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On the one hand I believe that weight management is not a level playing field. Differences in physiology aside, some of us like food a lot more than others, find it comfortable rather than unpleasant to have a very full stomach, and are inclined to turn to food for comfort and stress relief. For such people (raising hand), weight loss and maintenance are undoubtedly harder than for people who are disinterested or picky eaters and dislike the feeling of fullness. It takes more willpower for us to lose weight than it takes for the non-foodies.
I'm also One Of Those People, I was born hungry and I've stayed hungry. I love high calorie food and I'm a big fan of the soothing feeling it gives me when I eat it in excess. I believe that I was always destined to be one of the steady level 15% of obese people that existed until the 1970s. Originally Posted by freelancemomma
OK, at the risk of having tomatoes pelted at me, I'll jump in and share some of my thoughts on this topic.On the one hand I believe that weight management is not a level playing field. Differences in physiology aside, some of us like food a lot more than others, find it comfortable rather than unpleasant to have a very full stomach, and are inclined to turn to food for comfort and stress relief. For such people (raising hand), weight loss and maintenance are undoubtedly harder than for people who are disinterested or picky eaters and dislike the feeling of fullness. It takes more willpower for us to lose weight than it takes for the non-foodies.
However, since the 1970s obesity levels have doubled. I can't see any reason why, during a time of plenty, twice as many people like me have been born. People's troubles aren't any worse, poverty isn't a factor, obesity has doubled across all class and racial groups and there hasn't been a big change in the genetic pool that we all swim out of. Something else has happened.
I battle with my own obesity every day, part of that is knowing that I'm in charge of everything that goes into my mouth but it has taken me a fairly long time to educate myself to the point where I know exactly what's on that fork. Food producers have spent the last thirty years doing their best to keep that information from me, from all of us and making it as easy as possible for everyone to consume an excess of calories, not just people like me who want to eat to excess. In most of the world, governments have stood by and allowed this to happen, in the tiny pockets where governments have put food labeling in place, they don't have the same numbers of obese people as we have in the US and UK. When children are given the facts about basic health prevention measures, they grow up heeding that advice.
As for menus, some days I want that 16oz steak and on those days, nothing is going to come between me and that steak, other days I'm a bit more committed to maintaining my healthy weight and I will opt for the chicken salad but I think that if a restaurant is going to make the chicken salad more calorific than the steak, it's only fair that they warn me. I take responsibility for my own choices but it's unfair to ask me to make the correct choices without giving me the information I need to make an informed choice.
No one left my generation floundering to do their own research on the toxicity of tobacco products, we were told that there was a reasonable expectation that smoking would led to death. We were told the likely outcome of unsafe sex practices and given the means to counter them. No one has stopped adults making their own decisions but they make much smarter ones when the know the consequences.


