Weighty
Matters 101
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
||
A Candid View of Obesity
A victim of childhood obesity, I had been obese and out of shape for four decades; I have now been thin for over six years, and getting strong for the last three years. I think its time we took a candid look at obesity in America.
Obesity is neither a natural nor a healthy condition. Adult animals in the wild are fit. Food is rarely plentiful enough for many, if any, to get fat, despite the fact that every day they eat all they can get. If wild animals had as much food available to them as we do, many would be obese, as nature has provided a drive in all living things to eat what they can when they can as there will be times of scarcity. Survival in the wild depends on fitness; if an animal in the wild did get fat, it wouldnt last long, an entire obese herd is impossibility.
For
millions of us, work is sitting at a computer and talking on
the phone; our desk drawers contain stashes of snacks we draw
on during the day. We have available to us processed, inexpensive,
fast food, junk food, and non-food throughout the day and
for meals. Our natural drive is to eat all we can get and many
do. The number of food commercials, particularly those aimed
at children, young children, is astounding.
There has been a culture-wide acceptance of the condition of
overweight and less-than-massive obesity: television ads, department
store posters, TV news reporters, our friends, co-workers, family
and the mirror all show larger people. Once hidden lairs in the
basement or on the third floor, plus size sections are now prominently
labeled; regular mannequins have been replaced with larger sized
figures to represent the larger sized customers, and plus sized
mannequins have been created. For the first time ever, junior
sizes are available in plus size.
In
school, I was somewhat of a freak at 135 pounds in the sixth
grade, in 1962, compared to my classmates who hovered in the
nineties; I was 180 pounds in high school, while most of the
other girls fretted over pushing 115. When was the last time
you watched a high school dismiss? The
acceptance of obesity, both personally and societally, has now
become the norm. The percentage of Baby Boomers (my generation)
at buffet restaurants or in fast food lines who are obese is
in the 60% plus range. Yet, our concept of obesity is skewed;
when we think obese, we think fat lady in the circus size, when
the truth is that a person who is 30 percent overweight is obese;
a woman who should weigh 135 is obese at 175 pounds. The majority
of obese people, including many morbidly obese (100 pounds over
normal) consider themselves overweight, but not obese.
The insurance companies, medical community, state and federal
government all are sounding the alarm about the obesity epidemic.
Increasingly the focus is on childhood obesity, for two reasons:
first, it may already be too late to take on the adult obese,
currently a clear majority in this country, and secondly, while
adult obesity is tossed around verbally and in print in a politically
correct manner as to show appropriate concern, it is actually
a taboo subject, and for anyone in government to tackle it head
on is certain political suicide. But how can you not love a candidate
who is pushing to save the children?
Another challenge facing government is that more than a decade
of tacit approval of a population annually getting exponentially
more overweight and obese has sanctioned obesity. Our economy
has grown around it. Fast food, processed foods, an entire diet
industry (over 30 billion dollars a year), a newly rocketing
plus size clothing industry: despite any saber rattling of government,
industry, and the medical community, if any significant portion
of the obese population were to reach normal weight it would
create havoc with the American economy.
Long term overweight and obesity has medical consequences, and a high price tag. As the Baby Boomer generation ages overweight and obese, and young adults embrace an obese culture, the costs to government provided health services and supplements, and the related problems will increasingly effect every American socially and financially.
It is time for all Americans to take a candid look at obesity
and the effects it has on our society and on the future of our
nation.
Disclaimer: This
article is educational in nature, and is not intended to diagnose,
treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you have a medical condition,
please consult your physician.