And a lie is where the golf ball is sitting on the course.
And the course is a way to subdivide your intake of food.
And food is for thought.
And thought confirms our existence.
And existence is pain… at least when it’s without cake.
Because you appeared to be a good provider, as only someone of wealth could afford enough food to end up fat. Unlike nowadays where poor and fat is far too easy to manage.
Looking well-fed might certainly have been a sign of affluence, but you don’t see a lot of art depicting people as especially obese, indicating that having a lot of excess weight wasn’t the attractive ideal.
Actually you do see a lot of art of obese people depicted as a physical ideal (especially of women). There was the “Rubenesque” style during the Renaissance, but even this was inspired by ancient Greek and Roman sculptures and art.
Stone age figurines of women tend to be fat, with large sometimes saggy Breasts.
Of course that’s assuming it wasn’t just a widespread depiction of some early mother goddess that was around for a long time.
Anyway I guess being rich or capable enough to keep yourself (there have been feminist interpretations) or your partner/harem(?) fat in the stone age was probably far more of a bragging right.
build a car …although sites we backlink to below are considerably not connected to ours, we really feel they may be truly worth a go through, so possess a look…
TY but I’d consider myself extremely nerdy if I knew, so I prefer not to know my memes (unless of utmost importance). I also hate both Batman and Superman (boring, silly), I’m (was long ago) a Marvel Kid: X-Men and Spiderman FTW!
Presumably it’s 40 cakes.
And that’s terrible.
That’s as many as four tens.
But the cake… is a lie!
And a lie is where the golf ball is sitting on the course.
And the course is a way to subdivide your intake of food.
And food is for thought.
And thought confirms our existence.
And existence is pain… at least when it’s without cake.
Is that what breaking the backwall is about?
That’s as many as four tens!
Ya know, Being fat historically was seen as a complement at times…
Because you appeared to be a good provider, as only someone of wealth could afford enough food to end up fat. Unlike nowadays where poor and fat is far too easy to manage.
Looking well-fed might certainly have been a sign of affluence, but you don’t see a lot of art depicting people as especially obese, indicating that having a lot of excess weight wasn’t the attractive ideal.
Actually you do see a lot of art of obese people depicted as a physical ideal (especially of women). There was the “Rubenesque” style during the Renaissance, but even this was inspired by ancient Greek and Roman sculptures and art.
Rubenesque I’ll grant as being like that frequently; the ancient Greek/Roman stuff, not so much.
Stone age figurines of women tend to be fat, with large sometimes saggy Breasts.
Of course that’s assuming it wasn’t just a widespread depiction of some early mother goddess that was around for a long time.
Anyway I guess being rich or capable enough to keep yourself (there have been feminist interpretations) or your partner/harem(?) fat in the stone age was probably far more of a bragging right.
Look up the Roman statue known as the “Lely Venus”, it was the inspiration for much of Rubens’ work, and itself was a copy of an earlier Greek statue.
The play’s Alex doesn’t look terribly obese, I’d call her ‘plump’ rather than ‘fat’ myself.
We will never know who is the original creator. Now Evil Queen’s guards will round all them up.
Unless “spider!”, I guess.
build a car …although sites we backlink to below are considerably not connected to ours, we really feel they may be truly worth a go through, so possess a look…
Adverts? In the comments section?
But this was supposed to be a safe space!
Yeah I almost forgot this all started because Alex got mad that an actress was fat.
That’s the whole point, what else?!
Okay, for those who didn’t get the reference:
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/lex-luthor-took-forty-cakes
TY but I’d consider myself extremely nerdy if I knew, so I prefer not to know my memes (unless of utmost importance). I also hate both Batman and Superman (boring, silly), I’m (was long ago) a Marvel Kid: X-Men and Spiderman FTW!