Skeptical Greg
Agave Wine Connoisseur
Keep in mind that the thrust of the OP is not that obesity is not disabling, but that it is an " official " disability that warrants pension type benefits..
Keep in mind that the thrust of the OP is not that obesity is not disabling, but that it is an " official " disability that warrants pension type benefits..
Googling " benefits of fiber " brings up a lot of references to the fact that
fiber interferes with the digestion of dietary fat.
I don't think the USDA calorie counts take that into account.. i.e. The calorie count for a tablespoon of butter doesn't take into account that you ate it with a cup of oatmeal..
One example:
Nutritional implications of dietary fiber
The above example has references to several other papers..
More fruitful for discussion, and what much of the discussion in the thread has been about, is how you tackle the problem, and even if it's possible to tackle the problem. Otherwise it's only going to be a wrangle about whether obese people should be awarded disability pensions and I think we did that.
Takeaway food outlets did exist, principally the chip shop, but when I was a child there wasn't one in the village and it was a treat for seaside holidays.
I was driving around one of the poorer areas of Auckland on Thursday morning and had to pass through their shopping centre. Traffic was slow and I stopped outside a takeaway, watching a hugely obese Pasifika woman alternate bites of one of those revolting battered sausage on a stick things with her ~1 year old child.
Wish I'd taken photos.
A lot. Gaining 7 pounds over the holidays is more or less normal. The problem is never losing it then gaining 7 again next season. Etc.It's about moderation. It's about not eating more calories than you expend over a period of time. People who did that without realising what they were doing have a difficult job to fix it. But hey, how many people is that, really?
I would say yes, pretty much by definition. Plus, once you get overweight, you don't need to eat an abnormal amount to stay heavy. You have to do the abnormal thing by capping the calorie count.Is it really the case that some people are born with less will-power than others? That some have food cravings that are really, genuinely, irresistible while others can resist them?
Well it's not exactly even, obviously, but there are many factors beyond the simplistic "willpower" formulation. Our bodies have appetites, our brains, or minds, are part of our bodies. I'm not sure there's a single ingredient labeled "willpower" or "brain over body" control. Eating is more pleasurable for some people than others; some people are naturally fidgety and burn calories, some are tall and can carry more weight.Leaving aside people suffering from Prader-Willi, how uneven is the genetic playing field? I don't think anybody knows.
The compulsion is biologically based; how could it not be?
Then, why would obesity be on a sharp rise in the last 50 years, when education has improved dramatically also?
If you're talking to me, I put on 60 lb in 15 years. I'm not proud of this. I knew I was letting it get away from me but didn't seriously tackle it. When I did, I took it off in 15 months. This is not a recommendation.
That's kind of the whole point. It doesn't need a huge excess over one's actual energy requirement to rack up a significant weight gain if it's sustained every day for years. One needs to be in the habit of balancing the excess days with days when one eats under maintenance.
Turning this from the particular to the general, if people are under the impression that it's absolutely peachy if all you're doing is exceeding your maintenance requirements by less than 100 calories a day, they're doing it wrong. Of course it's fine to exceed your maintenance requirements by 100 calories a day. So long as you balance that with another day when you eat 100 calories less than your maintenance. And of course it can vary by a lot more than 100 calories either way.
That was my mistake. I don't think I was overeating in the normal day-to-day course of events at all. I was overeating at Christmas/New Year, and when I was on holiday, and I didn't cut down to compensate. If I had, I wouldn't have put on the 60 lb I had to lose. (Or rather, I would have put it on a few pounds at a time and taken it off again soon afterwards instead of all in one fell swoop over more than a year.)
I've learned my lesson now. I genuinely think this is an observation of more than individual relevance.
I'm following this thread with interest and really enjoy your contributions. You seem to have a very in depth knowledge of nutrition.
Church calendars not so much. Pancake day is before lent. You use up the good stuff before starving.
Then pig out on chocolate eggs at Easter![]()
Was it biologically based 50 years ago when obesity was much more rare? Does evolution happen that dramatically, that quickly?
It must have been a fairly big thing at one time, or we wouldn't have evolved to live as long as we do. Society benefited from retaining the knowledge and wisdom of older people.
Now we havebooksthe internet.
I tend to think that childcare is only a small part of it. Homo sapiens is a societal species, and longevity of the individual is heavily influenced by the functioning of the society he is born into. If societies with a significant complement of older people were more conducive to individual survival, then that selection would prevail. Unfortunately we didn't cop the break that only the intellectually gifted deveoped the long life-span. (And as you say, there are useful roles for older people who aren't in the "sage" category.)
My own view is that the menopause (which is almost unique in mammals) is a function of us having evolved from a shorter-lived ancestor species and the ovum capacity of the ovaries didn't extend with the lifespan. And of course this was a feature not a bug, as you point out, so there was no pressure to change that.
But we're getting a bit off topic.
A man is suing the Emirates airline after having to sit next to an overweight passenger during a nine-hour flight.
Giorgio Destro, from Padua in northern Italy, said that after he settled into his seat next to the window, he was “amazed” when the overweight man took the seat next to him.
He said he asked to be moved, but could not be re-seated as the aircraft was fully booked.
Mr Destro claims he suffered for the duration of the flight from Cape Town to Dubai, and was so uncomfortable he could not even use his seat for most of the journey.
I don't think that anyone else has given you a serious answer on this so I'll try.
Because it only correlates in countries with sufficient availability of cheap calories, in a famine struck country the rich will be better fed and better educated. The post WWII years have brought an abundance of food to the Western world without historical precedent. Also education may have improved but the correlation is across across the range not with a particular level of attainment.