I'm tired of being declared wholly impossible. All of the charts and tables in this Health 101 class are geared towards college-aged sedentary adults who are taking this class to learn how to be healthy. Unfortunately for me, I'm 16, I run seven to ten miles per day, and I'm in high school. According to these charts, the tallest I could possibly be is 5'7". Alternatively, I weigh a minimum of 142 pounds. In actuality I am 5'10" and 120 pounds. According to all these charts, I'm going to drop dead tomorrow unless I start eating way more and exercising so that I can build up muscle and avoid osteoporosis.
...And I'm supposed to respond to the paragraph the table points me to. Flargh. I also need to improve one aspect of my physical fitness over the course of the class, and it has to be by a certain amount as dictated by this most sovereign book. My options are...
A) Take a minute off of my mile time. This would require me running a 4:10 mile, a time that could almost qualify me for the Olympic trials.
B) Increase my sit-and-reach so that I can touch my toes. I can already reach six inches past my toes, thank you very much.
C) Bench press 120 pounds. This is my body weight, and the only possible path available to me. This is either going to be extremely difficult, or I'm going to need to reason with the professor.
Silly fixed-difficulty challenges. They don't work in D&D and they don't work in real life.