Obese man being catered to by British taxpayers.

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Jan 10, 2010
He ate 20,000 calories a day - ten times the recommended intake for a man
£100k-a-year care costs have racked up £1m bill for taxpayers
'I've always said there's a thin man inside all of this packaging'

The world's fattest man has told how the break up of a relationship with an older woman spurred him to binge eat his way to 70 stone. But it is the British taxpayer who should be the one feeling heartbroken.

Paul Mason, from Ipswich, was given life-saving bypass surgery last year and now weighs a comparatively slim 37 stone. But his care bill costs taxpayers an estimated £100,000 a year and is believed to have topped £1million over the last 15 years

The 50-year-old former postman, who now travels by motorised wheelchair after being bedridden for years, claims his gargantuan size was not down to greed but the heartbreak he went through in his youth.
Spoiler [+]
Fattest man: Paul Mason pictured weighing at least 60 stone prior to a life-changing operation
article-1343911-0CA09D77000005DC-175_634x485.jpg

Binge eater: A documentary about Britain's fattest man Paul Mason will air on Channel 4 this week

At the worst of his compulsiveeating, Mr Mason was devouring a shocking 20,000 calories a day,funding his gorging through stealing money from letters at a sortingoffice until he was dismissed before convincing his mother to take outa second mortgage.
His breakfast alone would be enoughto exhaust the appetites of most normal people, comprising an entirepacket of bacon, four sausages and four eggs complete with bread andhash browns.
Lunch would involve quadrupleportions of fish and chips along with two kebabs while Mr Mason wouldmunch on roast dinners, curries, pizza and more chips for his eveningmeal.

Constant snacking throughout the dayadded to his astonishing calorie intake, with up to 40 packets ofcrisps, sausage rolls and pasties keeping his hunger pangs at bay inbetween his enormous meals.

But after gastric surgery put hugerestrictions on the amount his stomach can consume, Mr Mason has spokenof the romantic pain that he believes inspired his binge eating.

[h3]HIS FRIDAY ORDER AT AN IPSWICH FISH AND CHIP SHOP[/h3]

  • Four large cod

  • Four battered sausages

  • Six large portions of chips

  • Two pies

  • Mushy peas and curry sauce

  • All washed down with bottles of Coke 

'This 24-hour eating was triggeredby something that happened in my 20s,' he told The Sun. 'You could saythat I ate to fill a crack in my heart.

'I met a woman when I was 21 and shemade my world complete. She was different to other women I'd met. Shewas 39, much older than me. It still hurts to speak about what happened.

'I called her Char. I adored her and thought, "Right, that's it for the rest of my life".

'She had a house, which we spent time doing up. Then, out of the blue, once I'd helped her finish the place, she broke it off.'

'This was in 1986, when I was 26. Ishould have become suspicious because she instantly found another chapand became engaged to him soon after.'

Mr Mason's father died in theensuing months and a deterioration in his mother's health saw him turnto comfort eating, a compulsion than later saw him forced to quite hisjob as a postman when his weight prevented him from completing hisdeliveries.

He was transferred to a sortingoffice where he worked until 1989 when he was sacked and imprisoned forsix months for stealing from customers' letters.

article-1343911-0CA3CF54000005DC-206_634x362.jpg

Compulsive eater: Mr Mason was disowned by his family after persuading his mother to take out a second mortgage then spending the money on food

article-1343911-0CA3CF68000005DC-96_634x335.jpg

Life or death: Britain's fattest man being lifted at a hospital as preparation for the surgery that helped him lose 20 stone

article-1343911-0CA02EC9000005DC-753_634x724.jpg

Mobile: Paul Mason sits in his motorised chair on a rare day out near his home in Ipswich after losing 20st

Paul said he wants to have a female companion and revealed he has a friend he has become close to.

'For the first time in years there is someone who makes me think about romance,' he told the Sun.

But Mr Mason's size means he isincapable of taking care of himself alone and the demands placed on hiscarers has cost the taxpayer more than £1million since he becamebed-bound in 2000.

Firefighters had to knock down thefront wall of his former home so they could drive a fork lift truckinside to lift him out and put him into an ambulance when he needed ahernia operation in 2002.

But after an operation at a WestSussex hospital last spring restricted his appetite and helped him lose20 stone in a year, he pledged to help others tackle their obesity.

'Food has taken my mobility away. And I've done it all to myself,' he added.

'I hate myself for what I've donebut it's all in my head. Blood tests and scans showed I was relativelyhealthy inside. I've always said there is a thin man inside all of thispackaging.

'Now I want to travel to every school in Britain with a cardboard cut-out of me at my heaviest.

'It's difficult for people to comprehend. They haven't the time to eat like I did, they're too busy.'

Charlotte Linacre, Campaign Manager at the TaxPayers’ Alliance said the treatment costs will enrage patients on NHS waiting lists.

'It’s such a shame that so much time and resources have to go to help one person, these nurses will be sorely missed at a time when public finances are squeezed,' she said.

'Although there is sympathy for people struggling with health issues, taxpayers will not feel this is a fair allocation of funds as they sit on waiting lists while footing the bill for his personal care.'

[h3]TWO NURSES TAKE FOUR HOURS TO WASH BRITAIN'S FATTEST MAN
[/h3]
Two female carers take up to four hours to wash Britain's fattest man Paul Mason - because he is so big it is impossible for him to clean himself.

The women, who visit him three times a day, have to apply cream to every inch of his bulging body to stop chafing.

He manages to soap his upper body himself and the nurses wipe him down.

They used to look after him from 8am until 8pm but Ipswich NHS were forced to axe the service because of cutbacks.

Mr Mason, who wears incontinence pads, has not walked properly since 2000 and wears size XXXXXXXXL clothes.

article-0-0CA3BC7A000005DC-541_634x350.jpg


article-1343911-0CA05778000005DC-588_634x286.jpg

Before surgery: Paul Mason languishing in a reinforced bed before undergoing a gastric bypass operation

He would eat his own **** if it had hotsauce on it
30t6p3b.gif
 
He ate 20,000 calories a day - ten times the recommended intake for a man
£100k-a-year care costs have racked up £1m bill for taxpayers
'I've always said there's a thin man inside all of this packaging'

The world's fattest man has told how the break up of a relationship with an older woman spurred him to binge eat his way to 70 stone. But it is the British taxpayer who should be the one feeling heartbroken.

Paul Mason, from Ipswich, was given life-saving bypass surgery last year and now weighs a comparatively slim 37 stone. But his care bill costs taxpayers an estimated £100,000 a year and is believed to have topped £1million over the last 15 years

The 50-year-old former postman, who now travels by motorised wheelchair after being bedridden for years, claims his gargantuan size was not down to greed but the heartbreak he went through in his youth.
Spoiler [+]
Fattest man: Paul Mason pictured weighing at least 60 stone prior to a life-changing operation
article-1343911-0CA09D77000005DC-175_634x485.jpg

Binge eater: A documentary about Britain's fattest man Paul Mason will air on Channel 4 this week

At the worst of his compulsiveeating, Mr Mason was devouring a shocking 20,000 calories a day,funding his gorging through stealing money from letters at a sortingoffice until he was dismissed before convincing his mother to take outa second mortgage.
His breakfast alone would be enoughto exhaust the appetites of most normal people, comprising an entirepacket of bacon, four sausages and four eggs complete with bread andhash browns.
Lunch would involve quadrupleportions of fish and chips along with two kebabs while Mr Mason wouldmunch on roast dinners, curries, pizza and more chips for his eveningmeal.

Constant snacking throughout the dayadded to his astonishing calorie intake, with up to 40 packets ofcrisps, sausage rolls and pasties keeping his hunger pangs at bay inbetween his enormous meals.

But after gastric surgery put hugerestrictions on the amount his stomach can consume, Mr Mason has spokenof the romantic pain that he believes inspired his binge eating.

[h3]HIS FRIDAY ORDER AT AN IPSWICH FISH AND CHIP SHOP[/h3]

  • Four large cod

  • Four battered sausages

  • Six large portions of chips

  • Two pies

  • Mushy peas and curry sauce

  • All washed down with bottles of Coke 

'This 24-hour eating was triggeredby something that happened in my 20s,' he told The Sun. 'You could saythat I ate to fill a crack in my heart.

'I met a woman when I was 21 and shemade my world complete. She was different to other women I'd met. Shewas 39, much older than me. It still hurts to speak about what happened.

'I called her Char. I adored her and thought, "Right, that's it for the rest of my life".

'She had a house, which we spent time doing up. Then, out of the blue, once I'd helped her finish the place, she broke it off.'

'This was in 1986, when I was 26. Ishould have become suspicious because she instantly found another chapand became engaged to him soon after.'

Mr Mason's father died in theensuing months and a deterioration in his mother's health saw him turnto comfort eating, a compulsion than later saw him forced to quite hisjob as a postman when his weight prevented him from completing hisdeliveries.

He was transferred to a sortingoffice where he worked until 1989 when he was sacked and imprisoned forsix months for stealing from customers' letters.

article-1343911-0CA3CF54000005DC-206_634x362.jpg

Compulsive eater: Mr Mason was disowned by his family after persuading his mother to take out a second mortgage then spending the money on food

article-1343911-0CA3CF68000005DC-96_634x335.jpg

Life or death: Britain's fattest man being lifted at a hospital as preparation for the surgery that helped him lose 20 stone

article-1343911-0CA02EC9000005DC-753_634x724.jpg

Mobile: Paul Mason sits in his motorised chair on a rare day out near his home in Ipswich after losing 20st

Paul said he wants to have a female companion and revealed he has a friend he has become close to.

'For the first time in years there is someone who makes me think about romance,' he told the Sun.

But Mr Mason's size means he isincapable of taking care of himself alone and the demands placed on hiscarers has cost the taxpayer more than £1million since he becamebed-bound in 2000.

Firefighters had to knock down thefront wall of his former home so they could drive a fork lift truckinside to lift him out and put him into an ambulance when he needed ahernia operation in 2002.

But after an operation at a WestSussex hospital last spring restricted his appetite and helped him lose20 stone in a year, he pledged to help others tackle their obesity.

'Food has taken my mobility away. And I've done it all to myself,' he added.

'I hate myself for what I've donebut it's all in my head. Blood tests and scans showed I was relativelyhealthy inside. I've always said there is a thin man inside all of thispackaging.

'Now I want to travel to every school in Britain with a cardboard cut-out of me at my heaviest.

'It's difficult for people to comprehend. They haven't the time to eat like I did, they're too busy.'

Charlotte Linacre, Campaign Manager at the TaxPayers’ Alliance said the treatment costs will enrage patients on NHS waiting lists.

'It’s such a shame that so much time and resources have to go to help one person, these nurses will be sorely missed at a time when public finances are squeezed,' she said.

'Although there is sympathy for people struggling with health issues, taxpayers will not feel this is a fair allocation of funds as they sit on waiting lists while footing the bill for his personal care.'

[h3]TWO NURSES TAKE FOUR HOURS TO WASH BRITAIN'S FATTEST MAN
[/h3]
Two female carers take up to four hours to wash Britain's fattest man Paul Mason - because he is so big it is impossible for him to clean himself.

The women, who visit him three times a day, have to apply cream to every inch of his bulging body to stop chafing.

He manages to soap his upper body himself and the nurses wipe him down.

They used to look after him from 8am until 8pm but Ipswich NHS were forced to axe the service because of cutbacks.

Mr Mason, who wears incontinence pads, has not walked properly since 2000 and wears size XXXXXXXXL clothes.

article-0-0CA3BC7A000005DC-541_634x350.jpg


article-1343911-0CA05778000005DC-588_634x286.jpg

Before surgery: Paul Mason languishing in a reinforced bed before undergoing a gastric bypass operation

He would eat his own **** if it had hotsauce on it
30t6p3b.gif
 
Why all these British kids on XBL tell me im a fat american?
laugh.gif
Every time I see these shows "1000 lb man" on TLC and @*#! its always some mother#*$%*! from London housing down steak-pie and chips once an hour...
30t6p3b.gif
 
Why all these British kids on XBL tell me im a fat american?
laugh.gif
Every time I see these shows "1000 lb man" on TLC and @*#! its always some mother#*$%*! from London housing down steak-pie and chips once an hour...
30t6p3b.gif
 
Biggest Loser is one of my favorite shows and as much as I respect those people for committing to changing their health and lives, I just don't understand how you can let it get that far.

If I were to put on 30 pounds, let alone 300, my friends/family would sit me down like "hey, hey, hey. Let's put down the fork." And thank god! How do you look at the scale and see that your weight has DOUBLED and just be like "f it"?
 
Biggest Loser is one of my favorite shows and as much as I respect those people for committing to changing their health and lives, I just don't understand how you can let it get that far.

If I were to put on 30 pounds, let alone 300, my friends/family would sit me down like "hey, hey, hey. Let's put down the fork." And thank god! How do you look at the scale and see that your weight has DOUBLED and just be like "f it"?
 
I lost all that weight for nothing, bruh.

Who's trying to move to the UK, get citizenship, and buy an apartment across the street from a buffet?
 
I lost all that weight for nothing, bruh.

Who's trying to move to the UK, get citizenship, and buy an apartment across the street from a buffet?
 
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