
This here is a little gift story for
Starfig, based on a very interesting image of a very fat Squirrel slowly losing his physical shape because of his high levels of fatness.
A link to the image inspiring this can be found here.
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/1563153/
And before reading this I want you to picture that what you are about to read is like and old 70s medical film so show a very rare and very disturbing disease to get.
Image and inspiration cred belongs to
Starfig
An old projector starts playing, and on the screen starts a very old 8-milimeter colour movie from the 1970s starts showing. First thing that is shown is the logo for "The American Society for Medicine and Science", and after that we see an Anthro Fox sitting by a desk, wearing a doctor's lab-coat, reading from a journal and smoking a cigarette.
"Oh, hey." The Fox says as he closes his journal, puts out the smoke of his cigarette, and greets the viewers when sees that he has company. "As a Doctor I have seen my fair share of "unique" and "unusual" disease's that has affected furs, but I don't think nothing was as shocking and terrifying as...The Blob Syndrome!"
(Then there is a cut over to a pretty hefty looking Squirrel entering a big hospital.)
"This here is the patient that while not knowing it right now, was suffering from the Blob Syndrome. We want to keep his real identity secret out of respect for his friends and family, so lets just call him "Stubbs the Squirrel" for now. As you can see he is a pretty big fellow, weighting in on over 400 pounds on his only 5 foot tall frame. His ordinary doctor has told him that if he doesn't try to lose some of his weight it could result in problems with his heart and breathing. But unknowingly to both of them, Stubbs was having far worse problems ahead of him."
(The next cut shows Stubbs at home, gathering a lot of junk-food before settling down into his two-seated couch. That he manages to fill up pretty good on his own.)
"Stubbs said he was going to look after his eating habits, but not long after his visit to the doctor he found himself back into his old ways again. And with the pounds continuing to pile up on him, he was only making more sure on what his ultimate fate would be."
(We cut back to the doctor at his office as he once again speak dramatically into the camera as he get up from his chair and moves over to his right, all while not breaking his contact with the audience.)
"It was first when he reached the weight of 500 pounds that the syndromes really started to kick in. At least we assume that it was at the 500 mark when it started to happen, as when the sickness starts to work on the patient it will make he or she to get into a "Weight Gain Frenzy" where it's hard to know just how much of it is caused by the actions of the patient."
(At this point the fox doctor has reached his destination that is a easel with a bunch of papers with drawings on them.)
"To make it easier for many of you to understand what is happening to Stubbs now, we will show you a series of drawings that will show the progress of the sickness taking place."
(The first image the camera cuts to is a drawing showing a very pudgy squirrel, and how his skeleton looks like.)
"As you can all see this first image is showing how he looked like when he first came to us. It all seemed pretty normal with his fatness swelling his outsides, while his insides stays the same. But that would all change pretty soon."
(The next drawing shows the same squirrel, but even more pudgy this time. And his skeleton was looking a bit more "weaker" this time.)
"Once the syndromes starts to kick in for real it will only take a couple of days for our squirrel friend to weight twice as much as he did when he first came here! Not only has he grown outwards, (with several of his flabby parts hanging down several inches, including his spare tiers, neck rolls and male breasts.) but his insides have started to disassemble! If you look at this drawing you can see how his skeleton is slowly disappearing and dissolving as the fat grows! It's almost like the fat itself is feeding of the bones and growing as they grow weaker."
"I will also want to warm you that the next things you will see is not drawings but in fact real images taken of our Stubbs the squirrel patient at the really bad moments of his decease."
(The next image is a truly gruesome one of the same squirrel once again, but this one was almost impossible to recognize him as he now looked like a melting blob of his former self.)
"If it wasn't clear enough that the patient was suffering from the Blob Syndrome before then this image will make it undoubtedly clear. At this point the patient isn't just dealing with an uncontrollable weight gain, but his body is also starting to heavily deform as the losing of his skeleton is slowly making him less and less able to keep holding his body together. (Especially notice how the left ear is on it's was moving down from the top of his head, and about to reach where his shoulder should be,)"
"The thing that makes this disease so unique and hard to study is the fact that it never has any clear pattern. Anything from what type of species to age and even which gender creates a whole different appearance for the blob in question. In his case he has clearly been a heavy eater before it started, since his midsection is the place where most of his now looser fat is travelling down to, making it sag down more then anything else on him."
"We tried to X-Ray him as a part of our study, but by now he was so far into his sickness that there was next to no bone fragments that could be visible on the photos. (Most of it being impossible to capture due to the thick layers of fat blocking it.) What we did see was that apparently the feet is the last place on his body to be affected, as they could still support this very instable mass for when he posed for this image."
"And it was lucky for us that we took this image when we did as only 2 days later the bones in his spine finally snapped and Stubbs couldn't stand up anymore! After that he just laid in his bed as the last of his insides where getting turned into the same soft mass as his outsides."
"For this last part we will go back to our filming of Stubbs life at the hospital and I would want to warn sensitive viewers before hand, cause this will probably be a little to disturbing for some of you to handle."
(The camera then cuts over to what looks like some kind of furry soup in a big bowl with a face floating in the middle of it!)
"This ladies and gentlemen is Stubbs. He has at this point lost All of the bones that he had inside of him, and has now turned into nothing more then a fat mass that is wobbling around inside of this bowl shaped container! (Which is a bowl as to prevent him from spilling over and risk disappearing down a drain or even a crack in the floor.)"
(As the doctor's voice continues to talk a very attractive cheetah nurse (In a bit of a skimpy outfit.) comes in and prepares to feed the blob that is now Stubbs.)
"As you will see now there is barley anything Stubbs can do now on his own except breathing through his nose. When he need to eat he will get a straw put into his mouth hole and then have his food pressed into it through a funnel."
"There is not many of his senses that works now as he has no longer any concept of smell, hearing, or touch. He can still open and close his mouth, but with no chin or cheek bones to help from words all he can say to us is just some unrecognizable gurgling sounds."
"Pretty much all he can do now is to lay his lazy eyes on the young nurse as she feeds him in order to help keep his body (Or rather what is left of it.) alive."
(The camera cuts back to the fox doctor, who is sitting back down at the same desk from when he started this whole presentation to give us the ending speech.)
"Sadly though for Mr. Stubbs and all the other furries out there, there is still no known cure for either stopping the Blob Syndrome, or slowing down it's pace. All we know for now is that 1 in every 100 million is in danger of getting this terrifying disease, and that it is caused by a mutated gene. (So there is no risks of it being contentious.) But still seeing that a great deal of our country's is living a very fatted lifestyle we can fear that pretty soon it can be as many as 1 per every 10, 000 that can cause this thing in a near future."
"So all we can do for now is to tell these furries to stop eating so much and go do some workouts, cause pretty soon YOU can be the next victim of...The Blob Syndrome!"

A link to the image inspiring this can be found here.
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/1563153/
And before reading this I want you to picture that what you are about to read is like and old 70s medical film so show a very rare and very disturbing disease to get.
Image and inspiration cred belongs to

An old projector starts playing, and on the screen starts a very old 8-milimeter colour movie from the 1970s starts showing. First thing that is shown is the logo for "The American Society for Medicine and Science", and after that we see an Anthro Fox sitting by a desk, wearing a doctor's lab-coat, reading from a journal and smoking a cigarette.
"Oh, hey." The Fox says as he closes his journal, puts out the smoke of his cigarette, and greets the viewers when sees that he has company. "As a Doctor I have seen my fair share of "unique" and "unusual" disease's that has affected furs, but I don't think nothing was as shocking and terrifying as...The Blob Syndrome!"
(Then there is a cut over to a pretty hefty looking Squirrel entering a big hospital.)
"This here is the patient that while not knowing it right now, was suffering from the Blob Syndrome. We want to keep his real identity secret out of respect for his friends and family, so lets just call him "Stubbs the Squirrel" for now. As you can see he is a pretty big fellow, weighting in on over 400 pounds on his only 5 foot tall frame. His ordinary doctor has told him that if he doesn't try to lose some of his weight it could result in problems with his heart and breathing. But unknowingly to both of them, Stubbs was having far worse problems ahead of him."
(The next cut shows Stubbs at home, gathering a lot of junk-food before settling down into his two-seated couch. That he manages to fill up pretty good on his own.)
"Stubbs said he was going to look after his eating habits, but not long after his visit to the doctor he found himself back into his old ways again. And with the pounds continuing to pile up on him, he was only making more sure on what his ultimate fate would be."
(We cut back to the doctor at his office as he once again speak dramatically into the camera as he get up from his chair and moves over to his right, all while not breaking his contact with the audience.)
"It was first when he reached the weight of 500 pounds that the syndromes really started to kick in. At least we assume that it was at the 500 mark when it started to happen, as when the sickness starts to work on the patient it will make he or she to get into a "Weight Gain Frenzy" where it's hard to know just how much of it is caused by the actions of the patient."
(At this point the fox doctor has reached his destination that is a easel with a bunch of papers with drawings on them.)
"To make it easier for many of you to understand what is happening to Stubbs now, we will show you a series of drawings that will show the progress of the sickness taking place."
(The first image the camera cuts to is a drawing showing a very pudgy squirrel, and how his skeleton looks like.)
"As you can all see this first image is showing how he looked like when he first came to us. It all seemed pretty normal with his fatness swelling his outsides, while his insides stays the same. But that would all change pretty soon."
(The next drawing shows the same squirrel, but even more pudgy this time. And his skeleton was looking a bit more "weaker" this time.)
"Once the syndromes starts to kick in for real it will only take a couple of days for our squirrel friend to weight twice as much as he did when he first came here! Not only has he grown outwards, (with several of his flabby parts hanging down several inches, including his spare tiers, neck rolls and male breasts.) but his insides have started to disassemble! If you look at this drawing you can see how his skeleton is slowly disappearing and dissolving as the fat grows! It's almost like the fat itself is feeding of the bones and growing as they grow weaker."
"I will also want to warm you that the next things you will see is not drawings but in fact real images taken of our Stubbs the squirrel patient at the really bad moments of his decease."
(The next image is a truly gruesome one of the same squirrel once again, but this one was almost impossible to recognize him as he now looked like a melting blob of his former self.)
"If it wasn't clear enough that the patient was suffering from the Blob Syndrome before then this image will make it undoubtedly clear. At this point the patient isn't just dealing with an uncontrollable weight gain, but his body is also starting to heavily deform as the losing of his skeleton is slowly making him less and less able to keep holding his body together. (Especially notice how the left ear is on it's was moving down from the top of his head, and about to reach where his shoulder should be,)"
"The thing that makes this disease so unique and hard to study is the fact that it never has any clear pattern. Anything from what type of species to age and even which gender creates a whole different appearance for the blob in question. In his case he has clearly been a heavy eater before it started, since his midsection is the place where most of his now looser fat is travelling down to, making it sag down more then anything else on him."
"We tried to X-Ray him as a part of our study, but by now he was so far into his sickness that there was next to no bone fragments that could be visible on the photos. (Most of it being impossible to capture due to the thick layers of fat blocking it.) What we did see was that apparently the feet is the last place on his body to be affected, as they could still support this very instable mass for when he posed for this image."
"And it was lucky for us that we took this image when we did as only 2 days later the bones in his spine finally snapped and Stubbs couldn't stand up anymore! After that he just laid in his bed as the last of his insides where getting turned into the same soft mass as his outsides."
"For this last part we will go back to our filming of Stubbs life at the hospital and I would want to warn sensitive viewers before hand, cause this will probably be a little to disturbing for some of you to handle."
(The camera then cuts over to what looks like some kind of furry soup in a big bowl with a face floating in the middle of it!)
"This ladies and gentlemen is Stubbs. He has at this point lost All of the bones that he had inside of him, and has now turned into nothing more then a fat mass that is wobbling around inside of this bowl shaped container! (Which is a bowl as to prevent him from spilling over and risk disappearing down a drain or even a crack in the floor.)"
(As the doctor's voice continues to talk a very attractive cheetah nurse (In a bit of a skimpy outfit.) comes in and prepares to feed the blob that is now Stubbs.)
"As you will see now there is barley anything Stubbs can do now on his own except breathing through his nose. When he need to eat he will get a straw put into his mouth hole and then have his food pressed into it through a funnel."
"There is not many of his senses that works now as he has no longer any concept of smell, hearing, or touch. He can still open and close his mouth, but with no chin or cheek bones to help from words all he can say to us is just some unrecognizable gurgling sounds."
"Pretty much all he can do now is to lay his lazy eyes on the young nurse as she feeds him in order to help keep his body (Or rather what is left of it.) alive."
(The camera cuts back to the fox doctor, who is sitting back down at the same desk from when he started this whole presentation to give us the ending speech.)
"Sadly though for Mr. Stubbs and all the other furries out there, there is still no known cure for either stopping the Blob Syndrome, or slowing down it's pace. All we know for now is that 1 in every 100 million is in danger of getting this terrifying disease, and that it is caused by a mutated gene. (So there is no risks of it being contentious.) But still seeing that a great deal of our country's is living a very fatted lifestyle we can fear that pretty soon it can be as many as 1 per every 10, 000 that can cause this thing in a near future."
"So all we can do for now is to tell these furries to stop eating so much and go do some workouts, cause pretty soon YOU can be the next victim of...The Blob Syndrome!"
Category Story / Fat Furs
Species Squirrel
Size 103 x 120px
File Size 108.5 kB
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