Quote:
Originally Posted by pixeldust
..and what about when you are not living up to your current outer appearance due to lifestyle changes?
Even at my fattest. my food choices didn't reflect my outer appearance.
And I think that's what more people need to understand. Not everyone who eats only "healthy" food will be thin, not everyone who eats crap will be fat, and not every fat person eats crap. It is possible to be active, eat healthfully and still be fat (when you're eating more than you need, that doesn't mean you're getting the extra calories from junk or that you're lying in bed all day doing nothing).
Even the reasons one person is fat can change over a lifetime. When I was in high school and college, I was quite active and yet I was extremely obese, because I was eating 24/7. In college and graduate school, I did eat more crap - because crap was often cheaper, and I still ate healthy by many people standards (My favorite cheap meal was green beans cooked in tomato sauce with onions and poured over an small baked potato for lunch. For dinner I'd choose a bigger potato and a salad).
I wish I had a dollar for every time someone said to me (or about me) "You eat so healthy, how can you NOT be thin?" or "You seem to eat so healthy, you must eat a lot of junk when no one is watching, right?."
Junk food has never been a large part of my diet, but I do think I was born with a very different appetite and view of food than most people. For as long as I can remember, I've been hungry and food-focused 24/7. I always want to be eating, and I always want to try something new. The food doesn't have to be high calorie for me to like it, but if I don't put a great deal of effort into resisting, I would be eating non-stop from my first waking moment in the morning to my last moment before falling asleep at night. If there werew a way to eat 24/7, I'd be the person to discover it.
No one else in my family w\has ever been this food obsessed (I was adopted so maybe some of this is genetic). I have always been hungry sometimes while also being full. Also to a much greater degree than anyone in my family, I've always wanted to try new foods, and liked almost everything I ever tried (with a few notable, but weird exceptions like applesauce, which I practically have a phobia toward. I can't even look at applesauce or smell it without getting nauseous).
Regardless of my weight, or my dieting status, I've always had strangers - both customers and clerks- comment and ask about my grocery choices. Mostly because of my intense drive for novelty, I often have several "strange" items in my cart. Sometimes they're strange to me. I may have no idea what I'm buying, but I'll look it up online when I get home. Other times they're items that I love, but aren't familiar to many folkks, such as Ugli fruit (pronounced Ugly - and they are sort of looking like an unriped AND spoiled grapefruit) - I always get comments and questions every time I buy one of these. When I reply that it's an Ugli fruit and tastes like lemonade, people often say "Uggh, I wouldn't eat it, it looks gross."
I'm the person who is always holding up the line, because the clerk can't identify the strange fruit or vegetables in my cart, I may or may not be able to name for them. Or the name I know it by isn't the name in the grocery clerk's book so they have to call a manager over to help them find it.
I don't mind the curious questions, even those that seem rude, such as one of my personal favorites: "Have you always eaten like this or are you on some weird diet?"