Interesting... with my newfound abilities, I'd probably try to do some Matrix type shit... just goes to show how shallow I am...

I am very interested in how it will improve strengths in terms of EVERYDAY use, not gym use. Like how much easier is it to move this and do that...
Haha, that gets old quick. I'm the strongest guy in my family. It was cool at first. But after moving couches, refrigerators, televisions, etc.... it gets old.
I suppose it's all worth it though.
This is so weird to me man... I am sitting at 175 or so, and my handheld (got the Omron one, I love it) says I am about 11% or so. I know it isn't perfect, but for us to be this close... I dunno, I guess I do need to see current pics to understand what is really going on. I suppose my "loose skin" doesn't help the situation either (and I put in it quotes because it could still be fat, it could be loose skin, depending on what day it is and what article I read... Venuto and McDonald say more fat, others say... loose skin).
Ahh, but you're missing a big point/fact. 10% body fat isn't going to look the same on you as it does me.
You're writing off 10+ years of consistent, heavy weight training.
I have a much larger muscle base than you from this.
So when I'm carrying 10% body fat it isn't going to look the same as your 10%.
Stay consistent with cutting and bulking cycles and you'll develop a 'better' 10% over time.
I am glad you said leave the psychology out of it here. I was about to pounce like a TIGER... claws and all! You've spoken to me in length about that issue and I am sure you've had experience with others about some in depth ramifications from it all.
I understand the psychology of it all quite well. On both fronts, obviously more intimately on the skinny side of things.
Society puts more of a negative light on fatness, that I will admit. When you have anorexic models at the forefront of our media defining what beauty really is, it's much tougher to be fat than skinny. Even more so with females in my opinion, but that can be argued... as it has.
But it's not apples to oranges. I know big people who have gone through life normally. The societal pressures suck for anyone big, but beyond that, I know people who have fit in perfectly and are really happy people... not that anyone is saying fat=unhappy. It's just that although fatness really affects many people's lives negatively, I know a few who it hasn't.
And for me, my social circle growing up magnified my skinny issue. If it wasn't the family begging me to stop being such a picky eater, it was my friends in school making fun of how skinny my wrists were or my ribs.
Societal pressure certainly wasn't as strong but when you have the likes of the various fitness magazines and whatnot defining what an ideal man looks like, being overly skinny isn't anything to write home about and leads to feelings of inadequacies.
What's worse, being ridiculed b/c you're fat or being ridiculed b/c your too skinny? I don't think that's a question that can be answered at all. Each suck without a doubt. Our bodies mean so much to us, like it or not, so being ridiculed about your own is never going to go over well regardless of why said ridicule is happening.
Related to above, I know really skinny guys who are happier than all hell. They don't care about muscles or looks even. Just as being fat doesn't affect all equally, nor does being skinny. I suppose it's a matter of individual mentalities as well as societal interactions regarding the two issues.
Bunch of rambling, but the point is it's not a debate that can really be had. It's like arguing, to a lesser degree, which is worst terminal illness A or terminal illness B.
They both end up dead.
And in our cases they both end up with emotional distress as well as distorted body images.
BTW, I don't even think in relative terms "it isn't much" at all. You've broken a barrier like me, that society puts a high regard on (is it right? another debate that shouldn't really matter because it's moot). That puts you into a totally different light and when you say it isn't much in relation to Global Warming, I get your drift, but it's your way of life now and that is huge in terms of relativity to who knows you and how people interact with you. Same here... people just react differently to me now... sorry, side rant there. I just read it and thought you dismissed something haphazardly and I wanted to make sure you saw the importance of it all.
I appreciate that and trust me, I don't right it off. In relation to my own shortcomings and personal struggles, I've accomplished enough to keep me proud for a lifetime. I mean that.
In relation to what others who have put as much time and effort in as me, my accomplishments of pitiful. It's all a matter of perspective, and like I said above in one of my posts.... I don't have a problem with looking through the right 'lenses.' I don't feel inadequate at all... I've spent a lot of time developing a a healthy mindset and mind/body relationship.