that doesn t mean to say that united will disappear or there will be job losses within the united states. but if you want to know where united is going in the future, it s international. the domestic u.s. is a very difficult place to make money. low barriers to entry, high barriers to exit. brutal regulation and overtaxation. it is hard to make money domestically. that is why our growth has been international. this year as we were going to grow between 1 and 2% this year and because of high fuel prices, we brought that back to flat. but even there, that flat is shrinking the domestic system and growing the international system. smisek said because united and continental did not have much route overlap, there will be further job losses within the united states. if you look at the u.s. airline industry, delta bought northwest. the other airlines are trying to bulk up, too. jeff smisek may be the largest with united, but he is under no illusion for what that means for
it is international. the domestic u.s. is a difficult place to make money. brutal regulation and overtaxation. it is hard to make money. that is why our growth has been international. each this year as we were going to grow between 1 and 2% this year. because of high fuel prices, we brought that back to flat. that flat is shrinking the domestic system. smisek said because united and continental did not have much root overlap, there will be further job losses within the united states. if you look at the u.s. airline industry, delta and northwest, the other airlines are trying to bulk up, too. jeff smisek may be the largest with united, but he is under no illusion for what that means for him and his competitors. when we are not about the
i joined sally at the nih. that s the national institute of health. they are trying to solve the puzzle. she went through tests and evaluations. here is her story. at 53 years old, she was physically ripped. everybody assumed i spent a lot of time in the gym. she didn t lift weights. whatever was causing her body to bulk up were taking away her ability to live life. it was frustrating. i was losing the ability to do the things i loved to do. it became increasingly difficult just to walk. at some point, i knew if it continued, it would kill me. she saw countless medical specialists. no one had an explanation. dr. gahl and his team were
welcome back to sgmd. sally has a mysterious disease that s causing her muscles, all of them, to grow out of control. so massive, they are starting to crush her. i joined sally and her doctor at the nih. it s national institute of health. they are trying to solve the puzzle. they put her through tests and evaluations. here s her story. at 53 years old, she was physically ripped. everybody assumed i spent a lot of time in the gym. sally didn t lift weights. in fact, whatever was causing her body to bulk up was taking away her ability to live her life. it was very frustrating. i was losing the ability to do the things i love to do that became increasingly difficult
of 25 to 60 years of age, we lose half a percent of our lean muscle mass annually and then after age 60, we lose 1% annually, so there s only a few ways to reverse that. one is to make sure that you re eating enough but the other thing is that you have to do resistance training as well as cardiovascular exercise in order to maintain that muscle mass. and resistance training, not to be confused with weight training. because some folks think that weight training especially i hear a lot of ladies, who say i don t want to bulk up, do this weight training stuff. what i ll say is initially, yes, you may increase the lean muscle mass and i ll see itault times with a lot of my clientele. they initially when they get involved into a weight training program maybe sometimes they gain some weight but for every pound of lean muscle mass that you create you burn an additional 25 to 50 calories at best. so what begins to happen is your lean muscle mass is going to support your metabolism and mu