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I finally made it to 600! (Ignore my dirty laundry room floor.) Now then, how about we start twords 700~



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You can't escape obesity.
And it'd be insane to believe you could. The food industry has engineered their products for decades to make them as addictive as possible, mainly by adding sugar, fat, and artificial flavors that'll hit that dopamine spot just right. You don't really think that you're immune against basic science, do you?
All those food cravings you experience all the time are a result of this system, which drives you to consume more, much more than you'd ever need. But it feels good, it feels comforting. Sinking your teeth into a cake or a pack of cookies has such a relieving and calming effect. No wonder you crave snacks after a long day.
Spend a minute looking at the food options presented to you every day. It's all processed junk, everything. Even items you might consider healthy will at least have that 10% base level of sugar. Fries with nearly 20 ingredients? Yup, fast food chains like McDonald's know exactly how to give you that delicious fix you're craving for.
The beauty of it is that you're already constantly craving this kind of food. Yet, willpower is very limited. It's scientifically proven that you can't resist something forever, that you're bound to give in eventually. So you start making up excuses, treating yourself to a snack, enjoying a cheat meal, or just letting yourself go because it's the weekend.
There is nothing you can do about it, you're up against your biology and a multi-trillion industry who share a common goal: making you eat as much as possible
Just give up and enjoy it.
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Be brave.
You want to be fat?
Then do it.
Succumb to your gluttony.
There's nothing stopping you but other people's opinions.
If you are brave enough, their opinions won't matter, and never will.
Eat to your heart's content.
Grow out of your clothes.
Become too fat to even fit in non-custom clothing.
Embrace the struggle: the effort of stairs, of waddling, of squeezing through doorways.
Be proud of what a fat man you are.
Make people uncomfortable: touch and jiggle your breasts and belly in public.
Go out to eat, filling two chairs with your huge rear.
Order the full menu.
Don't be discouraged by the stares.
Belch loudly.
Express how hungry you are, despite eating enough food for a family of 10.
Be a true, gluttonous, fat man.
I'll shower you with attention.
You'll feel pride at how fat you are getting. Hundreds of pounds appear on your frame through the years... you become immobile.
But you love every second.
You love every pound.
You want to become even more impossibly heavy... an entry in the Guinness Book of World Records.
You make it a goal... 1400lbs.
Is it possible?
Well, you're going to find out. And, no matter the effort, you'll work your way to that world record.
My impossibly fat piggy. ♡
We'll get you there... to your goal: too fat to function.
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You don’t need a goal weight
Some people have their milestones mapped out, right from the start. Some people carefully chart their desired journey, perhaps starting at 250. Planning to gorge themselves up to 350 or 400lbs, knowing they’ll then need to be pushed past their limits until they finally arrive at 500, overshooting by 30lbs with worrying ease.
Others might begin nervously, gingerly creeping up the scale, pound by pound, feeding by feeding. Of course, once they breach 200lbs, things suddenly become very real. They find themselves craving the next hundred, then another hundred, and then the hundred after that. Maybe they want to get heavier still, maybe their feeder wants them to stabilize, maybe they both make a compromise and agree to stop at 700lbs. Maybe they set a secret goal of 770, as a treat.
Others still might only realize that these options even exist after meeting a partner, weighing in for the first time in years, and unexpectedly thrilling at the sight of their soon-to-be feeder’s wicked grin after watching the scale flash “ERR”. They think “1200” is an impossible number as they head steadily in that direction, encouraged and helped along the way. The months and years marked only by buying scales of increasing capacity, until one day they themselves decide to change the goalpost, crossing out the “2” and replacing it with a “6”.
I, however, don’t believe in any of that. Is it exciting? Sure. Is it frightening? Probably a little. But is it really the most effective way for you to grow? Don’t get me wrong: there will be measurements, charts and graphs to reflect every thickening roll, each added fold, and all the new jiggle. But you’re not going to be like any of those people. You’re different. I have just one goal in mind for you - speed.
I’ll start you off small, having you gain one pound a week. Easy, manageable. You could almost do it in your sleep, and you certainly don’t need any help. A couple of weeks roll by and you’re crushing it - you don’t feel any different, other than the comforting warmth of knowing you’re doing such a good job. Then, I’ll have you move up to three. You’re probably already there anyway, but I want to see you keep it up. One month and 11 pounds later, you simply need an extra stuffing or two to push you over the finish line, no big deal. But then, a new week means you have to do it yet again, and on top of that, now I need you to get to five. How long will it take to get used to making that happen, week in, week out?
Maybe this is where you start needing a little help. A session to test your limits once or twice a week, on top of all the grazing in between meals. Maybe you get a little too used to the new routine, shooting up by seven pounds - impressive! Just don’t forget, you still have to do five more next week, you don’t get to roll over those two extra pounds - they’re just icing on the cake. Heavy, sweet buttercream for you to keep wherever you like. Tomorrow, you’re back to zero.
Your eating habits have had to change to keep up with gaining 20lbs each month, but you’re doing great. You’re starting to really feel bigger, too, going up a few more sizes and occasionally knocking things over with all the new inches going to your butt. It’s desperately cute, but you know you won’t stay this way for long. You also know you aren’t going to be growing five pounds per week for much longer, either - next stop, seven pounds.
That’s a pound a day, every day. Your stomach is used to the stretch, it takes a while to get full now, and you can handle being hand-fed long after you’re too full to get off the couch, even if you do stagger to bed in the middle of the night because the couch gets lonely. But that was then, and this is now. Now, this is less than the minimum. You have to tolerate more. You need to do this every day, as much as you can. You’ll gladly accept help, of course, but now you’re getting used to stuffing yourself, then needing help to eat even more after that, at least three times a day. The idea of every meal requiring help is exciting, but this is the new norm now. This isn’t an experiment that stops one day, this is just how your life is. You don’t remember the last time you felt hungry.
You are tearing through sizes. You’re outgrowing furniture. You’re too wide for some seats, and too heavy for most benches. Getting wedged in tight spaces is a thing of the past - you simply can’t maneuver your enormous body anywhere without plenty of room to work. Your stomach is practically bottomless, you’re being hand-fed more than you’re feeding yourself, and you’re still setting personal bests for calories consumed. You’re regularly more then eight pounds fatter every single week now, and it didn’t really take that long for you to get there. You’re doing so very well. By most standards, you are huge.
Being huge, however, isn’t what you’re training for. You know what’s coming, and you’re prepared for it. You wonder what the next bump will be. Does this mean you’ll need to get filled with a funnel and tube? What if you like it? You know you haven’t found your real limits yet, though. You can take more, a lot more. Can you do 12lbs in a week? Can you do 15, then do it again the next week and again the week after that?
You don’t get hand-fed on the couch, long after your heavy arms hurt too much to lift, any more. You don’t get to snack between meals, because you mostly don’t have meals any more. On special occasions, if you’ve been particularly good, you might get to eat food like you used to, even if you do need a lot more of it than you have the stamina to deal with before being fed the rest. All you have to do these days is lay reclined in your bed, breathe through your oxygen tube, and rest your hands on the sides of the top slope of your belly as it grows upwards and widens, ever so gradually, but surely. Always full, always being made to stretch just a little more to support your size. Always in motion, the thick layer of fat covering it sloshing lazily as you breathe. Dwarfed by the expanse of your lower belly, stretching out forever in front of you, as far as you can tell.
Every couple of hours, you drink from a tube. Sometimes there’s a funnel, sometimes there’s a bag, sometimes you can control the flow, other times your jaw is held open with a gag and all you can do is try to open your throat and feel it flow into you. You no longer wince in pain as your stomach becomes more and more burdened, you’re used to it.
Before you sleep, a small, flexible tube is threaded through your nose, into your stomach. As you sleep, a pump makes sure you never dip below “painfully full”. You’re not sure how much fatter you’ll be by the end of the week, but it doesn’t really matter - you just know that you’re finally growing, comfortably, to your potential.
If someone asked your goal weight, you’d probably say that you haven’t really thought about it.
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Was trying to get some of my summer clothes out, guess I don't fit in this door anymore. Wonder what that means for the clothes?!
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