The worst thing for me about being overweight are the assumptions and judgement people make about why I am overweight. People think it's as simple as calories in, calories burned. But as research shows, it is much more complex than that because each body metabolizes certain things differently. Just think of all the additives, preservatives, pesticides, chemicals, hormones, etc that are added to all but certified organic foods. Organic foods are also very expensive, so people who have little money end up spending it on foods that are really unhealthy and little more than hunger fillers.
The worst thing for me about being overweight are the assumptions and judgement people make about why I am overweight. People think it's as simple as calories in, calories burned. But as research shows, it is much more complex than that because each body metabolizes certain things differently. Just think of all the additives, preservatives, pesticides, chemicals, hormones, etc that are added to all but certified organic foods. Organic foods are also very expensive, so people who have little money end up spending it on foods that are really unhealthy and little more than hunger fillers.
For me, though, I hate the judgement. I eat mostly healthy, but I have a genetic (there are 3 places in the genome, all on the same chromosome) condition called lipedema, that makes it practically impossible to lose any weight that I gain, and there is a difference in colour and texture between lipedema fat and regular fat. I have had 3 surgical treatments so far, and will need two more. Recently I had to see a doctor who is not my regular, who asked repeatedly (about 8 times) through the 5-minute checkup whether I am diabetic, and he told me to lose weight. I am healthy, dammit! My blood levels are all normal. All of them. I hate having to justify myself to people who don't matter, and I hate the judgement.... even from doctors, who misdiagnose women with lipedema as simply obese with a simple cure: lose weight.
"People like that" are often using food as a means of self-regulation. Sure, a lot of people could make better decisions, but you are correct that it is a myriad of different reasons for the choices people do make. Poverty, lack of education about healthy choices, inability to cook, convenience foods, eating out, eating filler foods, self-regulation, poor self-image, addictions, lack of exercise, and so many other factors. Doesn't make judgement okay. It only drives obese people to eat more unhealthy foods to make themselves forget the judgement. No matter what semantics you use, calories in/out, in/burned, whatever - it's far too simplistic and does not address the bigger picture.Sadly the people like that, who tend to be very visible for all the wrong reasons, don't make it any easier for the people who are desperately trying to lose weight but struggling.
Yes, many find excuses for failure to take responsibility. This is true. I believe many are hurting for one reason or another, and it is also true that the older we are, the more difficult it is to lose weight - especially for women over 50.They will, however, still try to convince you it's genetic, it's because they're (X age), it's too hard in our industrial food society, basically anything that points the finger away from their own personal choices.
"People like that" are often using food as a means of self-regulation. Sure, a lot of people could make better decisions, but you are correct that it is a myriad of different reasons for the choices people do make. Poverty, lack of education about healthy choices, inability to cook, convenience foods, eating out, eating filler foods, self-regulation, poor self-image, addictions, lack of exercise, and so many other factors. Doesn't make judgement okay. It only drives obese people to eat more unhealthy foods to make themselves forget the judgement. No matter what semantics you use, calories in/out, in/burned, whatever - it's far too simplistic and does not address the bigger picture.
Yes, many find excuses for failure to take responsibility. This is true. I believe many are hurting for one reason or another, and it is also true that the older we are, the more difficult it is to lose weight - especially for women over 50.
No one ever grows up saying "I'm gonna eat and lay around till I'm fat and then I'm gonna ride around walmart in a scooter in shorts and halter with my hips 'n honkers hanging out so people can take pictures and post 'em online so everyone can laugh and give me yet more excuses to eat more and gain more and so on and so forth." Nope. People want to be healthy and attractive, and also loved for who they are. Instead, many are rejected and their outlet is food because it's all they've got. There are so many intrapersonal dynamics with obesity that needs treatment just as much as there are factors external to themselves. Obese people, whether disordered disease or not, need to be treated in the bigger context, and judgement only serves to make it worse.
You are you, and you have the inner and external resources to do something about it. Again, there are a LOT o obese people who simply don't have those same resources, especially if it is due to conditions beyond their control. And yes, mental health concerns can be beyond someone's control - addictions, medications, conditions, culture, and all the socioeconomic and agricultural contributions, and their mental/emotional responses. Clearly you have never had to fight obesity. Overweight, maybe, but not obesity. These people already struggle, already judge themselves, they are hurting inside, lonely, and often do not have the resources that you do. Otherwise it would be easy enough to lose the weight and they would do it, like you did. They need help, not judgement.But when you're headed that way it makes sense to do something about it, no?
You are you, and you have the inner and external resources to do something about it. Again, there are a LOT o obese people who simply don't have those same resources, especially if it is due to conditions beyond their control. And yes, mental health concerns can be beyond someone's control - addictions, medications, conditions, culture, and all the socioeconomic and agricultural contributions, and their mental/emotional responses. Clearly you have never had to fight obesity. Overweight, maybe, but not obesity. These people already struggle, already judge themselves, they are hurting inside, lonely, and often do not have the resources that you do. Otherwise it would be easy enough to lose the weight and they would do it, like you did. They need help, not judgement.
Again, for many people, it is not so easy as calories in and calories out, or simply making the decision to walk or run. I know people who eat virtually nothing - even 500 lb active men - who can't lose an ounce. I also know women who spent 8 hours a day exercising to lose lipedema fat from their legs, only to be told it will never go away no matter how hard they exercise. Every body is different. Count your blessings that you had the inner resources to do something about yours. Not many are so fortunate, and it is not about the decisions they make.Pray tell, who should get the blame for that if not me?
Personal responsibility plays a factor for many people, yes. And there are also many who have little to no control, and most of these are women - though men can also have fat disorders, metabolic disorders or poor mental health that contributes to weight gain. Again, no one is suggesting we should not take personal responbility, but you also need to acknowledge that there are legitimate reasons for people to be overweight, and you can't judge which are which, so don't judge at all. People who are overweight already feel crappy enough about it that they don't need people judging them for having a bag of chips in their cart. It might not even be for them!We can blame all sorts of external factors but we can't make personal responsibility go away.
Again, for many people, it is not so easy as calories in and calories out, or simply making the decision to walk or run. I know people who eat virtually nothing - even 500 lb active men - who can't lose an ounce. I also know women who spent 8 hours a day exercising to lose lipedema fat from their legs, only to be told it will never go away no matter how hard they exercise. Every body is different. Count your blessings that you had the inner resources to do something about yours. Not many are so fortunate, and it is not about the decisions they make.
Again, for many people, it is not so easy as calories in and calories out, or simply making the decision to walk or run. I know people who eat virtually nothing - even 500 lb active men - who can't lose an ounce. I also know women who spent 8 hours a day exercising to lose lipedema fat from their legs, only to be told it will never go away no matter how hard they exercise. Every body is different. Count your blessings that you had the inner resources to do something about yours. Not many are so fortunate, and it is not about the decisions they make.
Personal responsibility plays a factor for many people, yes. And there are also many who have little to no control, and most of these are women - though men can also have fat disorders, metabolic disorders or poor mental health that contributes to weight gain.
Again, no one is suggesting we should not take personal responbility, but you also need to acknowledge that there are legitimate reasons for people to be overweight, and you can't judge which are which, so don't judge at all. People who are overweight already feel crappy enough about it that they don't need people judging them for having a bag of chips in their cart. It might not even be for them!
I get it if you don't get it. But my first husband and I had friends - they were a couple, each weighed about 500 lbs. Actually I think he was closer to 600. Anyway, He wheezed a little, but he could keep up with my husband - a 160-lb man less than half our friends' age - when they prepared their loads (truck drivers). He walked and moved around as well as anyone, hopped in and out of his semi faster than we did, and he seriously hardly ate a thing. His wife was similar. She could clean her house in less than an hour, tend her garden, and move around quickly in her sewing room, and she would have tea and toast for lunch. I have no idea what their story was about obesity. I never asked. But I do know what I witnessed. Years before that, I went to grade school with a very overweight guy. He stayed overweight all his life, but as an adult, he ate clean and green (organic and plant based). He died a few years ago, but again, I never asked about his weight. And a family I grew up with had a son who was rather large. He was very active in school sports and had a very active job after he graduated. And he is by no means, an overeater. Never has been, but has always been large.
It all comes back to what is the worst thing about being overweight. The bottom line (for me) is that no one knows anyone else's story, so painting all obese or overweight people with the same brush is unfair to all obese and overweight people because it ignores the nuances of journey, context, health, and other contributing factors.
That's been my experience as well.My experience is that the overwhelming majority of the extremely overweight people I've encountered have been in situations where they either had shopping cart full of trash, or were in the process of eating ridiculous amounts of trash. That's not to say I've encountered every single extremely fat person out there but what I've seen is overwhelmingly consistent.
It's also worth considering what people who "hardly eat anything" actually eat. A guy I knew some years ago was badly overweight and his wife was hugely overweight, to the point she avoided social situations because she assumed she'd be rejected because she was fat. This guy once commented to me that "she hardly eats anything". I saw what she ate and there's no way it counted as "hardly anything". When I went to a convenience store to pick up some snacks at the end of a day out we were both getting something for ourselves and our wives (who hadn't joined us for the day, so we were choosing). I picked up a candy bar and a couple of bags of chips to share with my wife. He practically filled a shopping bag with candy, chips, salty snacks etc. But, you know, they hardly eat anything.
Sometimes I think people like to argue just for the sake of being argumentative and are not the least bit interested in really listening to others or understanding other perspectives than their own.
I really gotta find forums where people have conversations to learn and exchange ideas and information rather than just dig in their heels and assert their own "us/them, right/wrong" mindset.