My larger-bodied theory is that the “work-week” & all of its over-regulated time tables, don’t properly co-relate to most people’s biological needs. “Rushed” anything is seen as negative, I’ve never felt good a single minute when the word “rush” was in my head. With a work-week regulation of everything is the expectation, fall off the horse & your troubles become worse. Your peer evaluation goes down, the work will not be offloaded or considered too much for one person, it is compounded, or you must act like an “ubermensch” for as long as it takes to get caught up. Remembering that you fell off the horse precisely because of the weight you carried without these extra burdens, you must now “rush”. I thinked the mental directive, “rush”, triggers over-feeding because of it’s base narrative of “need”, which has overlap with survival instincts. This is the pyschological feed that turns the modern worker into a slave. Constant retriggering of the “need” directive, makes of man a mule & a yoke.
I also posit that overall population feeling is transferrable, at least for high-contact groups. Which is most to all people. Telepathy or not, I can feel the anxiety of someone through all of their cues & I pay the cost of giving my “attention” to their “direction” by inheriting a distinct percentage of their feeling, depending on my attention input weight. When people feel aggressive, their peers feel aggressed by inheriting a bit of the aggression. This is a telephone game, where average response to high stimulation by those whose “need” directives are perpetually retriggering decides the overall feeling state of those with professions that require high-contact & high #’s of people met per day.
Persistence wears down resistance, eventually the body’s natural weight regulation “capacitors” break, or at least conform to the new norm, hence the semi-permanence of weight gain after the initial deflowering of the non-obese individual.
This secondary theory could use a lot of work, & costs a decent amount of energy for me to add clarity to, but I believe in everything I’ve written
My larger-bodied theory is that the “work-week” & all of its over-regulated time tables, don’t properly co-relate to most people’s biological needs. “Rushed” anything is seen as negative, I’ve never felt good a single minute when the word “rush” was in my head. With a work-week regulation of everything is the expectation, fall off the horse & your troubles become worse. Your peer evaluation goes down, the work will not be offloaded or considered too much for one person, it is compounded, or you must act like an “ubermensch” for as long as it takes to get caught up. Remembering that you fell off the horse precisely because of the weight you carried without these extra burdens, you must now “rush”. I thinked the mental directive, “rush”, triggers over-feeding because of it’s base narrative of “need”, which has overlap with survival instincts. This is the pyschological feed that turns the modern worker into a slave. Constant retriggering of the “need” directive, makes of man a mule & a yoke.
I also posit that overall population feeling is transferrable, at least for high-contact groups. Which is most to all people. Telepathy or not, I can feel the anxiety of someone through all of their cues & I pay the cost of giving my “attention” to their “direction” by inheriting a distinct percentage of their feeling, depending on my attention input weight. When people feel aggressive, their peers feel aggressed by inheriting a bit of the aggression. This is a telephone game, where average response to high stimulation by those whose “need” directives are perpetually retriggering decides the overall feeling state of those with professions that require high-contact & high #’s of people met per day.
Persistence wears down resistance,
eventually the body’s natural weight regulation “capacitors” break, or at least conform to the new norm, hence the semi-permanence of weight gain after the initial deflowering of the non-obese individual.
This secondary theory could use a lot of work, & costs a decent amount of energy for me to add clarity to, but I believe in everything I’ve written