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Let's get one thing straight: fat people, even those weighing 200, 250 kilos, don't fall into the ground from their own weight. No one has ever been found halfway through the Earth, waving from the mantle like, "Hey guys, I think I overdid the dessert."
That's not how gravity works. The Earth isn't some fragile dinner plate with a "maximum load" warning on the bottom. It's a giant ball of rock and molten metal wrapped in atmosphere - and you, no matter how heavy, are just another item in its clingy gravitational collection.
See, gravity is like the world's most obsessive lover. You can try to jump, diet, levitate, or get dumped by every diet plan known to humankind - but gravity always pulls you back. You're not going anywhere. Even astronauts have to break up with gravity using rockets just to get some space.
When Gravity Refuses to Let Go
People act like Earth is flat, as if one wrong step will make you tumble off the edge into the cosmic void. No, my friend. Gravity doesn't allow drama like that. It's not a flat plate - it's a clingy, spherical prison. A loving one. A gravitational group hug.
And if you think 250 kilos is enough to puncture the planet - well you're wrong.
No, the ground doesn't collapse under you because of you. It collapses when it's cheap. Floors, like politicians, can't handle too much pressure. The Earth, on the other hand, can handle billions of tons of ocean, mountains, and megacities - it's not afraid of your body mass.
Countries facing obesity epidemics include the U.S., Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Australia, the U.K., Kuwait, and Croatia.
The problem began in the 1970s–1980s in the U.S., spreading worldwide with processed foods, fast-food culture, and sedentary lifestyles. Most countries have faced it for 20–50 years; in Croatia, it’s lasted about 25 years, rising since the early 2000s.
Driven by cheap calories, stress, and inactivity, obesity has become a chronic global crisis, increasing rates of diabetes and heart disease.
Experts call it the “slow pandemic” — a decades-long health emergency rooted in modern convenience and human inertia.
Let’s be real: the planet supports everything. Volcanoes, skyscrapers, oceans — it holds them all.
That’s the truth. You don’t fall through the ground because physics won’t let you. Gravity pulls you down, the ground pushes you up — a perfect stalemate. It’s like a toxic relationship that somehow works.
So next time you feel bad about your weight, remember: you’re not too heavy for the Earth. You’re literally part of the deal. You’re a contributor to the gravitational economy.
And if you ever doubt that, just jump — and watch the Earth instantly pull you back like, “Where do you think you’re going, baby?”
๐ References
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Isaac Newton - Philosophiรฆ Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687)
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NASA - What Is Gravity? Educational Brief (2024)
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Croatian Astronomical Society - Basics of Gravity and Planetary Motion (2023)


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