Why Are We So Fat?
That’s the question asked in the
cover story of the August 2004 issue of National Geographic magazine.
“Americans enjoy one of the most luxurious lifestyles on Earth: Our food is
plentiful. Our work is automated. Our leisure is effortless. And it’s killing
us,” says Geographic senior writer Cathy Newman.
Some of the latest facts and statistics revealed in the article are chilling:
* One out of three Americans is obese, twice as many as three decades ago
* The Center for Disease control and Prevention (CDC) has declared obesity an
“epidemic”
* 15% of children and teens are overweight, a nearly three fold jump since 1980
* Other countries are catching up to the United States, especially newly
industrialized nations. KFC opened a drive through restaurant in Beijing in 2002
with more on the way. UK snack food consumption rose 25% in the last five years.
Sales of processed food rose 20% in Latin America between 1980 and 2000.
* Being overweight is now associated with over 400,000 deaths per year
* Obesity is associated with an increased risk of heart disease, type 2
diabetes, osteoarthritis, stroke, and colon, breast and endometrial cancers
* Next year, Obesity is expected to surpass smoking as the leading cause of
preventable death in the United States
* The Puget Sound Ferries increased their seat width from 18 to 20 inches to
allow room for bigger bottoms
* An ambulance company in Colorado retrofitted its vehicles with a winch and a
plus size compartment to accommodate patients up to a half a ton in weight
* A casket maker in Indiana now offers double-sized models
* One in four Americans gets ZERO exercise, one-third of Americans don’t get the
minimum amount the government suggests we need just to avoid chronic disease
* The average child will watch 10,000 commercials per year touting food or
beverages, nearly all of them for junk and fast food
So what’s the answer to the question? What does this article reveal? Has a new
hormone been discovered that is secreted excessively in overweight people? Was
the obesity gene discovered and isolated, confirming that your genetics
determine whether fat is fate? Does blood sugar and insulin go haywire in
certain people regardless of how they eat or how they exercise? Has it finally
been proven that carbohydrates make us fat? Is the appetite mechanism in the
brains of overweight people out of kilter?
Nope, none of the above. The conclusions made in the article are refreshing
because they are the right ones, and the most obvious ones: The reason we are so
fat is because we eat too much and exercise too little. Surprise, surprise!
“For all the Americans who’ve blamed bulging bellies on a slow metabolism, the
jig is up,” says Newman. “A report earlier this year by the Center for Disease
Control (CDC) finally confirms what many of us didn’t want to admit: We’re fat
because we eat a lot – a whole lot more than we used to, and most of the
increase comes from refined carbohydrates (sugar).”
Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition at New York University is quoted in the
article as saying, "How about some common sense? It’s a simple matter of eating
fewer calories. But nobody wants to talk about calories because doing so does
not sell books."
Truer words have never been spoken. Unfortunately, few people want to listen to
that simple message, “Eat less, exercise more,” because everyone is too busy
looking for the latest breakthrough or the “next big thing in fat loss.”
Besides, fat loss couldn’t be that simple, could it?
Well, maybe fat loss isn't "easy", and certainly "eat less, exercise more" is an
OVER-simplification, but the fundamental cause of obesity really IS that simple
and the facts confirming it are now in:
According to the CDC report, we ate 1775 pounds of food per year per person in
2000, up from 1497 pounds in 1970.
In the 70’s we ate 136 pounds of flour and cereal products and now it’s up to
200 pounds per person – and the increase is almost all from processed, white
flour, high sugar foods. Not to mention, everything has been Super-sized.
Example: 1955 McDonald’s French fries – 2.4 ounces, 210 calories. 2004 Super
size Fries – 7 ounces, 610 calories.
When you add this increased food intake (mostly refined food) on top of the lack
of exercise encouraged by technology, cars, video games, television, washing
machines, riding lawnmowers, elevators and other modern conveniences, you have
the recipe for obesity on a global scale.
In all our searching and waiting for the latest scientific discovery, the newest
pill, or the next breakthrough supplement that will free us from the shackles of
body fat, most people have continued to overlook or ignore that simple and
obvious advice: “Eat less, exercise more.”
Is it really that simple? Isn’t there a lot more to it? Well, yes, of course.
There’s how much less do you eat, what do you eat, how much you exercise, what
kind of exercise and so on. But those are just details. Often what we must do,
in order to see the big picture clearly, is to reduce the problem to its most
basic level FIRST before worrying about any details.
A principle called Occam’s Razor was put forth by English philosopher and
theologian William Occam in the 14th century. It said, “Entities should not be
multiplied beyond what is necessary.” Differently stated, it says, “The simplest
and most obvious solution to a problem is usually the best one and the correct
one.”
Does accepting this simple answer to the obesity epidemic make the process of
losing the weight any easier? Perhaps not, at least not physically. Permanent
fat loss will always require sweat, discipline and effort, and will often be a
greater challenge for some than for others.
However, if we would stop allowing ourselves to be so caught up and immobilized
by the myriad of different weight loss methods and theories today and just
acknowledge, accept and practice the simple advice given to us in Newman's
article – which we’ve all heard a thousand times before – “Eat less, exercise
more,” we would not only be rewarded with results, we would also see the fog of
confusion that seems to shroud the whole “weight loss thing” begin to lift.
Certainty would take its place, and that would at least give us the confidence
to continue to forge ahead towards our goals.
Burn
the Fat, Feed the Muscle (BFFM) is a fat loss program and
lifestyle which acknowledges the real, simple solution to fat loss: “Eat (a
little) Less, Exercise (a whole lot) more. Don’t let yourself be a part of these
chilling obesity epidemic statistics.
Tom Venuto is a
lifetime natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, gym owner, freelance
writer and author of
Burn
the Fat, Feed the Muscle: Fat Burning Secrets of the World's Best
Bodybuilders and Fitness Models. Tom has written over 140 articles and has
been featured in IRONMAN magazine, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular
Development, Muscle-Zine, Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. Tom is the
Fat Loss Expert for
Global-Fitness.com and the nutrition editor for Femalemuscle.com and
his articles are featured regularly on literally dozens of other websites.