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These Drastic Before - After Photos Of People Who Quit Alcohol Will Make You Rethink Your Choices

Gym is just a street away but too lazy to go there. planning from last 4 months to join.
Do it. You will notice visible changes within few months.
There is no shortcut to getting fit.

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That's me....3 yrs but not sober at all. Its freaking hard work out there what brings u in shape, not quitting booze.
Wow. That's a drastic change. Congratulations!
How you achieved this?
 
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Looks fake. Many faces don't match in the photos?
 
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I don't drink and my Faith doesn't permit it : )

:o: More for us, I suppose.

vikings-were-norse-seafarers-who-raided-traded-settled-all-over-europe.jpg


Norwegians are 82% Lutheran, but that never stopped anyone from having a drink or too. Even during the heyday of Christianity among the Vikings in the 1000s, alcohol remained a way of life.

In fact, laws such as Gulaþing Law required the production and consumption of alchohol, ale mainly, during festivals popular during Pagan times, but carried over after the conversion of Norway, albeit under different names:

The drinking of ale was particularly important to several seasonal religious festivals, of which the Viking Scandinavians celebrated three: the first occurring after harvest, the second near midwinter, and the last at midsummer. These festivals continued to be celebrated after the introduction of Christianity, although under new names. Historical records show that ale consumption at these festivals, even in Christian times, was quite important: the Gulaþing Law required farmers in groups of at least three to brew ale to be consumed at obligatory ale-feasts on All Saints (November 1 - Winternights), Christmas (December 25 - Yule), and upon the feast of St. John the Baptist (June 24 - Midsummer). More ordinary festivities, celebrated even today, are so closely associated with beer that they are known as öl ("ale") and include Gravöl (a wake, or "funeral ale"), Barnöl (a christening, or "child-ale") and taklagsöl (a barn-raising, or "roofing-ale")

To each their own, but we never let religion get in the way of having a good time..
 
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:o: More for us, I suppose.

vikings-were-norse-seafarers-who-raided-traded-settled-all-over-europe.jpg


Norwegians are 82% Lutheran, but that never stopped anyone from having a drink or too. Even during the heyday of Christianity among the Vikings in the 1000s, alcohol remained a way of life.

In fact, laws such as Gulaþing Law required the production and consumption of alchohol, ale mainly, during festivals popular during Pagan times, but carried over after the conversion of Norway, albeit under different names:

The drinking of ale was particularly important to several seasonal religious festivals, of which the Viking Scandinavians celebrated three: the first occurring after harvest, the second near midwinter, and the last at midsummer. These festivals continued to be celebrated after the introduction of Christianity, although under new names. Historical records show that ale consumption at these festivals, even in Christian times, was quite important: the Gulaþing Law required farmers in groups of at least three to brew ale to be consumed at obligatory ale-feasts on All Saints (November 1 - Winternights), Christmas (December 25 - Yule), and upon the feast of St. John the Baptist (June 24 - Midsummer). More ordinary festivities, celebrated even today, are so closely associated with beer that they are known as öl ("ale") and include Gravöl (a wake, or "funeral ale"), Barnöl (a christening, or "child-ale") and taklagsöl (a barn-raising, or "roofing-ale")

To each their own, but we never let religion get in the way of having a good time..

I'm a Muslim
 
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Excess of fat, sugar etc is all bad. Excessive alcohol with give you liver problems, excessive sugar diabetes, Excessive fat cholestrol.

The moral, Excess of anything is bad. A healthy lifestyle is important.
 
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