Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Joe Conte is long-time customer with apparently no few regrets about his Soylent-heavy diet.

Joe Conte is long-time customer with apparently no few regrets about his Soylent-heavy diet.

via Lars DeRuntz 
http://www.takepart.com/article/2015/05/06/soylent-diet

16 comments:

  1. Glad that something like this exists but it's not for me, not now. In my much younger years when work filled my entire life, it would have been ideal!

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  2. I don't think I could do this now, at least not entirely. With our different schedules, dinners and a few hours around them are about the only time my fiancee and I have together. That and I am very picky about my food with regards to texture. If the taste and texture don't mesh right, it's out. For that I would have to try it and see if it would be a problem. If it was, I could take some steps to change the flavor, but that might just put the effort right back in.

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  3. I like love to cook, I love food and everything that goes with it. This is for people who don't enjoy life. The philosophy of let's get that food out of the way. What's next? Sex?

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  4. Muamer Mujevic​ Some people don't equate food to life...they enjoy other things more.

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  5. Craig Froehle cooking great food and enjoying it with your partner and kids is the apex of life's achievements in my book http://biblehub.com/kjv/ecclesiastes/3.htm None of your colleagues or rivals will be there at your gravestone.

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  6. Matt Schofield Not being judgmental, not assuming that everyone will conform to your ideals, and enjoying your time with those who care for you and vice versa--no matter the activity--is the apex of life's achievements in my book.

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  7. Deen Abiola great, if that makes you happy, it takes all sorts to make a world. I've tried living to achieve stuff in the corporate world, and it didn't work for me. Achieving stuff for my partner and kids does.

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  8. AllHailDiskordia
     Soylent Green ?

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  9. Matt Schofield​ So are you saying the opposite principles to what I've listed will lead to a better or even equal world? I'd genuinely be interested in alternative base principles that lead to as good a world.

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  10. Deen Abiola I'm pretty sure that it is perfectly possible to be individually happy with your own family without concerning yourself too much about whether you are "leading to a better or even equal world". If you make your happiness dependent on such a very unlikely outcome, you're pretty much guaranteeing that you won't smell the roses along the way.

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  11. You are not answering my question. I merely found it curious how quickly you switched from a declarative pronouncement to a 'to each his own' style of rhetoric. =)

    (none of your colleagues at your gravestone carries a connotation of denouncement and not neutrality to someone else's stated preferences)

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  12. Deen Abiola​ Don't worry...Matt has a hard time reigning in his impulse to tell everyone how they should behave, from big lifestyle choices down to trivial things like how to construct an email. ;-)

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  13. Craig Froehle sorry! If you prefer, I won't comment but simply observe.

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  14. Yes, How do you construct an email ?

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Now I'm doubly intrigued!

Now I'm doubly intrigued!