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  • Apparently size does matter; diet or be dumped!

    Aug 01, 2011 byJulia Havey 0 Comments

    This has been a rough couple of years for me…who am I kidding, a lifetime of rough patches! BUT this article touched me because apparently I am not the only one who has been left because of widening girth! My first husband and I divorced when I was 300 lbs, so I know first hand what it feels like:

    It’s been a rough year for women struggling with their weight.

    Almost 50 percent of men surveyed in a new poll of 70,000 people said they would leave a partner who gained weight, reports MSNBC. In contrast, only 20 percent of women said they would ditch a significant other for putting on extra pounds. (JH: maybe this is why 50% of marriages end in divorce? 50% of men leave their wives because they gain weight?!)

    James Bassil, editor-in-chief of AskMen, which cosponsored the poll with Cosmopolitan.com, said the study showed that “some romantic behaviors have proven to be timeless ones” including the notion that “size matters.”

    The survey results aren’t the only recent data to indicate that men consider a woman’s weight when evaluating a relationship. Last month, a study claimed that both husbands and wives were more satisfied with their marriages when the wife had a lower body mass index than the husband.

    Defending her findings, Andrea Meltzer, lead author of the study, told ABC News, “It’s relative weight that matters, not absolute weight. It’s not that [women] have to be small.”

    The study didn’t explore exactly how relative weight influences marital happiness.

    Earlier this year, research suggested that a woman’s weight may effect more than her relationships. A University of Michigan study found that in Iceland, the higher a woman’s weight, the less likely she was to be employed. For men, higher weight was correlated with an increase in employment rates.

    MSNBC, which covered the study under the headline, “Those extra pounds can hurt you at work, ladies,” reported that another recent study, this one out of the University of Florida, found that women 25 pounds over the average weight earn $13,847 less per year than average-weight women.
    But worrying too much about weight can also hurt a woman’s career, according to a survey conducted by Dove in May. Fifteen percent of the 445 women who participated said worry about their appearance had gotten in the way of their career advancement, and 20 percent said body concerns affected their day-to-day lives. And yet another study claimed that better body image helps women lose weight.
    In other words, data tells women who are overweight, or think they are, that their body size can be problematic for their relationships and their careers. Yet worrying or feeling bad about it may hurt them at work and their chances of losing weight.

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    Well folks…you can’t change the way weight is viewed by others but you can change the way that YOU live and make a significant improvement to your life, your health and possibly even your wealth if this data is true! Try MY way of losing weight healthfully by Busting your worst Vices and add PGX to the solution and it’s an almost unfailable way to change! and best of all, thanks to the makers of PGX (as seen on Dr. Oz’s show recently and he said HE takes it and his family!) you can get my Vice Busting Diet for FREE! It’s a 26 week comprehensive program to help you bust your worst vices gradually over time and is the best program available for those not only wanting to lose weight to KEEPING it off! Get it today, www.PGX.com


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