no idea what it did to my body overall

2018-11-28 17:17:44 UTC  

I'll have pop if I go out for dinner or on special occasions

2018-11-28 17:17:51 UTC  

But I try to keep my intake down

2018-11-28 17:18:43 UTC  

they also use phospate based carbonation methods, which in the body leaches out calcium (a lot from your teeth as well) which you excrete in the form of calcium phosphate

2018-11-28 17:18:59 UTC  

weakening bones as well

2018-11-28 17:19:16 UTC  

That's fine, I have probably an excess of calcium in my diet

2018-11-28 17:20:18 UTC  

Here's a question

2018-11-28 17:20:30 UTC  

What do yall think about marketing to kids

2018-11-28 17:20:51 UTC  

What about it?

2018-11-28 17:20:58 UTC  

Highly circumstantial whether it is good or bad

2018-11-28 17:21:12 UTC  

i think that parents should grow a spin and learn to parent.

2018-11-28 17:21:59 UTC  

marketing that is kid friendly is fine, marketing made specifically to benefit from being shown to kids though is predatory

2018-11-28 17:22:12 UTC  

I was reading an article on G-Fuel marketing and a quote was "we are marketing to kids but in the end it's on the parents so we dont care to change it"

2018-11-28 17:23:03 UTC  

it's a bit like marketing hard liquer sales to appeal to alcoholics, and showing the ads in AA meetings

2018-11-28 17:23:27 UTC  

Sorry what is the kid equivalent to that exactly?

2018-11-28 17:23:45 UTC  

showing ads of sugar rich cereals in a kids cartoon

2018-11-28 17:24:06 UTC  

or marketing vape pens to kids

2018-11-28 17:24:16 UTC  

Are kids addicted to sugar, able to buy sugar and trying to cure themselves of their addiction?

2018-11-28 17:24:46 UTC  

Nice

2018-11-28 17:24:58 UTC  

What a lovely face

2018-11-28 17:25:08 UTC  

if you don't like how something is marketed to kids, don't buy it for them. Then convince others to not buy it.

2018-11-28 17:25:20 UTC  

@Beemann enablers are still the same, and using a psychcologist to exploit a situation is the same regardless

2018-11-28 17:25:29 UTC  

I'm in agreement with you grenade

2018-11-28 17:25:50 UTC  

What's being exploited?

2018-11-28 17:26:00 UTC  

If your kid is able to buy something without you, you need to get that shit on lock down, or teach them how to spot deceptive practices.

2018-11-28 17:26:02 UTC  

Your target audience who doesn't make purchasing decisions?

2018-11-28 17:26:30 UTC  

to many parents though just buy what their kids want to shut them up because it's easier

2018-11-28 17:26:52 UTC  

That's the parents' fault

2018-11-28 17:26:55 UTC  

^

2018-11-28 17:27:00 UTC  

you should be teaching them how to make choices for themselves by the time they are starting to get financial freedoms, so around 15-16 they should be able to make some of those choices on their own.