Use finsCarl Watts wrote:......... It is not easy to keep you neck and shoulders out of the water.kayakr wrote:Ok, the thread made me curious.

Use finsCarl Watts wrote:......... It is not easy to keep you neck and shoulders out of the water.kayakr wrote:Ok, the thread made me curious.
Yeah, I've got about a 4 pack, so 15% sounds about right.Around 10% your abs would clearly show
I think most people sink like stones when they breath out.fins
The formula indicate I should be 165Surprise! Lean People Live Longer
In the Nurses’ Health Study, researchers examined the association between body mass index and overall mortality and mortality from specific causes in more than 100,000 women. After limiting the analysis to nonsmokers, it was very clear that the longest-lived women were the leanest. The researchers concluded that the increasingly permissive U.S. weight guidelines are unjustified and potentially harmful.
Dr. I-Min Lee, of the Harvard School of Public Health, said her twenty-seven-year study of 19,297 men found there was no such thing as being too thin. (Obviously, it is possible to be too thin; however, it is uncommon and usually called anorexia, but that is not the subject of this book.) Among men who never smoked, the lowest mortality occurred in the lightest fifth. Those who were in the thinnest 20 percent in the early 1960s were two and a half times less likely to have died of cardiovascular disease by 1988 than those in the heaviest fifth. Overall, the thinnest were two-thirds more likely to be alive in 1988 than the heaviest. Lee stated, “We observed a direct relationship between body weight and mortality. By that I mean that the thinnest fifth of men experienced the lowest mortality, and mortality increased progressively with heavier and heavier weight.” The point is not to judge your ideal weight by traditional weight-loss tables, which are based on Americans’ overweight averages. After carefully examining the twenty-five major studies available on the subject, I have found that the evidence indicates that optimal weight, as determined by who lives the longest, occurs at weights at least 10 percent below the average body-weight tables. Most weight-guideline charts still place the public at risk by reinforcing an unhealthy overweight standard. By my calculations, it is not merely 70 percent of Americans who are overweight, it is more like 85 percent.
The Longer Your Waistline, the Shorter Your Lifeline
As a good rule of thumb: for optimal health and longevity, a man should not have more than one-half inch of skin that he can pinch near his umbilicus (belly button) and a woman should not have more than one inch. Almost any fat on the body over this minimum is a health risk. If you have gained even as little as ten pounds since the age of eighteen or twenty, then you could be at significant increased risk for health problems such as heart disease, high blood pressure, and diabetes. The truth is that most people who think they are at the right weight still have too much fat on their body.
A commonly used formula for determining ideal body weight follows:
I found the excerpt also posted here on a simpler page that printskayakr wrote:I found a pretty interesting part of "eat to live" available online.
More is available under "excerpt" at
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/eat-to- ... 1100685073
people are not getting taller very rapidly, but overall bmi has risen sharply in the 30 years...... the average man is mayby 175/180 cm, not much point dragging a 2.12 basketball player in the discussion.Oldcolonial wrote:The BMI formula is weight / height^2. This formula does a pretty good job of getting to the relation between weight and height correct if you are relatively short compared to most rowers or more appropriately near the average for people living in Belgium in the 1830's. (the place and time for which it was developed). If you are substantially taller, the square in the denominator does not capture the tendency for weight to grow by more than the square of height across individuals with increasing height. For instance, if you go through and apply the formula to players in the NBA you will find that a good chunk of them are considered overweight and some even obese according to the calculation. E.g. Dwight Howard BMA 27 = 120.2 kg / 2.11M^2 is firmly in the overweight category.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_mass_index
Man, I must be way out of whack! My wrists and ankles are a hell of a lot smaller than my waist.hjs wrote: next to bmi, waistline is important, this should always be the smallest part of your body..... almost rare these days.
body as in trunkBob S. wrote:Man, I must be way out of whack! My wrists and ankles are a hell of a lot smaller than my waist.hjs wrote: next to bmi, waistline is important, this should always be the smallest part of your body..... almost rare these days.![]()
Bob S.
Sure, I knew what you meant. I just can't resist passing on silly ideas that pop into my mind. It was not intended as a criticism.hjs wrote:body as in trunkBob S. wrote:Man, I must be way out of whack! My wrists and ankles are a hell of a lot smaller than my waist.hjs wrote: next to bmi, waistline is important, this should always be the smallest part of your body..... almost rare these days.![]()
Bob S., the part without the legs, arms neck and head.
No it is not, bmi is for following population over time. That does give a good view. Bmi in the western world has gone up big time the last 30 years, only one reason, we are getting fatter and fatter, 50 procent of adult man cn not see there privat parts anymore, while standing._sleuth_ wrote:A water immersion test is probably the most accurate way of measuring your body fat vs muscle mass. I spent 20 years in the military fighting that " your overweight" crap. While I was near a local university which had a sports medicine program, I found they did water immersion tests. The military standards stated I was 30+ lbs overweight, the water immersion test showed I was not only NOT 30 lbs over weight but I was at <10% body fat (at that time anyway) at the weight I was at. The commander and first sergeant were not happy but it's tough to argue with science and facts.
As far as I am concerned, BMI is something someone came up with and successfully peddled to make money. Just saying...