Thankyou.Aurora wrote:'screamifyouwanttogofaster', believe it or not, I also wish you well in your endeavours to follow a healthy lifestyle.
I have no wish to belittle you, personally, in any way. If I have given that impression, I apologise wholeheartedly.
Nevertheless, I am also entitled to my views based, in part, on the personal experiences of friends and former colleagues, many of whom work within the NHS.
I have also read any number of articles on the subject of obesity over the past twenty years and remain convinced about the urgent need for change in our Western diet and lifestyle.
You are entitled to your views, of course. However, from my personal experience, the experience of others I have been fortunate enough to meet whilst working on my health issues via the internet, and my own research into the subject of obesity, I disagree with you.
I agree there is an urgent need for change in our Western diet and lifestyle. Though I suspect we would disagree on exactly what that change should be, I think there would also be a fair amount of common ground as well.
However, I cannot support the idea that the answer is to lecture fat people as if they are stupid, and accuse them of being lazy and gluttonous, or give support based on the assumption that they live on ready meals and junk food any more than many thin people do. Or that a calorie counting and low fat, high carb diet is the solution.
In addition, there are plenty of thin people who eat unhealthily and are reaping the consequences (you don't have to be obese to get type 2 diabetes from a high sugar diet, for example). Targetting the obese and ignoring everyone else does not seem a reasonable approach to me. That is what I was saying in my previous post which you quoted. The emphasis on thin= healthy/ good seems unhelpful, in fact even harmful. It concerns me deeply that kids are being taught in school that obesity is the number one health evil. Schools may also be teaching healthy eating (albeit based on a faulty food pyramid), but the focus on weight encourages kids to grow up with body hang ups and to get into the kind of unhealthy attitudes and lifestyles that lead to eating disorders and other such problems (smoking in hope of eating less for example). Kids as young as 5 and 6 are dieting these days. I don't think the problem is that we're not demonising fat enough!
I threw out my scales a couple of weeks ago. I am determined to focus on health- in eating, activity and other lifestyle choices, and on enjoyment of life, my family and contributing something positive to the wider world. As for my weight, I will continue to strive to be as healthy as I can be, and what will be will be.