Read 37 times since Friday, November 04, 2011
As a fellow human being I can relate, I know how hard it must be to deal with gelatinous fat compiling within tissues of flesh. This is a sad thing to witness, probably even more for the creatures suffering the grease increase.
We, us humans I mean, need to understand the biological makeup of the bodies we similarly acquire, as consequent of us both being human beings, that is. Tissues, muscles and organs are all made of cells.
You know what a cell is, don't you? It is the building block of life in all macro organisms.
A macro organism is a creature, perhaps like a human but not limited to that, made of many organs and organisms. This could be canine, feline, a homosapien, or maybe even an intelligent life form (much more intelligent than humans) from billions of miles deep in space.
Cells also have building blocks, they are made up of different vitamins and nutrients and proteins that we get from our diet. The interesting thing about us, humans, is our ability to burn food as energy in our body.
You creatures... I mean us creatures, humans as we have named ourselves, half muscle tissue in our body that can burn calories like phosphor-taynious-argomite-which we probably know nothing about. This has led us to adapt quite radically.
Some humans are very much suitable for say, perhaps, alien harvest or something of that sort, and then there are others that are in dire need of being strained and reconstituted, which we don't have time for... I mean the aliens, in the hypothetical situation that they wanted to harvest people.
Studies have shown, by objective analyses, that people who are fit have more relations. They seem to be approached more for casual relations, sexual relations, and even occupational relations.
Not only are the more sociable than their overweight counterparts, but they also have better skills abilities and generally show to be "happier". Upon chemical analyses we found that a human that would exercise regularly had almost a hundred percent more endorphins in their brain than that of one who did not.
So we monitored their movements and activities, these healthy people seemed to portray a sense of jovial innocence and merriment more than their counter parts. Of course there was fluctuation in both subjects, but the stats don't lie.
Which leads us to conclude: that if we as humans all exercised not only for our own benefit but for the benefit of other humans and whoever else may exist in the outer regions of space the world would be a better place. Destry Masterson is a health, fitness and nutrition expert. She has written articles about exercise and recommends http://www.proform.com for information about exercise equipment.
Contact Info:
Destry Masterson - MyOnlineArticleWriting@gmail.com - Twitter: @DestryMasterson
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