![]() Everything we ate, my mom made us eat bread with it because she knew it would fill us up and we would feel less hungry later. “Even if we had gone the healthy route, how long could we have sustained it? Maybe a couple weeks, or maybe a month. “It was all bad stuff, but it was cheaper, so we didn’t have to spend a lot of money on it,” Lacy said. I could eat crawfish literally every day.”ĭelicious was valued over nutritious the cheaper, the better. ![]() Everything that is not good for you that tastes good, you know? Crawfish too. Typical dinner might be fried chicken, red beans and rice. “No vegetables to speak of, I’ll tell you that. “It was southern Louisiana cooking, so nothing healthy,” Lacy said. The family eventually settled down, with little money, in Geismar, outside Baton Rouge. His family was displaced to Beaumont, Texas, for weeks, only to return to find their home destroyed, much of their belongings looted. Lacy grew up in Gretna, a suburb of New Orleans, until 2005, when Katrina hit. I could be 225 and they’d still be like, ‘You’re still a fat piece of s–t.'” You just have to read it, get mad or however it makes you feel, and move on. “And no matter what, you can’t say nothing back to them. “You just can’t shake it,” he said, frustrated with the Twitter trolls. He knows no matter what he does, no matter his weight, the jabs will persist. The 26-year-old, now with the Seahawks, spoke to ESPN for a Wednesday feature in which he became more than a, well, running joke, opening up on his background - of growing up with little, of losing that little in Hurricane Katrina, of his offseason weight goals being a public spectacle. Lacy is the last of his kind, making him the avatar of the burly running back - and the target of shaming trolls, of a public eager to pounce on a professional athlete whose job is to keep his body in order, a job that’s not easy for a guy who just likes food. They really don’t have big backs anymore.” “I don’t get it,” said Lacy, who weighs in around 250 pounds. The spiritual successor of the Ron Daynes and Jerome Bettises of the NFL world runs alone, really the last big back at a time when everyone’s Twitter fingers have less-generous terms than “big back.” ![]() Ozempic users spark spike in ER visits: Shocking new side effects John Goodman's trainer talks weight loss, intervention at cemetery John Goodman, 71, celebrates 200-pound weight loss with dashing red-carpet walk on birthday Andy Cohen jokes 'The Real Housewives of Ozempic' is airing on Bravo
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