Michael Edelman (1964 - 1992) of  Pomona, NY; Guinness listed him at 994 lbs, but his mother estimates  that he weighed some 1200 lbs at his heaviest. He had already reached  154 lbs at age seven, and left school at ten because he could no longer  fit into the desks. After that he spent most of his time in bed, or  sharing massive meals with his 700-pound mom. Michael liked to start the  day with four bowls of cereal, toast, waffles, cake, and a quart of  soda, and end it with a whole pizza with the works for a bedtime snack.  Mother and son tried every new diet that came along, "but after a few  days, we'd reward ourselves with a chocolate cake. Then we'd call for a  pizza and that would be it." When the two were evicted from their Wesley  Hills home in 1988, Michael had to be moved by forklift.  After his  exposure in the press, dozens of hospitals and diet promoters vied to  get him in a weight-loss program, but Michael was determined to get thin  on his own. He appeared in three different tabloids in one week when he  publicly vowed to lose enough weight to consummate his relationship  with 420-lb Brenda Burdle, but the couple grew apart when they both  gained weight instead of losing it. After the sudden death of Walter  Hudson (below), with whom he had formed a long-distance friendship,  Michael developed a pathological fear of eating. He rapidly lost several  hundred pounds, taking nourishment only when spoon fed. At about 600  lbs, he literally starved to death.
Walter Hudson (1944? - 1991) of  Hempstead, NY (born in Brooklyn, NY); 5 ft 10 in, measured at 1197 lbs  (though the industrial scale broke in the process of weighing him). His  chest was measured at 106 inches, his waist at 110. Hudson was  discovered by the press in 1987, when he became wedged in the door of  his bedroom and had to be cut free by rescue workers. An agoraphobic,  he'd spent most of the past 27 years in bed. Hudson lived with his  family, where his appetite was always indulged, and gave every  indication that he was content with both his weight and his situation.  "I just ate and enjoyed it," he said. Despite his massive size, Newsday  reported that he was extraordinarily healthy: his heart, lungs, and  kidneys all functioned normally, while astonished doctors noted that his  cholesterol and blood-sugar levels "showed the chemistry of a healthy  21-year-old." Even so, activist-turned-nutritionist Dick Gregory managed  to convince Hudson that losing weight was necessary to save his life.  Gregory used Hudson to promote his Bahamian Diet, and claimed that his  protegé lost at least 200 lbs (sometimes claiming as much as 800 lbs)  under his care, but when Hudson refused to perform for the cameras on  cue, Gregory summarily abandoned him. Other celebrities and diet  promoters also claimed to have helped him lose massive amounts of  weight, though Newsday noted that Hudson never seemed to look any  thinner. (Gregory threatened to sue his rivals for $50 million.) Hudson  himself gave conflicting stories, sometimes claiming to weigh as little  as 480 lbs or as much as 1400. He only allowed himself to be weighed  once. Hudson died in his sleep after years of intermittent starvation  dieting, a few weeks after announcing wedding plans. His body was found  to weigh 1125 lbs, and his massive coffin required twelve pallbearers.


 
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar