I suggest you look for this kind of physique if you wan't you husband to survive at least a winter.

Never considered that positive feedback loop. I find it very hard to get comfortable, so I am constantly changing positions.
The most recent healthcare studies have shown its more about where the fat is, vs total amount of body fat (sample study). 5% is probably pushing a bit too lean if you're maintaining it for long periods because it reduces subq fat to abnormally low levels.
This sounds counterintuitive. Although thinking about it, most 60+ people I know are rather chubby and the skinny ones are so because of they already have some health issues, hence loosing weight.classical_Liberal wrote: ↑Mon Dec 17, 2018 10:04 pmAs you age (in 20-30 years), studies have shown that lower BMI's have increased overall mortality and dementia rates. Obviously, obesity is still way worse. (sample study)
I wonder if it gives you an energy buffer if you do get sick. People often loose weight when they are ill, if you haven't got any to loose you could be in trouble quite quickly.
I've thought about this lately too, and every time my conclusion is that RVs / caravans are way more convenient.
But BMI and body fat % are not the same thing. People can have the same BMI with vastly different body compositions (which affects health).classical_Liberal wrote: ↑Mon Dec 17, 2018 10:04 pmThe most recent healthcare studies have shown its more about where the fat is, vs total amount of body fat (sample study). 5% is probably pushing a bit too lean if you're maintaining it for long periods because it reduces subq fat to abnormally low levels.
As you age (in 20-30 years), studies have shown that lower BMI's have increased overall mortality and dementia rates. Obviously, obesity is still way worse. (sample study)
Could be, people on chemotherapy generally have trouble eating so having some cushion might help. On the other hand toxins are stored in fat so massive fat loss while going through illness might just add to overall poor health.tonyedgecombe wrote: ↑Tue Dec 18, 2018 4:46 amI wonder if it gives you an energy buffer if you do get sick. People often loose weight when they are ill, if you haven't got any to loose you could be in trouble quite quickly.
Right. As Jean noted elsewhere, ERE is mostly home economics (being your own housewife) combined with a bit of finance. Of course, this is also how the middle-class/mid-gentry used to live everywhere.C40 wrote:With the right woman, I'd be open to being "kept" like that. I like doing those kinds of "productive" things anyways.
Makes sense, but an home-partner introduces variables and elements of risk that you can't necessarily control or predict, the whole system becomes more complicated. Significant compromises will have to be made (not always but often).7Wannabe5 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 18, 2018 5:50 amThe thing that baffles me is how most of the men on this forum are still so stuck in late 20th century thinking that they can't comprehend that the cost of keeping a wife/house-husband who likes to do productive things is worth a shit-ton of capital otherwise invested. Simple calculation: Fairly lazy home-partner who only works 4 hours in the morning 5 days/week and is only capable of work at the level of average help at McDonalds = 20 X $10 X52 = $10,400/year = SWR on over $300,000!
Key words here "men on this forum" who are in general extremely progressive and ambiguous. Thousands of years of history show that men are perfectly willing to let women make babies and breakfast. The thing that has changed is feminism. Women want to work to be more independent.7Wannabe5 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 18, 2018 5:50 amThe thing that baffles me is how most of the men on this forum are still so stuck in late 20th century thinking that they can't comprehend that the cost of keeping a wife/house-husband who likes to do productive things is worth a shit-ton of capital otherwise invested. Simple calculation: Fairly lazy home-partner who only works 4 hours in the morning 5 days/week and is only capable of work at the level of average help at McDonalds = 20 X $10 X52 = $10,400/year = SWR on over $300,000!