RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
Then what is the point to your post? You make these claims and then say you don't know. Why did you bother in the first place.zultr said:I didn’t know I was trying to answer the question. I assumed writing “I don't know. I think it depends a lot on the individual,” and “I'm certainly no expert on addiction” would have tipped you off on this point.
I said that I could very well be wrong and have not addressed it since. What I don't understand is how you arrive at your original premise since you admit your lack of understanding of the subject.I don’t feel compelled to research stats for all behaviors for your edification, but you already know the answer to the smoking question. After you stated that “95% of people who quit smoking don't start again,” I posted that it is in fact slightly more than 93%. I would bet those results fall within their respective margins for error, making the difficulty of each act indistinguishable, rendering your initial comment wrong. You do rely on science rather than personal guesses for your analysis, don’t you?
This is great if you will apply it consistently. If you do it makes your original statement moot.Do you know for a fact that giving up golfing on Saturdays is statistically easier for everyone to give up than smoking? If not, then why are you stating it as fact? Perhaps quitting golf would be easier for you personally, but wouldn’t that make “your experience anecdotal?” After all, “isn't it rational to accept science over anecdotal evidence?” For you, lifestyle changes that lead to weight loss are difficult for you to bear; in fact, they make you “nervous and miserable to be with.” What of an individual who is completely obsessed with golf and couldn’t give a rats ass about smoking or eating? Is their experience irrelevant because you don’t share their perception or that they constitute a statistical minority?
Again, then I fail to see why you bothered to respond in the first place. Why did you tell us about your anecdotal experience if it has no bearing or no meaning at all?Are those the only things that people fail at, or are they what you perceive to be the most common? Some people fail at keeping their garages clean while gambling, smoking, and eating pose no challenge at all. I'm sure that statistics indicate that certain behaviors that are more difficult to kick than others, but since there are so many exceptions and variations to the rule, it seems to depend on the individual.
I have not seen any points that you have raised other than fat people are in denial and your proof is your own experience.I believe I am raising some logical questions while not necessarily knowing the answer. I'm also pointing out that science at this point may not have all the answers either (it does happen, believe it or not). Obesity is a new phenomenon in human history and its study is in its infancy. I haven’t seen any scientific studies that specifically address the points I am raising (if you find them, I’m willing to be enlightened), and it is perfectly reasonable that such points be considered; to do so is far more reasonable than latching on to the first study that says what you’d like to hear.
As to studies I can only ask "where have you been for the past two decades?"
Palo Alto Medical Foundation
Obesity is a result of many factors. Although it was once thought that a lack of will power—eating too much—and a lack of physical activity caused obesity, it is now recognized that family influence, genetics (including your basal metabolic rate, or BMR), and cultural and psychological factors all contribute to becoming obese.
Alvarado Hospital Medical Center
- Children adopted at birth show no correlation of their body weight with that of their adoptive parents, who feed them, and teach them how to eat. They show an 80% correlation of their body weight with their genetic parents, whom they have never even met.
- cal twins, with the same genes, show a much higher similarity of body weights, than do fraternal twins, who have different genes.
- Certain genetic populations, such as the American Indians of the Southwest, have a very high incidence of severe obesity. They also have a markedly increased incidence of diabetes and heart disease.
- Mice can be bred, which are very obese (they look like little powder puffs). This is the result of a defect in a single gene, called the ob gene, which is associated with the ability to make a hormone, called leptin. The problem in humans is much more complicated genetically, with over 100 genes involved in some aspect of obesity.
- Another hormone has recently been discovered, called ghrelin, which stimulates appetite in normal persons. Persons who lose weight by dieting have persistently elevated ghrelin levels, urging them to eat more. Persons who undergo a gastric bypass have a decrease in ghrelin levels by about 77%, indicating one mechanism of how the operation reduces appetite.
Sorry, I had assumed that you had picked up a newspaper a few times in the last two decades.You keep mentioning science (without citing any) to support your claim...
That the subject of this thread is idiotic and presumptuous in the face of facts....but I'm not sure what your claim is.
I see no value in calling obesity a disease or disability. To what end? I eschew political correctness and I see zero value in it. Why not simply call it obesity and treat it as a condition. As to science there is tons of it. How anyone could get through life without seeing it is beyond me. I understand that since I'm overweight I'm more likely to know but damn, this stuff is in the news all of the time.You stated earlier that you don’t want to be considered “disabled.” Well, you seem to be arguing both sides of the coin. Is obesity something beyond one’s control that qualifies for a disease or disability, or something else?
It's like you asking me to prove the world is round.
Link found between obesity and brain receptors
Brain scans show that obese people, just like drug addicts, have fewer receptors for dopamine, a neurotransmitter that helps produce feelings of satisfaction and pleasure.
The finding at the Brookhaven National Laboratory has prompted scientists to theorize that one reason people overeat is to stimulate the dopamine "pleasure" circuits in the brain, just as addicts do by taking drugs.
"This is the first scientific contribution that the addictive pathways are deficient in the obese and it may explain their cravings," said Dr. George Blackburn, an associate professor of nutrition at Harvard Medical School.
How much science would you like?What Causes Obesity?
The balance between calorie intake and energy expenditure determines a person's weight. If a person eats more calories than he or she burns, the person gains weight (the body will store the excess energy as fat). If a person eats fewer calories than he or she burns, he or she will lose weight. Therefore the most common causes of obesity are overeating and physical inactivity. At present, we know that there are many factors that contribute to obesity, some of which have a genetic component:
), since an accident i cannot lead the life i once did as such my weight is plus half a stone (not bad really i still swim) but i eat the right foods and still have semi decent muscle size but for the flak i get off my doctor you'd think i'd spent my life not moving and being fed lard