In Association with Amazon

amazon.com amazon.ca amazon.co.uk


www.simplebean.com

Search Simplebean.com
 
Exactly how many carbohydrate, protein, and fat grams does your body need?

Free Simplebean Health Guide
software for your PC.
Get the Free Simplebean Health Guide software

Navigation
Home
Download
Articles
Library
Help Files
Links
About Us

Shortcuts
Submit Article
Contact Us

Link to Us


www.simplebean.com
Healthy Life

Super Size MeThe New Whole Foods Encyclopedia: A Comprehensive Resource for Healthy EatingHealthy Eating
Healthy Recipes
Healthy Lifestyle
Healthy Weight
Healthy Eating for Life to Prevent and Treat CancerHappy Feet, Healthy Food: Your Child's First Journal of Exercise and Healthy Eating
Choose your Amazon Amazon.com

Food: The Proof Is In The Portion

By Virginia Bola, PsyD

We are a large people. 65% of us are overweight, 30% actually obese. How did we reach this point?

We ate ourselves into a prison of our own fat.

Why?

Well, we certainly didn't sit down and decide that we wanted to gain weight, did we? We had no pressure on us to fatten ourselves for some eventual slaughter. On the contrary, as our collective girth increased, we paradoxically elevated scrawny to a cultural icon, happily dismissing the corseted matronly figures of the past two centuries.

Where did the disconnect between our reality and our ideals begin?

We can blame the processors who milled out the vitamins and minerals we need. We can blame the preservers who cut back on fiber and freshness in favor of additives and chemicals. We can blame the packagers who added sugar and starch to everything. We can blame the fast food industry for frying everything and we can blame the beverage companies for their addictive colas.

While all of these made their contributions to our current plight, one source of our caloric distress runs through everything: portion size.

We eat hamburgers - not the gigantic, multi-patty ones, just a standard burger - that are 3 times as big as those of 30 years ago. Our orders of french fries are at least twice the size of their cousins in the 1970s. Pizza no longer has cheese only on the top but its crust is also filled. Large soft drinks are the size of watering cans instead of baby bottles. Recipes that once announced "serves 8" now report "serves 4" with exactly the same ingredients. Bagels and muffins are 3 to 4 times as large as their predecessors (and any fan of Seinfeld knows that only the tops are worthwhile). Thank heavens for hormones that can produce the 20 to 30 pound turkeys we demand for our holiday dinners.

Compare the small boxes of frozen vegetables that so awed us in the 1950s with the huge bags available today, awash in butter or cheese sauce. The TV dinners we precariously balanced on rickety tray tables are now heavy enough that those same tables wouldn't hold them.

Restaurant meals have grown as well, with a "to go" container almost standard because few eaters can finish them (although we try terribly hard). Far from their smorgasbord roots, buffets have become almost obscene in their offerings.

Whatever happened to nouvelle cuisine? Has the fastidious gourmet been completely swallowed by the voracious gourmand? Is gluttony no longer a deadly sin?

We love nothing better than a good bargain: something for nothing or, at the very least, at a discount. If we can obtain just a few more ounces of something for negligible extra money, we pounce on the larger size. If we're offered two for the price of one and a half, we don't have to stop and think. If we can save money by buying a whole package, even if we don't want all of it, we'll do it because it makes economic sense (ah, the birth of super size!)

Where did we get the idea that bigger is better? Is it the national legacy of the depression when we swore we'd never "do without" again? Is it a natural spillover from our thoughtless squandering of the world's resources? Is it the speed and stress of our competitive lives that logically leads to our attacking our food with the same disregard for restraint we show in business?

Whatever has brought us to this point, it is time for us all to cry "enough!" We may fear terrorist attacks or biological warfare but it is our daily over-consumption of food that is killing us. Diabetes, clogged arteries, and other obesity-related illnesses cost 350,000 American lives a year and the figure continues to climb. The associated medical costs are staggering and threaten eventual bankruptcy for the Medicare system if not reined back.

Several states and school districts are attempting to apply brakes to a junk food society out of control. A change in the structure of our farm subsidy programs has been suggested - to reward the growers of healthy crops and penalize those who raise the building blocks of edible garbage (sugar and corn syrup). Taxation, as has been used to curb the purchase of cigarettes, could change the consumption equation by hitting our wallets (and a 1 cent tax on every soft drink sold in the United States would raise 40 billion dollars a year).

However, the great change will only come when each of us, individually and collectively, start cutting back.

We need to insist, repeatedly and loudly, that restaurants serve child and senior size plates to adults and split orders without extra charge (where are the class action lawyers when you need them?) We have to demand that small sizes of meal components are offered. We should start boycotting those huge "economy" sizes of everything from soft drinks, to frozen potatoes, to cooking lard, and potato chips.

And the buck finally stops at our own plate. For our health, our longevity, and our looks, we must limit how much we eat of anything. If we cut our intake in half, we will be doing ourselves, our children, and our society a great favor and our bodies will thank us for it.

Virginia Bola is a licensed psychologist and an admitted diet fanatic. She specializes in therapeutic reframing and the effects of attitudes and motivation on individual goals. The author of The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual, and a free ezine, The Worker's Edge, she recently published a psychologically-based weight control e-workbook, "Diet with an Attitude" which develops mental skills towards the goal of permanent weight control.

She can be reached at http://www.DietWithAnAttitude.com

 
Link to this page


Super Size Me
Super Size Me
Morgan Spurlock
Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock, rejected five times by the USC film school, won the best director award at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival for this alarmingly personal investigation into the health hazards wreaked by our fast food nation. Under extensive medical supervision, Spurlock subjects himself to a steady diet of McDonald's cuisine for 30 days just to see what happens.

 

Simplebean Top 10
1.Eating for Life: Your Guide to Great Health, Fat Loss and Increased Energy!, Bill Phillips
2.Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy: The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating, Dr. Walter C. Willett
3.The G.I. Diet : The Easy, Healthy Way to Permanent Weight Loss, Rick Gallop
4.Body for Life: 12 Weeks to Mental and Physical Strength, Bill Phillips
5.The Omega Diet: The Lifesaving Nutritional Program Based on the Diet of the Island of Crete, Artemis P. Simopoulos
6.Food and Mood: Second Edition : The Complete Guide To Eating Well and Feeling Your Best, Elizabeth Somer
7.Your Miracle Brain: Maximize Your Brainpower, Boost Your Memory, Lift Your Mood, Improve Your IQ and Creativity, Prevent and Reverse Mental Aging, Jean Carper
8.The Ultimate Fit or Fat, Covert Bailey
9.Dare to Lose: Four Simple Steps to Achieve a Better Body, Shari Lieberman, Ph.D.
10.The Get with the Program! Guide to Good Eating: Great Food for Good Health, Bob Greene

 

Restaurant Confidential
Michael F. Jacobson
From the Center for Science in the Public Interest, this book offers all imaginable nutritional details about restaurant food, including meals available at mall eateries, fast-food outlets and family-oriented establishments, along with ethnic eateries from Chinese to Italian. It includes a practical list of the best and worst meal choices, according to calorie, fat and sugar content. Those desiring to eat out healthier will find this book useful as they plan their meals.
 
Healthy Highways: The Traveler's Guide to Healthy Eating
Nikki Goldbeck
A unique guide for anyone who wants to eat healthfully, particularly while traveling.
 
Eating Mindfully: How to End Mindless Eating and Enjoy a Balanced Relationship with Food
Eating Mindfully: How to End Mindless Eating and Enjoy a Balanced Relationship with Food
Susan Albers
Healthy eating is conscious eating. Albers provides a checklist for the wide variety of mindless eating approaches, from eating when not hungry to faddish diets to food rituals. These step-by-step instructions help readers reach a new level of understanding of their relationship to food, weight, and health.
 
The Way to Eat: A Six-Step Path to Lifelong Weight Control
David. L. Katz
Dr. David L. Katz, head of the Yale School of Medicine Prevention Research Center, provides expert guidance to lifelong weight control, health and contentment with food.
 
Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
Sally Fallon
A full-spectrum nutritional cookbook with a startling message--animal fats and cholesterol are vital factors in the human diet, necessary for reproduction and normal growth, proper function of the brain and nervous system, protection from disease and optimum energy levels.
 

COPYRIGHT. 2007 fore royal, llc ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The information on the website is intended as a sharing of knowledge and information from the research and experience of the authors. The information on this website is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional and is not intended as medical advice. Statements made pertaining to the properties or functions of nutritional supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. If you have a medical problem or symptoms, consult your physician. Always consult your physician before starting a new diet or exercise regiment.
www.staysafeonline.info
National Cyber Security Alliance