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Weighing Reality

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall, Bitch Magazine. Posted March 15, 2006.


As doctors fret about our obesity epidemic, reality TV is revealing some intriguing things about American corpulence.
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"Obesity," declares Charlotte Cooper, author of 1998's Fat and Proud: The Politics of Size, "is just a word used by people to medicalize fat."

Extra weight, once considered a genetic short straw, is increasingly characterized as a crisis threatening the physical, political, and moral health of our nation -- even as large bodies are becoming increasingly visible in popular culture.

Medical and public-health sources define obesity as weighing more than 20 percent over one's "ideal weight." However, the methods that are used to determine "normal" weight ranges are limited in their estimation of what constitutes obesity. And as the ranks of overweight and/or obese Americans swell, they challenge the very notion that fat is not "normal."

So what's making us so fat, and why? In the past, overweight Americans have had several tried-and-true explanations: genetics, an underactive thyroid, and that old favorite, big bones. But a quick review of studies and books on the plumping of the American populace shows that there is no consensus about the etiology of individual weight gain. Increasing rates of obesity have been attributed to a wide range of factors both personal (overwork, food obsession, yo-yo dieting, stress) and social (poverty, the rise of fast food, poor nutrition education). Now, a handful of scholars and psychologists are attempting a deeper evaluation of this hefty new body, while even the basest expression of popular culture -- that is, reality tv -- is revealing some intriguing things about American corpulence.

Linda Papadopoulos -- a British psychologist, author of the 2004 book Mirror Mirror: Dr. Linda's Body Image Revolution, and consultant on the U.S. television show "Celebrity Fit Club" (more on that later) -- says weight gain is "not as simple as 'people just eat.'"

Psychologists like Papadopoulos and psychoanalyst/writer Shari Thurer (author of 2005's The End of Gender: A Psychological Autopsy) find that individual weight gain can be attributed to causes as benign as eating when bored or as extreme as responding to sexual abuse by piling on pounds to make oneself unattractive. They also tend to link pathological eating disorders -- including anorexia and bulimia as well as compulsive eating -- to deeper issues around relationships and control, often rooted in childhood development.

In his early writings, Freud avoided arbitrary separations between psyche (mind) and soma (body), and in this approach Australian neurologist/psychologist Elizabeth A. Wilson sees fertile ground for new theories about eating and weight. She decries the progression of psychoanalytical investigation toward purely ideational theories of eating (what does it mean?) and away from biological explanations (what happens in the gut?).

In her 2004 book, Psychosomatic: Feminism and the Neurological Body, Wilson expands feminist theories of the body through the illustration of biology's dynamism. Intrigued by the positive effects of using antidepressants to treat bulimia, she points out that the majority of the body's serotonin is found not in the brain, but in the "complex neural networks that innervate the gut."

Whether fat is viewed as a medical problem or as an indication of a damaged psyche, the message that permeates pop culture is the same: Healthy people are not fat, and fat people are not healthy. This rhetoric ignores the fact that a thin person can be weaker or more prone to illness than his or her fat counterpart, and it coerces us into a constant vigilance against what could be an evolutionary preference for amassing energy reserves (fat) to sustain us in periods of famine. If it were so easy, natural, or normal for us to be our "ideal" weight, perhaps we wouldn't need to struggle so hard or become dependent on external supplements and medical intervention to maintain it.

Scholar Kathleen LeBesco, author of the 2004 book Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity, thinks that the problem with psychological approaches to fat is their tendency to collapse all weight gain into "disordered eating." She argues that we need a new angle of looking at fat that can "tease out who is engaging in compulsive overeating or bingeing -- versus who is fat for reasons that aren't what you'd describe as 'psychologically unhealthy,' but that end up being aesthetically 'vile.'" She points out that in American culture, "we don't seem to care about compulsive overeating as long as the body looks a certain way. So it's not really about the practice, it's about the aesthetics."

Nowhere is this call to conformity seen more clearly than on television. Hefty individuals have expanded beyond the stereotypes of, for instance, the fat comedian, and spilled over to talk shows and reality programming, but they haven't necessarily fared better for their efforts. Daytime talk shows love to feature social outcasts in a parade of shame and judgment, and fat folks -- along with more active transgressors like cheaters, beaters, and sexual predators -- are a staple of the afternoon tv dial. But to dig into our culture's obsession with weight and dieting, we need to tune in to two reality shows that purport to tackle the real issues behind weight.

Both NBC's "The Biggest Loser" and VH1's "Celebrity Fit Club" divide their participants into two teams and put them through a series of competitive weight-loss tasks. Combining the challenges with a generous helping of tough love, they ultimately reward those who lose the most. I first tuned in to "The Biggest Loser" during a week in which all food was removed from the house except temptation food supplied by the producers: piles of cookies, stacks of donuts. The ostensible reason for this was, as the show established, that the "real world" outside the cloistered set is full of temptations, and that none of the contestants would succeed in keeping weight off if they easily succumbed to breaking their diets. In practice, though, it was akin to putting a group of alcoholics in a room with an open bar and chastising them when they cracked.

On "The Biggest Loser", losing weight is simply another strategy in a means to an end: winning the "game" and collecting the $250,000 prize. And while a short disclaimer at the end of each program reveals that a physician and nutritionist provide supervision, the camera's gaze rests only on the contestants and the two trainers. The focus on calorie counting and exercise flattens the discourse about roots of weight gain and roads to real weight loss. It eliminates any consideration of the social and political implications of corpulence, evaluation of fat rhetoric, or analysis of the very concept of "obesity" itself.

In the more realistic (and, one might argue, more humane) "Celebrity Fit Club," celebs stay at their own homes, keep their day jobs, and remain on the show throughout the season; a nutritionist and a psychologist (the aforementioned Dr. Papadopoulos) are integral parts of the show. Although viewers aren't privy to the details of all psychologist-participant interactions, we do learn enough to make rudimentary analyses of each celebrity's psyche and the root cause of their weight issues.

For instance, we witness the gymnastic-coach father of onetime "Saturday Night Live" cast member Victoria Jackson as he flips through photo albums of a young Jackson. "Here she is at 5," he says, pointing his daughter out from an indistinguishable group of leotard-clad girls. "See, she's already bigger than the other girls."

Later, Jackson reveals that when she confronted her father about his fatphobic comments he insisted that he was just joking. "And what are you now?" one of the "Celebrity Fit Club" panel of weight-loss experts asks. "A fat comedienne," she laughs.

In these discussions of the psychological implications of the participants' weight, we get a more expansive view than that provided on "The Biggest Loser." Still, these are simplistic evaluations: While one person has an addictive personality rooted in a shortage of nurturing, another let his need for career success distract him from his health.

Not least of "Celebrity Fit Club's" shortcomings is its superficial sketching of such recurring characters as Addict on the Verge of a Relapse, Sassy Black Woman, and (my personal favorite) Fat-Positive Plus-Size Model -- filled last season by rock offspring Mia Tyler and this season by former "America's Next Top Model" contestant Toccara. Both seasons' FPPSM initially resisted the compulsory weight-loss quest and offered subtle resistance to body norms -- but in the end did lose weight. Toccara's weight loss was spurred by the eventual resentment of her teammates as well as a growing competitiveness. Still, she remained comfortable in her body and in the season finale announced she would gain weight to return to her "perfect weight" of 180 pounds.

What, exactly, are the producers hoping to convey with a participant like Toccara? Is she there to build drama, add conflict, or provide an opposing viewpoint? We'll never really know, because "Celebrity Fit Club" positions all participants -- even the few who are clearly self-confident and well-adjusted -- as pathologically wounded, medically unhealthy, and in deep denial. When Toccara loses weight, we're expected to think, 'Damn, she looks good,' and join the panel in expressing chagrin at her determination to replace her (slightly) minimized curves.

Even Papadopoulos, who is proud of her efforts to provide a positive influence on "Celebrity Fit Club," recognizes that "in general terms, what we are still saying is, 'Your value lies in the way you look.'" Not surprisingly, Cooper goes further, arguing that the show reinforces "the wrongness of fat" and, worst of all, disconnects viewers from their own bodies.

It's worth wondering who, in the end, these shows are for, and whether the intended audience alters their meaning. Perhaps in between the sit-ups, the judgment, and the baring of psychological wounds, viewers are intended to get a sense of what it means, in this time and place, to be fat. However, since we're provided such shallow representations of each fat contestant, viewers are more likely to walk away feeling good about ourselves in comparison to corpulent participants, and validating our feelings that fat is bad, dieting good, and competition even better. There are small sparks of political resistance implicit in the presence of hefty bodies and fat-positive individuals on shows like these, but they are too quickly snuffed by the larger context. When it comes to reality diet shows and their ritualized exorcism of our shadow selves -- the internal Other, the Fatty within -- we all lose.

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Jacob Anderson-Minshall writes the nationally syndicated column TransNation.

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the real problem
Posted by: rsaxto on Mar 15, 2006 4:43 AM   
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The real problem is that greedy food corporations are giving us food so deficient in dietary needs that people have to eat more of it to get needed nutrients. Food corporations fatten themselves by stuffing their victims with foodless food. It's criminal!

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» RE: the real problem Posted by: Jimbo
Fat is a real medical problem.
Posted by: medstudgeek on Mar 15, 2006 4:49 AM   
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While I'm not denying the negative effects of the media on women's self-image, this whole idea that we have to ignore increasing obesity rates because the corporate media tells everyone to be thin is counterproductive. Fat people are at higher risk of heart disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis, hypertension, cancer, and lots of other awful things. While I agree this isn't really fat people's fault, rather the fault of the car culture, no safe places to exercise for the lower class, long work hours that leave people no time to exercise, and greedy food companies, fat is a real health problem.

Rather than demonizing fat people, we should do something about the car culture, crime, work hours, and food companies; all sound lefty initiatives.

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I think
Posted by: pball on Mar 15, 2006 6:22 AM   
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...it depends on what you mean by "fat". Just being a big guy/girl isn't neccessarily bad for the health, despite what the media tells you; I know quite a few larger people who have perfectly fine blood pressure, cholesterol, so forth and so on even though the mainstream press would be screaming "OMG THEY NEED TO LOSE THIRTY POUNDS OR DIEEEE". Hell, one of my running buddies is a pretty large dude (bout 5'11 and 255), but his aerobic endurance is totally beyond question - he ran NYC in 3:40-something last year! But then there's _obesity_, which is without a doubt totally ravaging to your health, and something we do need to do something about. I see people in stores on scooters, unable to walk, whose sole disability is their weight - that's the problem and that's what we need to do something about.

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missing the point
Posted by: afmeyers on Mar 15, 2006 5:29 AM   
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There's no mystery why we have an obesity epidemic. If you're interested, here are some titles: Fat Land by Greg Critser; Food Politics by Marion Nestle; Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser; and the forthcoming Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan. Put simply, agribusiness now produces 3800 calories per capita per day - an increase of 500 calories per person per day since 1970. Why? Because, beginning with Earl Butz, Nixon's Secretary of Agriculture, our tax dollars have paid agribusiness big time to overproduce, especially corn and soy. They have excess product they need to move, so the answer has been -- get us all to eat more. And this they've done with supersizing and processing. The scientific literature documents just how effective these strategies are - they work. The excess corn is now high-fructose corn syrup and livestock feed. Oh, and don't stop there - corn exports, abetted by free-trade deals, are now destroying indigenous agriculture in the hemisphere's poorest countries. And the new ad campaign by Ford - "go green, go yellow" - is more of the same. It takes about as much energy to produce a gallon of biofuel from corn as you get by burning it. It's another sham, like hydrogen fuel cells. Of course fat people should not suffer discrimination, but it is misguided to propose that there's nothing wrong with obesity - it will kill you, there's no doubt about that. Saying that our culture is obsessed with thinness is well and good - true, true, unrelated. It's not gonna make the public health disaster of rampant obesity go away.

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» RE: missing the point Posted by: yesman
industrialized food
Posted by: sunset on Mar 15, 2006 5:37 AM   
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Most people eat processed and artificial food. Hormones are given to feedlot beef to fatten the animal. Bovine hormones are similar to human ones. Would it shock anyone to think these hormones cause people who eat such beef to gain weight? Read labels: high fructose corn sugar is a chemical that actually causes diabetes. It is in most soft drinks. Soft drinks also contain phosphoric acid, which acidifies the blood and contributes to osteoporosis. The carbonation in soft drinks causes burping, which bathes the esophogus in stomach acid and contributes to esophogeal cancer. We are a nation of dietary ignoramuses. The safest way to eat is to avoid all manufactured and processed food, like our grandparents did, because they had no other choice.

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» RE: industrialized food Posted by: reebus
Half the population is hypothyroid
Posted by: radchick on Mar 15, 2006 5:44 AM   
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It has often been stated that people use slow metabolism as an excuse for overweight. Unfortunately, hypothyroidism -- low thyroid function, when the thyroid does not produce enough hormone -- is a real and growing problem. Holistic health resources estimate that about half the American population has thyroid disorders, mostly on the underactive side. Chlorine (stupidly used instead of ozone for sterilizing municipal water) is carcinogenic -- and displaces iodine, needed for the production of thyroid hormone. Conventionally grown, and even organic, crops are grown in soil depleted in vital minerals such as selenium and manganese, needed for thyroid support. These are just two examples of many that show how lack of nutrients, and the poisoning of America with chemicals, damage the body.

Don't underestimate this disorder, responsible not only for slow metabolism, but increased susceptibility to infections, heart problems, slowed mental functioning, and depression (don't take Prozac, take thyroid hormone!). Insist that your doctor give you an entire panel of T3 and T4 lab tests. And trust in your own experience: if you have symptoms of hypothyroidism, your thyroid is probably low! Read Solved: the Riddle of Illness by Langer and Scheer. And search Google for Wilson's Thyroid Syndrome, and low thyroid (in general) for great information.

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At least the corporate media is doing something right.
Posted by: mrexcellerator on Mar 15, 2006 6:00 AM   
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By protraying close to normal weight as good and obesity as undesirable the media is resisting the tendency of culture to equate normal (wihch is now overweight) with the OK. I don't know how long this will last but it is important that the image of health not be distorted.

There are lots of reasons why people eat too much amd move around too little. There are good reasons why poor people feed their kids fat producing high glycemic diets (it's cheaper than fresh wholesome food). Whatever the excuses getting fat will kill you early and cost society extra to care for your degenerative diseases before you do. It is not in society's interest to de-stigmatize obesity. It is also not in the obese individual's interest to remove the pressure to balance caloric input and output.

The fashion industry has an unhealthy norm of underweight that has caused immense harm to the (mostly) young women who develop eating disorders through it's influence. Hopefully the corporate media will not now exhault obesity and marginalize the -10% to +10% body image.

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jerry springer, answer me this
Posted by: saywhat? on Mar 15, 2006 6:50 AM   
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this obsession we have with reality tv and watching people's problems i just don't get...i tried watching 'the nanny' a couple of days ago and couldn't last 10 minutes..can people really come to an enlightened decision regarding anything watching this stuff? .i think we have a serious mental health problem in this country

this voyueristic intrigue ought to be channelled towards educating people on how to entertain themselves, then maybe we'd have less problems

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You Should Hear About What My Parents Ate As Kids
Posted by: Bab5nutz on Mar 15, 2006 6:58 AM   
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I have often asked my parents about what they ate when they were kids, during the forties and fifties. Much of the food they ate would give nightmares to any modern nutritionist.
They ate heavy stodgy foods - lots of scones, pies, white bread slathered with butter, vegetables boiled until they were as tough as leather. Potatoes were a huge part of the diet, and they were served boiled, fried, and mashed - usually with piles of butter. Offal was also a big part of their diets, kidneys, livers, you name it. And there was generous servings of heavily preserved, sugared fruit. Not to mention bread and butter puddlings, Yorkshire pudding, and a lot of fruit cake
And yet, there were not many fat people about.
Why?
Few people back then owned cars. They walked, they took busses, kids rode bikes to school in all weathers - and many others walked.
Most people were simply too busy to have time to sit about and get fat.
The idea of exercising to keep fit or for pleasure - apart from playing sport, would have been considered ridiculous.

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Food has changed
Posted by: Linda50 on Mar 15, 2006 6:58 AM   
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I have to agree with the comments about the food. Food, grown in the corporation farms, don't have the nutrients such as food grown on farms that produced crops, 75 yrs. ago. The genetic engineering has all but eliminated the nutrient value of any grains. That way, the corporate farms can sell more and see more profits. Interesting how we as people are being sacrificed for the bigger profit margin. That is why organic farming is getting more popular. They have more healthful benefits. But we have to make sure the corporations don't eliminate the small organic farmers. The small farmers are our trip to a healthier population.

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Stigmatiziation
Posted by: blorbin on Mar 15, 2006 7:56 AM   
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I have to agree that serious obesity is a health hazard with many social and political factors, not the least of which is poverty. Poor people can't afford nice, organice vegetables and other health-food store staples. But I just have one issue with this side of the argument. It has been my experience that anyone, especially a female anyone, who is the slightest bit overweight is thrown in with the "unhealhty." I have dealt with this myself, though I am only "overweight" by anorexic standards. I think people should be careful and think twice before pathologizing all overweight people, and remember that being too skinny has proven unhealhty as well. Ofcourse, there are few skinny jokes.. My point, not everyone who is overwieght owns a car or eats crap, and it can be really annoying to be on the receivin end of these biases.

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competition
Posted by: owleyes on Mar 15, 2006 9:35 AM   
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I appreciate this author's insights about televisions reinforcement of competetive dieting as a good thing. Competetive dieting does not exist in isolation--it is part and parcel of a larger compulsion to compete. I share this graduate TA office with several women, all good friends. Competing with each other is our twisted formula for success and the meaning of our lives. We compete for grades, we compete for awards, we compete to see who is the longest-suffering martyr, who can tell the best story, who can drink the most, who has the hardest lot in life. We also compete for weight loss. Then, in moments of severe stress, we compete to see who can be the most self-sabotaging, the most self-destructive. Then bring in boxes of fiddle-faddle and Hershey's kisses in order to tempt each other. We have acknowledged the pettiness of our behavior and vowed to change, but we always seem to slip back. Recently, one girl was counting the change she had amassed in her desk drawer. So of course, every one else had to count their desk-drawer change to see who had the most and who had the least. We did not even think about this; it just happened automatically.

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Without Facing the Facts, One is doomed
Posted by: JPechinski on Mar 15, 2006 10:23 AM   
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What seems to be almost completely absent from this piece and subsequent discussion are the obvious facts: diet and exercise. We see "new studies" almost daily which report the "breaking news" of the ever greater advantages of good diet and regular exercise. Frankly I have never met a single person who while maintaining a moderate diet and exercise regimen became fat (outside of the VAST minority ((this is a FACT)) of people suffering from mental, genetic or other hormonal diseases). Sure it becomes "normal" to be fat, when everyone around you is fat and out of shape...and I don't doubt that environmental/food pollution has led to growing instances of genetic/hormonal damage, but obesity itself leads to these same problems as well...but it should be abundantly obvious that with technology come easier (physical) and lazier lives and richer foods (don't blame them, blame one's own will and/or lack of discipline). To accept this type of "norm" would be akin to accepting the Conservative "norm" we all rail aganst on this site simply because it is an abundant or growing feature of society. I doubt many of you would accept THAT! When I watched "The Biggest Loser" program I was amazed and impressed (and it confirmed my beliefs on the subject) that with proper coaching, diet and exercise even massively and sickly obese people CAN AND DO become thin, very thin and as the program showed clearly even svelt and beautiful again. Some of the contestants even reversed the early stages of disease including but not limited to diabedes. SO, it is ALL about facing the physical FACTS of nature, and triumphing over the psychosomatic ailments of mental illness, and going for a run on a regular basis, as much of a pain in the ass that might be... not looking for some twisted magic bullets, pills, therapies....or as this author seems to do look for new "norms" excuses, and "reasons".

P.S. I have several obese and several very athletic family members so I can see and be sensitive to how it effects people...but I can also see how those members who CHOOSE different lifestyles (remember same genes here) achieve different outcomes. It's about fact, it's no mystery.

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bricesmom
Posted by: bgamett on Mar 15, 2006 10:46 AM   
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I would like to put my 2 cents in on this debate. I am a high school health/science teacher and so a chunk of my curriculum is devoted to nutrition and exercise. I preach to my high school students about the benefits of eating healthy (no "fad diets" atkins etc) and regular exercise as well as changes they should make in everyday life such as to walk rather than drive to lunch. Most kids scoff at me when I suggest them trading soda for water (I try to get them with the fact that soda is $1 and water is free!) Those students who are not athletes get no exercise. My belief is that it all lies in the home. We have to raise our children up with good, nutritious foods so that they think that is the norm, not double Big Macs and pop tarts. They have to think its normal to go outside and play soccer or ride their bikes all day rather than play those ridiculous video games (those are not allowed in my home!) Basically, we as parents have to set the example for our kids so that good eating and exercise habits are the NORM! If we don't, when our children have children, those kids will be just as lazy and fat if not more than the current generation. Think seriously about this message, you guys. It starts at home...not in the government or the food companies or whatever. Its up to the parents. Take responsibility for your family's health.

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One false statement about thin people
Posted by: gmknobl on Mar 15, 2006 11:41 AM   
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Overly thin people may be just as if not more unhealthy than fat people but this does refute the FACT that being overweight is unhealthy. PERIOD.

Most people who are fat may be just fine with that. Great. They'll die earlier anyway and that in and of itself is a bit of a selfish attitude to take with regards to their loved ones. Yes, this is on the same level of selfishness as refusing to give up smoking or any other known unhealthy habbit. But it still is a wrong, however slight, that that person must jive with others. And yes, I realize there are several areas in which I, too, am selfish that are more important to correct than my weight. I do not think this is a big problem at all compared to the problems we individually face, just that it is a known unhealthy one and one that costs each of us on a family level extra money due to medical bills. And it is a problem that almost everyone, except that small percent with truly bad hormonal/thyroid/some other genetic thingy, can do something about. And though it is not easy, neither is it as hard as people think. It just requires the right technique, some willpower and some physical effort over an extended period. And here's how 99% of people can loose weight.

To change and become healthier, the person must:
a) want to loose weight - not just think it would be nice to loose weight but actually want to really do something about it.
b) exercise. And not that namby-pamby 30 minutes 3 days out of the week half workout but real, hard, strenuous exercise.
c) cut down caloric intake and have good calories in what you do eat. That is, eat a truly balanced diet with more vegetables, a good amount of real whole fruit, a small amount of meats and some carbs. And the more strenuous and lengthy your exercise is, you must coorespondingly increase the carbohydrates (not the sugars unless you need them while exercising but complex carbs like pasta).

You will loose weight and you will find after a few weeks, it becomes easier to not eat when you shouldn't, especially after a strenous workout. Your body won't want to eat right away and you shouldn't stuff yourself then either.

Also, your stomach will shrink in size, which is the major reason most people eat less. The physical want of food (vs. psychological) is based on how empty your stomach is as a percent. So, if someone's stomach is only 10% full they'll be hungry (as an example only - I haven't checked the numbers) but the person with the larger stomach will need more food to feel full afterwards and thus will consume more calories when they don't necessarily need those calories. My point is, when you've lost weight, your stomach should shrink too, especially if you've not eaten when you've felt hungry, because when you feel hungry, it doesn't necessarily mean you need to eat but just that your stomach is past a certain percentage empty.

Shrinking the stomach can be done at any age but is generally harder to accomplish the older you get. This is from personal experience only. And when the stomach is way, way too large, you must go through a long period of the stomach shrinking to get the right size stomach. My supposition is that the older you get, the longer this will take. I do not recommend stomach surgery ala the Today Show's Al Roker except in extreme cases because it's just plain dangerous even if it can help by simply lessening the desire to eat (the stomach is smaller and thus doesn't take as much to make you feel full).

I have many friends of whom were overweight, including myself. Everyone that has decided they were overweight and gotten upset with themselves about it, resolving to loose weight, have lost weight. A few that have "said" they wanted to loose but always found excuses not to do what the rest of us found worked, have regained or given up after a month. Most of us cycle and this works.

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One false statement about thin people
Posted by: gmknobl on Mar 15, 2006 11:43 AM   
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Overly thin people may be just as if not more unhealthy than fat people but this does not refute the FACT that being overweight is unhealthy. PERIOD.

Most people who are fat may be just fine with that. Great. They'll die earlier anyway and that in and of itself is a bit of a selfish attitude to take with regards to their loved ones. Yes, this is on the same level of selfishness as refusing to give up smoking or any other known unhealthy habbit. But it still is a wrong, however slight, that that person must jive with others. And yes, I realize there are several areas in which I, too, am selfish that are more important to correct than my weight. I do not think this is a big problem at all compared to the problems we individually face, just that it is a known unhealthy one and one that costs each of us on a family level extra money due to medical bills. And it is a problem that almost everyone, except that small percent with truly bad hormonal/thyroid/some other genetic thingy, can do something about. And though it is not easy, neither is it as hard as people think. It just requires the right technique, some willpower and some physical effort over an extended period. And here's how 99% of people can loose weight.

To change and become healthier, the person must:
a) want to loose weight - not just think it would be nice to loose weight but actually want to really do something about it.
b) exercise. And not that namby-pamby 30 minutes 3 days out of the week half workout but real, hard, strenuous exercise.
c) cut down caloric intake and have good calories in what you do eat. That is, eat a truly balanced diet with more vegetables, a good amount of real whole fruit, a small amount of meats and some carbs. And the more strenuous and lengthy your exercise is, you must coorespondingly increase the carbohydrates (not the sugars unless you need them while exercising but complex carbs like pasta).

You will loose weight and you will find after a few weeks, it becomes easier to not eat when you shouldn't, especially after a strenous workout. Your body won't want to eat right away and you shouldn't stuff yourself then either.

Also, your stomach will shrink in size, which is the major reason most people eat less. The physical want of food (vs. psychological) is based on how empty your stomach is as a percent. So, if someone's stomach is only 10% full they'll be hungry (as an example only - I haven't checked the numbers) but the person with the larger stomach will need more food to feel full afterwards and thus will consume more calories when they don't necessarily need those calories. My point is, when you've lost weight, your stomach should shrink too, especially if you've not eaten when you've felt hungry, because when you feel hungry, it doesn't necessarily mean you need to eat but just that your stomach is past a certain percentage empty.

Shrinking the stomach can be done at any age but is generally harder to accomplish the older you get. This is from personal experience only. And when the stomach is way, way too large, you must go through a long period of the stomach shrinking to get the right size stomach. My supposition is that the older you get, the longer this will take. I do not recommend stomach surgery ala the Today Show's Al Roker except in extreme cases because it's just plain dangerous even if it can help by simply lessening the desire to eat (the stomach is smaller and thus doesn't take as much to make you feel full).

I have many friends of whom were overweight, including myself. Everyone that has decided they were overweight and gotten upset with themselves about it, resolving to loose weight, have lost weight. A few that have "said" they wanted to loose but always found excuses not to do what the rest of us found worked, have regained or given up after a month. Most of us cycle and this works.

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Why is Alternet Pushing the pro-fat agenday
Posted by: Daniel Shays on Mar 15, 2006 3:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is it because you are all a bunch of cubicle trolls? Get bored sitting inside all day and can't resist that damned jelly donut?

What the fuck? More and more americans are killing themselves by getting fat. It's as obvious as the day is long. Even most fat people understand this.

You shouldn't have a lot of extra fatty deposits on you. Seriously--that is indicative in ALL MAMMALS as an unhealthy condition. I am aware that there are certain areas where it is healthy to have fat deposits, and other areas where an extra little bit won't kill you, and might even end up helping you, if you ever crash in a plane in the Andies.

But really, the world is at a cross roads right now. If you are a flabby, not-moving around too much kind of cubicle hamster/couch potato--seriously, now is the time to do something about it, because when the economy collapses soon and the health care system is decimated, it's not going to be very convenient to be 55 with diabetes. Really, take a walk and eat some more whole grains and vegetables. Never drink another soda or eat another Mcdonalds (or any fast food) again. Really--every progresssive in America, for so many reasons, should take a pledge to do those two things.

The writer's first paragraph is pure sophistry. Really, it's embarrasing to see that passed off as acceptable alternative media journalism. There's a reason that obesity was once viewed as a glandular problem--that's because people used to eat something like a whole foods diet and get plenty of activity. Back then, the kids who got fat really did have some kind of medical problem.

But now corn syrup is in just about everything you can buy--not just soda, but whole wheat bread, for christ sakes, and healthy-looking cereals. And kids get inundated with junkfood brainwashing. And all people, from kids to adults, get less and less activity than human beings ever got at any other point in human history. Obesity is a serious, crisis-causing problem--it is at the crux of the overloaded healthcare system. The obsesity epidemic is at the core of everything that is wrong with this economy and this society, and so-called progressive poo-poo it at their own peril.

It's not just us. It's our pets, too. Look at all the fat dogs out there. That's the dogs adopting their fat-family culture. And my wife was a vet tech, so she can tell you, that just about every health problem they dealth with for the animals was related to being fat. And its just the same for the majority of human health problems. Sure, plenty of our health problems come from the toxic poisons the US government has allowed us to be exposed to, but if you think being fat helps you deal with all those toxins, I'm afraid you are sadly mistaken.

This isn't to say that it's okay to make fun of fat people. But fat people, don't use being made fun of as an excuse to pig out or something. It just doesn't help you very much, and it would probably give the asshole who made fun of you in the first place a good jolly laugh on your behalf, now wouldn't?

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Reality shows –– HAH!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Mar 16, 2006 10:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What, you're expecting reality shows to be real? Most of them are populated with out-of-work actors; the "reality" is often scripted and the contestants are cherry-picked (sometimes for their repulsiveness). The quality of showmanship on these low-rent bombasts makes one scream for real writers and real actors. "Real" people (and bad actors), left to their own divices with little in the way of story line, and less of written dialogue, are BORING!! If I wanted that for entertainment, I could just hit the streets or "fly fish" with a $100 bill in a trailer park. Why in hell does anyone think we used to train – and pay – actors and screenwriters?! Cheap, fake "reality" is NOT interesting, even IF you get to play "Peeping Tom" to these "reality" shows' mind-numbingly stupid life stories.

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Fatr women
Posted by: sherman on Mar 17, 2006 2:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fat women are better than a blanket on cold nites. I love to roll in corpulence, such a sense of abundance shoud not be discouraged for mere aesthic values. Until you have indulged your re fat women, you haven't lived.

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» RE: Fatr women Posted by: fisaticdreams
» Sexuality and Empowerment Posted by: Elfcat1
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