Archive for September, 2008
Obesity – Is Being Obese a Death Sentence?
If you are reading this article and believe you will be obese for life, maybe you are better to just move on to the comics section. This article is only for people with strong stomachs. If you have been fighting with yourself every time you put that excess food in your mouth and wondering why you keep doing it over and over again, stop for one moment and give yourself a final chance to prevent execution.
Obesity-Is being obese a death sentence? Their is only one answer to that question, YES. Unless:
1.Are you willing to make one last confession before I pull the plug?
2.Are you willing to listen for once in your life, really listen?
3.Are you strong enough to go through rehabilitation one last time? If you fail, well…
Step #1. Admitting that you have a curable problem is a start.
•Put all your eating mistakes on paper and write down the reasons why you make that mistake next to each.
•Writing it down admitting to your mistakes is letting yourself know that you are the problem.
•Admit it(confess) it is all your fault.
•Throw all those excuses out the window, you are the culprit and no one else.
Step #2. Are you willing to listen?
•This is your last chance, no turning back. You need to accept the fact that you are not perfect.
•Look at yourself in the mirror and tell that person in front of you that you want to change. Tell the person you see, not me.
Step #3.Are you willing to go through rehabilitation one last time?
•If you know and accept to really do it this time you have four months to start rehabilitation.
•Your death sentence can be commuted temporarily only if you sign your own personal waiver form.
•Look at the person in the mirror, read the list of mistakes you have confessed to, create a picture of the new person you want to look like.
•The work begins today.
Food for thought.

Celiac , Gluten and Obesity – There is a Connection
I read an interesting article on a celiac website called “Celiac Disease and Obesity – There is a Connection.” I’m glad to see it because I certainly didn’t fit the usual celiac mould, which is underweight and/or unable to keep on or gain weight. Puh-leez. Celiacs/gluten intolerants tend to have malabsorption issues, meaning gluten/gliadin (the protein in wheat) is interfering with the absorption of nutrients from their food; your body thinks you’re starving, no matter how much you eat. Throw in the fact that gliadin breaks down into an addictive opiate-like substance in the body and you have people like me, who experienced intense cravings and insatiable hunger…and of course, weight gain.
“Eat less and move more” doesn’t help in this situation. I wanted to eat less. I made a huge effort to eat less. Eating less took up about 85% of my mental energy each and every day. All I thought about was food: eating it, getting it, not eating it, eating “better” food, when I was going to eat, did I bring enough food with me, why am I so bloody hungry? I studied other people’s eating habits and wondered why I couldn’t eat slowly, or put my fork down between bites, or leave food on my plate, or NOT want chips or cake or crackers after a meal of spaghetti and garlic bread. I was overweight, but not obese – if I’d been obese, you bet I’d have taken a beating from friends, co-workers, family and health professionals for my behaviour, which would be (and still is) seen as gluttony, a lack of willpower, a character flaw.
Many people on the low-carb forum I frequent find that when they add wheat products back to their diet, they react badly: brain fog, fatigue, G.I. distress, aching joints, skin rashes, etc. I was the same. I suspected something was up, but it wasn’t until I’d removed all gluten from my diet for a while and then added it back that I really noticed how crappy I’d felt for most of my life…and how good I could feel instead. Then I got tested and found out for sure what the trouble was. It was so simple to do, and caused a dramatic improvement in my quality of life, not just physically but mentally/emotionally.
So why don’t we test for this all the time? Why isn’t food tolerance/allergy testing a routine part of a medical workup? Why aren’t children tested when they start on solid foods…and then re-tested several times throughout childhood? Why does the medical community at large know so little about nutrition and food, about the effect food has on our bodies? Hippocrates said “Let thy food be thy medicine and thy medicine be thy food”…so what happened?
It is my theory that Overeaters Anonymous meetings are chock-full of people who, like me, have food intolerance issues that manifest, at least partially, as cravings and overeating as well as depression, anxiety and other emotional symptoms. And no-one – not their doctors, not their counsellors, not their sponsors, not their friends – is going to “let them off the hook” by suggesting that their actual problem could be bread or oatmeal or fettuccine. I do not believe that ANYONE has ever become obese because they just like to eat or have no willpower, whatever that is. I think obesity always has an underlying reason – meaning that obesity is a symptom of something else – and that reason can be treated. Unfortunately, we still treat obesity and overweight as something that requires penance and punishment. It’s a moral failing. A scarlet letter.
But the real failing is ours. We fail the obese by blaming them. We fail the overweight by giving them diet plans containing the very foods that may have led to their overweight. Would it be so difficult to just run a couple of tests? Or do we just not want to have to admit we’ve been wrong, judgemental, mean…and say sorry?