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The Skinny on Fat (The Truth About Obesity, Part 2)
Tech Central Station ^ | July 16, 2003 | Sandy Szwarc

Posted on 07/16/2003 11:57:41 AM PDT by Timesink

Edited on 07/22/2003 2:46:46 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

A host of sinful foods have been demonized as the root of obesity and poor health of American adults and children. Fast food restaurants have been sued, accused of contributing to customers' obesity because their food tastes too good and they tempt us by advertising. Taxes are being proposed on foods deemed fattening or bad for us, namely, anything with meat or fat, that is fried or processed or that is sweet.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: fat; obesity
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To: Timesink
OK. I have to say it. While chunky people all over the world are wondering if it’s their genetics or that the AMA’s erroneous dietary recommendations that are responsible for their condition, we in the know are moderating our diet and EXERCISING VIGEROUSLY (this does not mean walking on a treadmill for a half hour 3 times a week). That’s right, barring those with legitimate medical/hormonal conditions, if you want to lose weight and be in shape it takes effort and sacrifice.

True, it’s much easier to find someone or something else to explain their portly predicament, but this will rarely result in weightloss. BTW... This is a fun thread!

181 posted on 07/17/2003 9:12:32 AM PDT by SouthParkRepublican
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To: najida
We have always advocated nutritionally dense carbs, and watching portion sizes.

And what do you get? A lot of fat people who are hungry all the time!

It's the hunger, najida, that Atkins eliminates. Hungry people are going to eat something, and a couple of small slices of cheese satisfies the hunger better than a plum or a banana, which leaves you still hungry.

Once we get the hundred or so pounds off the really overweight, THEN you can start with the fine points of grains and fruits.

Let me say this again: The fact that people gain weight after getting off of Atkins says nothing about Atkins. It says a lot, however, about how undisciplined Americans are.

As to risks, the best overall "diet" is Ornish's veggie plan, but who wants to eat like that?

The fact that vegetarians look like zombies ought to tell you that THAT'S not healthy, for sure.

182 posted on 07/17/2003 9:13:43 AM PDT by sinkspur
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To: sinkspur
Obesity is a major problem in this country, and carbohydrates are the culprit, not meat, not cheese.

Hey, one of my jobs this last year was working for a group doing gastric-bypass....this was following a stint working on a University Hospital Oncology unit.

Yes, obesity is rampant...but I took dozens of diet histories from these people. I was scared spitless by the shear number of folks who thought eating platters of pork chops, pounds of cheese (and NO fiber, NO FRUIT NO VEGES) was OK...and they couldn't understand why their cancers were growing so friggin' fast....

With the GPB folks, it was varied...some were eating too much fat, some too much sugar, some too much meat....bottom line
PORTIONS are the problem. Of all foods, carbs, proteins fat, etc..

And lastly, if you have to supplement your diet, then it means you should be eating it. The absorption rate is questionable, and often it is the combination that makes the food work (ie, the anti-oxidant in the presense of a lignin type fiber, or lycopene in the presense of a high acid food).

183 posted on 07/17/2003 9:13:43 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: najida
When I was a child, way back in the 50's, we probably had only one obese child in a class of 25. We had two recesses a day and everyone played active games or sports during these times. When we got home we would eat a snack, probably Oreos and whole milk, and then grab the roller skates or the bicycle and stay out till dinner.
184 posted on 07/17/2003 9:14:31 AM PDT by k omalley
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To: SouthParkRepublican
That’s right, barring those with legitimate medical/hormonal conditions, if you want to lose weight and be in shape it takes effort and sacrifice.

Actually, the only sacrifice it takes is not eating high glycemic carbohydrates. A low carb, high protein eating plan, combined with moderate exercise, will get the weight off.

If you want to KEEP IT OFF, you've got to decide you're going to eat and exercise like that for the rest of your life.

If you like vigorous exercise, you should keep right on doing it.

But it's simply not true that losing weight requires hard work. It doesn't. It requires discipline.

Most Americans don't have time to work out two hours a day, and they won't, no matter what anybody says.

185 posted on 07/17/2003 9:20:05 AM PDT by sinkspur
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To: sinkspur
Even though I am slender and eat a healthy diet, I am cursed with a very high cholesterol. I tried the Dean Ornish plan for three months and the results were dreadful. My cholesterol dropped by 20 points and the entire loss was HDL(good cholesterol). I didn't loose any weight but I felt like I was starving all the time.
186 posted on 07/17/2003 9:20:05 AM PDT by k omalley
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To: sinkspur
We have always advocated nutritionally dense carbs, and watching portion sizes.
And what do you get? A lot of fat people who are hungry all the time!

~~sigh~~ read what I wrote. For some bizarro reason, there is a all or nothing mentality here. You are supposed to eat a wide variety of foods, together. Have that cheese omelet, with wheat toast with olive oil spread.

Have that apple with a slice of cheese for a snack.

Have wheat pasta with meatsauce, a salad a peaches for dessert.

Have a bedtime snack of high fiber cereal and skim milk...toss in some nuts and banana slices. That is what we have always advocated....again, it is the portions. For me, it is overall health that I advocate.

187 posted on 07/17/2003 9:22:07 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: k omalley
When I was a child, way back in the 50's, we probably had only one obese child in a class of 25. We had two recesses a day and everyone played active games or sports during these times. When we got home we would eat a snack, probably Oreos and whole milk, and then grab the roller skates or the bicycle and stay out till dinner.

I know! I was raised on a farm and we worked hard and played harder. We also ate lots of what we were growin'....corn, potatoes, peas, beans, cows, pigs etc. And my mother was the worlds best baker...always something wonderful on the counter when we came in from playing.

Mixes and processed foods were unheard of then, and well, we had a Coke on our Sunday visits to grannies.

188 posted on 07/17/2003 9:26:10 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: najida
Who said no veggies? One of the staples of the Atkins diet is salads with spinach, and all kinds of low glycemic things in them; even some high glycemic stuff is OK as long as you keep your carbs within your safe zone.

And were the pork chops FRIED? No fried food on Atkins.

We're never going to agree here, najida, as the Atkins plan is just now getting peer reviewed. He was always considered a freak, even as those who tried his plan lost weight, lowered cholesterol, lowered blood pressure, and felt the best they've ever felt while their doctors were scratching their heads. Now, the scare tactic is "well, you're clogging your arteries." What bunk.

What you and your cohorts have recommended in the past required too much work from already overworked Americans. Counting calories, and watching portion sizes is just not getting the job done. We've got to try something else.

Atkins is simple, easy, and it works. I've done it for six years, and will never go back to eating potatoes, or bread, or rice, or popcorn (which I love) again. I did a treadmill test last month, and had better readings than I had ten years ago.

189 posted on 07/17/2003 9:30:37 AM PDT by sinkspur
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To: najida
Have a bedtime snack of high fiber cereal and skim milk...toss in some nuts and banana slices. That is what we have always advocated....again, it is the portions. For me, it is overall health that I advocate.

No. It is "all or nothing," at least for me. I haven't drank a glass of milk in 20 years. Milk is for children.

It's not the portions. It's the HUNGER. High-glycemic carbs and processed carbs make people HUNGRY. There's even an old joke about needing to order pizza after a Chinese meal to satisfy the hunger. (Glutamates are the main culprit in chinese food, along with the mountains of rice.)

BTW, I never eat bedtime snacks, as I'm never hungry.

190 posted on 07/17/2003 9:38:31 AM PDT by sinkspur
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To: sinkspur
”Actually, the only sacrifice it takes is not eating high glycemic carbohydrates. A low carb, high protein eating plan, combined with moderate exercise, will get the weight off.”

This is fine if it does not effect your energy level. I don’t know about you but without a moderate amount of carbs I feel like my ass is dragging and my workouts are lame. It can be discouraging.

”If you want to KEEP IT OFF, you've got to decide you're going to eat and exercise like that for the rest of your life.

I agree but you make it sound worse than it is. Once it becomes habit, like anything else, you get used to it and don’t miss the larger portions dread going to the gym.

“But it's simply not true that losing weight requires hard work. It doesn't. It requires discipline.

I agree but if you are a man, you might not just want to be a skinny guy and muscle mass is not just going to happen on it’s own. Not only that but a little more hard work means a little less discipline is needed when considering what to eat. It’s the extent of the discipline (regarding diet) that causes most people not to stick to it.

”Most Americans don't have time to work out two hours a day, and they won't, no matter what anybody says.”

I don’t have time for it either (and here we touch on another type of discipline). I work 60plus hours a week, commute over an hour to and from work. What do I do? Wake up at 5am, throw on my gym clothes, grab my business garb, and head off to the gym. Is it fun? No. Has it had a huge effect on my appearance, self confidence, and health? Heck yes.

191 posted on 07/17/2003 9:47:24 AM PDT by SouthParkRepublican
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To: sinkspur
My experience has been different.

For my patients, counting carbs, looking at foods from the 'glycemic' standpoint, the fact that they were having to supplement was overworking folks. That and the complaint that too many foods were off limits.

The factor I have seen in success with my patients has been desire, honesty about how much they were eating, increased activity, forgiveness (falling off and getting back on the wagon), and the overall determination to be healthy & change their eating habits.

Re-read my posts...It was the foods they were leaving out that possibly increased the cancer growth. The had literaly elimated all the protective foods, fiber, anti-oxidants, bioflaviods etc from their diets.

Hunger? Again, re-read my posts. A bit of protein will help, with the carb. AND, what I have found is that most folks aren't getting near enough water....so that often helps with hunger (the thirst signal is often mistaken for hunger).

As for the bedtime snack....
I give it to my Juvie diabetics so they don't bottom out at 3 am.

No milk? Fine, get it from soy milk then...
There are multiple studies out that show %50 greater fat loss in those that get over 1000 mg of calcium. Plus the calcium-cancer link.

There is the whole oxymoron of 'These foods are bad for you but the nutrients they carry are good for you so supplement them' kinda shoots the Atkins diet in the foot.

Lastly, you are the third person I have ever met that has stayed on Atkins more than 6 months.
192 posted on 07/17/2003 10:47:24 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: BureaucratusMaximus
Atkins is the first and only diet I have tried. It works...and I'm not going back to eating the way I used to either. I've lost 65 lbs in 7 weeks and plan to lose about 40 more.

That's an awful lot of weight to lose in such a short time, even for somebody who started out as heavy as yourself. It's taken me 3 and a half months to lose 55 pounds and that was with walking 7-10 miles every day. Anyway good luck with the rest of your weight loss and stay healthy!

193 posted on 07/17/2003 11:35:33 AM PDT by SamAdams76 (Back in boot camp! 245 (-55))
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To: sinkspur
Most Americans don't have time to work out two hours a day, and they won't, no matter what anybody says.

Of course, most Americans watch several hours of television a day also. Much of that mindless sitcoms and insipid reality shows.

I exercise 2 hours a day and it's hardly put a crimp in my busy day. I simply get up an hour earlier than I used to so that I can walk for an hour before starting the day. I also use my lunch hour to get the other hour in. If my business does not allow for it that day, I just walk an hour after I get home.

Like you said, it doesn't require hard work to make this lifestyle adjustment. It just takes discipline. I've explained to others how I was able to find the two hours and all they have is excuses why that could not work for them. But the reality is, they just don't want to wake up at the crack of dawn because that might cut into their TV time from the night before.

194 posted on 07/17/2003 12:02:34 PM PDT by SamAdams76 (Back in boot camp! 245 (-55))
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To: RedBloodedAmerican
Now I've read a bunch of diet books over the past few months and everybody's got an agenda or an axe to grind. The sad fact is you can't trust any of them. All you can do is experiment for yourself and find the program that works best for you.

I have discovered that the low-carb/walking approach works best for me. Now I haven't cut carbs to the extent that Atkins advocates but I've been down to 70-100 carbs a day since April 1 and have never felt better in my life. My carb intake would be even less if I didn't use sports drinks like Gatorade and Propel Vitamin water. With all the walking I do, water isn't enough, especially on hot days.

If fairness to Atkins, his book does warn that it would be dangerous to combine his diet with a low-fat diet. I believe that is when your body starts burning muscle. So long as you take in enough fat and protein, your body will not turn to burning muscle. If it did, I'm sure we would have heard about it by now, given that millions of people have adopted this way of eating over the past few decades. Believe me, the medical establishment hates Atkins and they would have nailed him to the wall years ago if it could be proven his diet was a "death trap."

195 posted on 07/17/2003 12:12:26 PM PDT by SamAdams76 (Back in boot camp! 245 (-55))
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To: SamAdams76
Propel Vitamin water

Propel has few, if any carbs. I believe its sweetness comes from a blend of mostly sucralose and a little fructose. On the other hand, Gatorade is loaded with carbs.

196 posted on 07/17/2003 12:35:57 PM PDT by PallMal
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To: sinkspur
"The biggest problem most people have on eating plans is being hungry. Hunger kills motivation quicker than anything"

YAY! You brought up the REAL bugaboo for ordinary folks.

The secret to ordinary people maintaining a healthy weight is activity and moderation of eating habits...that aren't so extreme that they leave you constanty hungry and can be maintained for the long haul.

Also...All these posts disparaging genetic contribution to obesity seem to miss the point that appetite and saiety have genetic controls. (Delete a patricular portion of Chromosome 15 and your hunger will NEVER be satisfied).

The intricate feedback loops that regulate appetite, satisfaction, body structure, cell function,and energy stores and energy metabolism, etc. are all affected by genetics.

Some have to eat MUCH less than normal and work MUCH harder physically to burn off a given amount of fuel, only to be left MUCH, MUCH, MUCH less satisfied and hungry and miserable.

Reward pathways can be tweaked, - but genetics drives that too.

How much folks can and should do to treat and override tendency to obesity - I don't begrudge the spectrum of thought on that issue.... but to say genes are irrelevent to obesity or behaviours contributing to obesity is just stupid.
197 posted on 07/17/2003 12:47:24 PM PDT by SarahW
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To: SamAdams76
Believe me, the medical establishment hates Atkins and they would have nailed him to the wall years ago if it could be proven his diet was a "death trap."

Atkinsalert
Dr. Barnard

198 posted on 07/17/2003 12:52:34 PM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: najida
ARGH! At least one link worked (that is first) Again Atkins
199 posted on 07/17/2003 12:56:18 PM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican
I like what Pam Smith says in reference to Atkins type diets: "Why do you think they call it a 'diet'?"

I remember a doctor telling us in one of our nutrition classes about a young kid who was diagnosed with diabetes and was flipping out over it. When asked why, he said he was going to die; that's why they call it die-abetes.
200 posted on 07/17/2003 12:57:31 PM PDT by aruanan
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