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Reproductive Justice and Gender

Thin Is the New Miserable

By Stephanie Losee, AlterNet. Posted November 19, 2008.


A new book from Valerie Frankel shows how the only lasting effect dieting has is on people's mind-sets about their bodies.
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I know better than to diet constantly. Dieting makes you fat. Dieting makes you distracted. Distracted women tend not to make history. And yet here I am. Dieting. Even a global economic meltdown and a historic election could not take my mind off the fact that I have gained nearly 10 pounds and my wardrobe doesn’t fit. And I can’t afford to buy new clothes. Which means not only that I haven’t managed to find a way to take the shortest break from obsessing about my pants size, my dieting isn’t even working. But I don’t know any other way. My mother put me on my first diet when I was in the sixth grade, and I’ve been gaining and losing ever since.

It turns out I’m not alone -- my experience mirrors that of Valerie Frankel, self-help journalist and author of 19 books, including The Accidental Virgin. Thirty years after her mother put her on a diet to lose her baby fat, Frankel was still riding the dieting rollercoaster. She had vowed to keep her own daughters off it, but as they approached puberty, she began to suspect that not sabotaging their body image wouldn’t be enough.

"They had eyes and ears," she writes in her wry and affecting memoir, Thin is the New Happy. "They saw and heard what I put myself through: my dieting cycles, anxiety about food, dread of bathing-suit vacations, rising and falling and rising weight. I was a bad example."

Her efforts to become a good example required nothing less than a head-to-toe exorcism. She confronted her unrepentant mother, who said that if she could go back she wouldn’t act differently, even after Frankel catalogued the damage her mother’s harping had done. Frankel counted the number of negative thoughts she had about herself and her body every day (triple digits). She phoned one of the toughs who had taunted her in junior high. She posed naked in Self magazine. She asked her former Mademoiselle colleague Stacy London, now host of TLC’s "What Not to Wear," to help her throw out her figure-hiding, all-black wardrobe. And finally, she developed the Not-Diet, which had just four rules: Eat what you want. Stop when you’ve had enough. Don’t insist on perfection. Work out four times a week. Within a few months, she had reached a healthy weight and has maintained it, and her sanity, ever since.

Frankel and I were classmates at Dartmouth, where I witnessed several of the events (and diets) in the book. We caught up by phone -- she in Brooklyn, I in San Francisco.

Stephanie Losee: You dedicate your book to The Last Fifteen Pounds with a little poem that reads: "I don’t miss you/Not one tiny bit/You bitches." What did those 15 pounds represent to you?

Valerie Frankel: They represented a lifetime of failure, the measure of what I can’t do, as opposed to being just 15 pounds I just carried around. It was a symbolic unworthiness that a lot of women feel about their extra weight. A symbol of being not deserving of a lot of things -- of love, of sex, of happiness, of success. And of self-love.

SL: Your mother put you on your first diet when you were 11, and your victory over chubbiness and the approval you received from observers turned you into a lifetime dieter. How did that diet affect your mind-set?

VF: There was a conspiracy among the mothers of my friends not to give me snacks, because my mother got everyone involved in this project for me to lose weight when I was, in fact, at a healthy weight for my height and age. So I felt totally on the defensive and persecuted. And I didn’t understand what the problem was. I didn’t feel fat. I also just plain missed food. When you’re a kid, you love candy and cookies and peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches, and I just missed being a kid. I did lose weight on that first diet -- success! And I recognized that I was thin now and that I was getting a lot of compliments and approval -- my mother liked it, the other mothers liked it, even my teachers in sixth grade praised me.


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See more stories tagged with: gender, body image, dieting

Stephanie Losee is co-author of the book Office Mate: The Employee Handbook for Finding -- and Managing -- Romance on the Job.

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View:
Biology proves Valerie Frankel is correct
Posted by: nerissa on Nov 19, 2008 1:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi everyone,

The abstract below suggests that stress induced by dieting shortens lifespan. It is not the dieting but the stress that is the issue. Animal and human research strongly suggests that calorie restriction is beneficial but only if stress is controlled. This includes stress that the diet itself induces and other life stressors. In many cases people need to address other issues in their lives prior to focusing on weight loss. This being particularly the case in the USA which leads the industrialized world in not supporting adequate vacation time, sick leave, a social safety net (unless you happen to be filthy rich in which case trillions of dollars are available), etc.


Psychosom Med. 2008 Oct;70(8):845-9.
Dietary restraint and telomere length in pre- and postmenopausal women.
Kiefer A, Lin J, Blackburn E, Epel E.
UCSF Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA. eepel@lppi.ucsf.edu
BACKGROUND: Leukocyte telomere shortening can serve as a biomarker of aging, as telomere length (TL) can decline with age and shortening is positively associated with morbidity and mortality. It is therefore important to identify psychological and behavioral factors linked to accelerated telomere shortening. Stress and poorer metabolic health (greater adiposity, insulin resistance, and cortisol) correlate with shorter telomeres. Self-reported dietary restraint (DR), defined as chronic preoccupation with weight and attempts at restricting food intake, is linked to greater perceived stress, cortisol, and weight gain, when assessed in community studies (versus in weight loss programs). OBJECTIVE: To test for an association between DR and TL in healthy women across a range of ages. METHODS: We examined whether DR is linked to TL in two samples, one of premenopausal women (aged 20-50 years;N = 36) and one of postmenopausal women (aged 53-69 years; N = 20). RESULTS: In both samples, higher levels of DR were associated with shorter leukocyte TL, independent of body mass index, smoking, and age. CONCLUSIONS: Chronic DR, as assessed by self-report (i.e. not caloric restriction), may be a risk factor for premature telomere shortening. Potential mechanisms are discussed.
PMID: 18923062

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» About stress Posted by: truthlover
This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
Food
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Nov 19, 2008 3:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The interesting thing about this article is the way a person's eating habits can tell their whole life story.

In my case, for example, I seem to have a compulsive need to finish everything on my plate--even if I'm full or don't like what I'm eating--and it bothers me when other people don't finish what's on their plate. In general, I hate to see when food is wasted, even though I know the world's hunger problems are caused not by lack of food, but by politics. It doesn't take a trained professional to guess that my parents made a point of making us kids finish everything on our plate when we were growing up.

I think the traditional couch in the therapist's office should be replaced with a dinner table. One good meal could save thousands of hours spent asking stupid questions trying to get into a patient's head. It might even encourage me to try some therapy myself, depending on what they're serving that day.

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» RE: Food Posted by: bookie
» RE: Food as thy enemy Posted by: WyrdSister
» RE: Food as thy enemy Posted by: Oracle2020
Obsessions of the over educated
Posted by: kegbot1 on Nov 19, 2008 4:03 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So the two Dartmouth sisters sit around and obsess about how a lifetime of said obsession with their own body images in the most self-centered society on the face of the earth has, um, wounded them?

Meanwhile, for the rest of us mortals worrying about getting sick without health care, trying not to bankrupt ourselves to send our kids through some state university all the while hoping we won't get layed off and lose it all. . .

So pardon me if I continue to wonder why Alternet continues to assault our reading time with articles that seem to be so out of the experience of most of us who don't have the time to obsess over our guts or the money to join tony gyms and buy pricey diet cures.

See because what it's about now is survival. Some day, perhaps soon, Ms. Losee might be damned glad to have that body fat if the market for fluff books dries up.

No working class consciousness here, I guess.

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» Good points Posted by: LeeAnnG
» Over educated? Posted by: suprmark
» And empathy wins again Posted by: maddy
» RE: And empathy wins again Posted by: Lilykins
» Pressure Posted by: kepstein7777
» RE: Pressure Posted by: Lilykins
» Mea culpa Posted by: kegbot1
How about Health
Posted by: loneswaneast on Nov 19, 2008 6:27 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a health care professional, I have to object to the tone of this article that suggests and corroborates the radically obese chant of victimhood. 75% of illnesses are caused by unhealthful eating habits. If we had better food to eat, we would not have the existing obesity epidemic.
Listen, we all need to be comfortable in our skin, but by giving an obese person another reason to not take control of their overeating, you are harming them, their families and every one paying outrageous amounts of money for health care insurance due to their abuse of themselves and the system.

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» RE: How about Health Posted by: Grandma Crabby
» RE: How about Health Posted by: helenwheels
» RE: How about Health Posted by: loneswaneast
» RE: How about Health Posted by: Karina
» Who's fault is it? Posted by: Karina
» RE: Who's fault is it? Posted by: babs
» And she's psychic Posted by: Karina
» I partly agree Posted by: truthlover
» RE: How about Health Posted by: DaBear
» RE: How about Health Posted by: loneswaneast
» RE: How about Health Posted by: babs
» DIETS DON'T WORK !!!!!! Posted by: Live Gently
A bit Me-Obsessed
Posted by: charliemudcat on Nov 19, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Two comments: Get over the issues you have with your mother and stop trying to make people say they're sorry for hurting you. People are thoughtless, but often mean well... like your mother.

Second, the idea that cavemen ate until they were full and stopped is ludicrous. They may have had to go two or three days without eating. Like animals (have you ever looked at the extended bellies of a pride of lions after a big kill?), you eat until you're sick because you don't know when you're going to eat again. Thus the behavior that this interviewee assumes is "natural" is another learned behavior that we want to call natural because it fits our self-help book.

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» Animals live to eat... Posted by: mstenger
The reason your hungry all the time.
Posted by: topview on Nov 19, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The soil in the world is depleted of the essential minerals, and when you eat your food, you are not getting the minerals to supply your cellular system what it needs, and so, you have these cravings for something to eat. If you have all the proper minerals and nutrients you wouldn't be hungry all the time. The junk food people eat to try to stop the cravings are so full of chemicals that your liver has to store it in the fat and when there is to much, the liver makes more fat to store it in.
If you try to eat only what Nature provides you will stop the cravings and lose weight. You do have to get the minerals to feed your cells what they need or you will never get healthy.
Go to my blog and read about minerals for the answers. On right side of page.
My Blog Here

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WARNING: Women only article
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 19, 2008 7:52 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh wait I forgot. If you're a man, looking skinny gets you labelled as "gay" ! After reading this article, one would have to wonder "No wonder men are sol if they're skinny while women are supposed to be skinny and sexy or they too are SOL !" Damn FUCK !

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Okay I'll bite
Posted by: DaBear on Nov 19, 2008 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In context of bigger problems, a bit of a fluff piece, but like Grandma Crabby said, not inconsequential.

On the balance, my own experience as a middle aged man (holy shit I said, "middle aged") corroborates this chick's experience in terms of the yo-yo bullshit. My weight is coming down when I simply do what my body type demands, eat to sate hunger not appetite, using quality foods, and take the "manual route" to things (walking, riding my bike, etc.) rather than taking the easier faster but less physically engaged method of doing things. Even with that I still have to vigorously exercise, intervalically, 40-90 minutes a day otherwise I don't lose anything regardless of how I eat or don't eat.

And my Doc was right, the insurance guys are absolutely full of shit. A muscular, large boned short guy built for wet, cold, hardscrabble highlands cannot possibly weigh 140-145 lbs and be healthy but he can be 165-170 and be fine. 25 down and 30 more pounds to go and I try only to think about it when I go to the doc, otherwise I get all fucked up in the head about it and screw up.

My parents made me finish whatever was left in the serving dish but they never beat me up about my weight. I was damned scrawny between noticeably large bones and joints until I hit 21. It's just a genetic thing.

More power to women who take this woman's message and get off the cultural crazy. I may get grief from others on occasion but mostly it's my own pressure... I see how women have to deal with all manner of horseshit crap from others all the damned time. It'd sure be good to help out and not to be part of the problem. It worries me that so many women have posted here about their dads and their uncles and the like...

To that end, as I have a daughter and my wife has the exact opposite problem (she has a horrible time trying to maintain enough weight for good health because her metabolism burns like a friggin' solid rocket booster), what kinds of things should men say to their daughters that can help them stand up to the cultural stoopid? I'd like to know so my kid continues to mature into the gorgeous woman she will certainly ultimately be. She plays futbol everyday and is a dancer so she's healthy generally but she's not deaf or blind and she notices things around her.

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» RE: Okay I'll bite Posted by: babs
If Thin is the New Miserable...
Posted by: Auk on Nov 19, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...does that mean fat is the new happy?

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Well, I'm Fat and Happy!!!
Posted by: Gravitas on Nov 19, 2008 2:05 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All and all a good article. For those that argue one can't be fat and healthy, please keep in mind that for the last 60 years or so, fat people were subjected to stigma, discrimination in medical care and risky weight loss methods. If we forgo all those things and just concentrate on eating well, exercise and a body/mind/sprirtual balance, their health would improve considerably.

Here are some sites for those who want to end the psychic destruction of weight obsession in their lives:

http://the-f-word.org/blog/ This blogger is progressive and vegetarian.

Kate Harding's shapely prose (You will have to google)

www.bigfatblog.com
Joy Nash's fat rants on U-tube
and you are always welcome on my myspace blog which is often deals with weight issues: www.myspace.com/vortexresister113.
"Fat can be beautiful. Intolerance is ALWAYS ugly!"

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Fat means diabetes, heart problems, etc!!
Posted by: harpy on Nov 19, 2008 2:41 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd much rather be thin than fat! As someone who was always naturally thin, I just found out I had Hep C (approx 40-50% of Americans have it and don't even know it!), and thyroid problems go right along with it! My doctor wants to ignore the thyroid, even though I've gained 30 pounds in the last three months in spite of an hour a day on the tread mill and no over-eating! I'm 56, and until August weighed 127, now it's almost 160! I'm not B.S.'ing here, I know about all the food diaries, and used to manage a fitness salon where all I did all day was encourage food diaries and exercise. I'm on to my third doctor, after being ignored, and hopefully he'll take a closer look at the thyroid. I mean, when your body temp is always 97 or below, your skin is really dry, your eyebrows are disappearing, and you get "carpal tunnel" overnight, it's a great big sign that your thyroid is messed up! Not to mention I have a family history of that problem. I don't want all the problems that go along with being overweight, and if anybody thinks it's just about being cute and skinny, or that it's a self-image issue, you're way off-base. Being fat causes all kinds of health problems, and many people have undiagnosed thyroid problems that need to be looked at, instead of being told it's all about your self-image. Thyroid problems can also cause serious heart problems.

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WELL - I think I will write a book too
Posted by: stellabloo on Nov 19, 2008 3:26 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... or maybe call up my old fashion designer pal to tell me What Not To Wear lol

I mean, if that's what it takes, I could write a book too for a guaranteed spot on Oprah but the sad truth is that I was once a chubby teenager and now I just give out the same advice FOR FREE.

Some more FREE advice:

Eat when you want but don't be afraid to be hungry or even skip a meal. The notion of 3 squares a day is not historically sound.

That said, be alert to the difference between hunger and low blood sugar, which is an invitation to diabetes. If you're having trouble, try limiting sugars and starches to avoid "crashing".

People who eat healthy fats lose more weight than those who limit fats or carbs.

Calcium/magnesium citrate (or any other electrolytic form) is invaluable for nerve and muscle function, including cardiac and smooth muscle. Not only do most people not get enough magnesium in their diet, the first thing your body does when depleted of any essential nutrient is shut down the gut.

Someone told me 20 years ago that mountain biking was the Fountain of Youth. They were right ;.)

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Stop dieting and start becoming healthy
Posted by: ynotu on Nov 19, 2008 4:10 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have found a great website that gave me the tools to eat healthy and stay fit. There are tons of articles dealing with all types of issues and member supported message boards. And it's free.

www.sparkpeople.com

And no I don't work for them. I just know what it's done for me, health wise.

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Fat is a Feminist Issue
Posted by: ladyoracle on Nov 19, 2008 4:12 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But there's nothing new in this article. My mom put me on my first diet when I was five years old, and I spent the next 24 years to the present day spiralling from one eating disorder to another ranging from adult weights of 93lbs and 217lbs. But I think the market is glutted with these navel gazing accounts of mother's abuse and its lasting effects. Look how much fame and acclaim Frankel's suffering has brought her. I wish someone wanted to hear what I have to say, but they don't because it's all out there so writing about it isn't even going to help me. Could Frankel have gotten to where she is without the pose for Self, et, etc, which the average woman has no means of bringing about for herself? My mother still thinks she was right, too, and it's a terrible burden. That's why I do not want to have children so I won't pass that b.s. on to them. I guess I just feel like everyone cares about everyone else's story, how come no one cares about mine?

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» RE: Fat is a Feminist Issue Posted by: Bittersham2
what is the real problem
Posted by: richholland on Nov 19, 2008 6:35 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
sitting on the beach in Shihanoukville, Cambodia a cue of miserable people some blind, some without legs begging for money in spite of hundreds of NGO s.

No body is overweighted.
For the young divorced mothers a FAT baby is something fantastic.

But in the USA you have the problem selling food makes profit, selling dieetbooks generates profit.
feeling guilty makes you buy things....
donot blame your mother she was brainwashed to act as a consumer, the good thing in the article is the proof that escaping from the american dream will make you more happy.

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Ok, now to soften up and bail you folks out of your misery.
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 19, 2008 7:08 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GRASS FED MILK, HEMP, and STEVIA !

Look 'em up on google.com and see what you've been missing. Great health without the loss.

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"BLAME THE VICTIM" SEEMS STANDARD FAIRE IN TODAY'S WORLD. WE
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Nov 19, 2008 9:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
blame heavy people for being heavy. The heavy people I have known seemed to me to be genetically predisposed to their weight. I've stood on the edge of heavy for a lifetime.

My first wife died at age 58. She never weighed over 115. Weight is not necessarily a killer. There are heavy Italians that eat garlic and drink red wine that will outlive me. I think we are hunting good science on this. Until we get good science don't blame the victims.

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Victim Mentality
Posted by: Karina on Nov 20, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a repeat theme of 'blaming the victim'. People are not victims of their own habits. Sure, plenty of people have genetic predisposition to being heavier but the eating habits of many Americans is the primary culprit of weight problems. Why else ARE we the most obese country?
Epigenetic modulation. Our habits alter our genetics.

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The author actually did diet after giving it up....
Posted by: loneswaneast on Nov 20, 2008 8:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She lost weight after giving up "dieting". To do that, one has to expend more energy than one takes in. That is called dieting. This article actually suggests that one should relax about eating and not obsess about one's body. This is not a new argument...remember "stop the craziness" by Susan something or other?
The author did indeed diet.
Please do not suggest that it is bad to care for yourself by developing healthy eating habits for life.

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All this fuss about what the corporatists see as "disposable bodies"
Posted by: Smackback on Nov 21, 2008 11:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporate elite feudalists don't care what we eat. They don't care if we don't eat. They don't care if we drop dead. In the new corporate feudalism, there's always someone else standing in line ready to take your place when you drop dead.

This is why we don't have decent health insurance, either. To the corporate feudalists, we are all disposable. Human bodies are the most plentiful commodity on this earth. To the moneyed elite, we are just servants who clean their pools, serve their drinks, make their consumer goods, etc. And if a Chinaman will do it a lot cheaper than an American and not complain, well that's all the better, as far as the corporatists are concerned! "More for us" is their mantra.

Think about that, and then do what you want. Fuck the corporatists any way you can before you die.

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cycles
Posted by: janisw on Nov 21, 2008 10:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not understanding her concern with gaining 10 pounds, which is how this article opens.

I gain between 25-30 each November-December and lose it all again in May-June when I can get outside and walk/bike more often.

In the winter I wear a size 10 or 12, depending on how it's cut. In the summer, I wera a size 6 or 8, depending on how it's cut.

I do not diet. And in the winter, I certainly do not exercise.

I know I am being simplistic, but in the 7th grade when I was a size 14 I just figured out my cycles and adjusted for them.

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I Think Your Weight is INHERITED --personal experience!
Posted by: joeocho88 on Nov 25, 2008 2:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Your weight is largely determined by HEREDITY!
Centuries ago, wealthy people were overweight because it was very difficult to get food, in fact it was a luxury item! Fat was desireable because it meant that the woman had enough nutrition to carry the children to a healthy delivery. When food was scarce,the fat that was stored could be burned to keep the body going so having body fat was advantageous for survival!

Some Native Americans ( and the Hispanic people who have descent from indigeous people),Africans and some Germanic people have inherited the tendency to be fat and NOTHING short of installing the stomach band surgery can be done to lose the weight on a permanent basis.

Diet pills don't work for very long and they affect your neurological system with extended use...Liposuction might work for a while...

IT HAS JUST BEEN GENETICALLY PROGRAMMED IN FROM THE EARLIEST OF TIMES!

I will NEVER be a size three or a zero, but if I eat sensibly, in moderation and stop when I am full and no snacks in between, I will be OK.

If these guys in the New World Order have their way, 80 percent of us won't be around because we are "useless eaters" ( so says Henry Kissinger) so we had better eat while there is food to eat...this economy is starting to SCARE me..

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