swimmer2 said:
Sid's statement that (and paraphrasing Sid, sorry) - that if I eat more than I use I will get fatter - is a rather loaded statement, because whilst (with the caveats you've all given) it's basically true, it implies that it's my fault if I become obese. In fact this was the argument given by the lady on the programme who defended the US food companies. Even without the suggestion that sugar affects my brain, we are talking about a commodity that we require to live. If food production uses ingredients that damage our health across such a wide spectrum of food types and this is done for profit reasons, then even if the ingredients weren't addictive the practice couldn't be described as moral. Suggesting I don't eat ANY processed food is hardly helpful, since is very difficult (not to mention expensive) not to.
There is one other thing that was mentioned in last nights program that has until now not been discussed and that was 'snacking' or eating between meals, which is something that was never ever done when I was growing up. And nowadays a whole industry has developed to sell us stuff to eat between meals or to sell us things to eat 'on the go', there is now a Greggs or similar on every high street selling nothing but sandwiches, rolls and pastry items, sausage rolls, pies etc etc. Instead of the Cadbury's chocolate bar that I would get as a treat as a lad, today there are a million different chock bars and sweets that are there to tempt the passing consumer.
But, it is not mandatory to eat these things, when you walk past a Greggs no one rushes out and says "wanna buy some carbs mate" Greggs arent drug dealers they are selling perfectly legal and legitimate food items, but what did we eat before they came along? Well breakfast, lunch and dinner thats what, when we filled the car with petrol a 'man' ran out of the garage and did it for us so we didnt have to queue next to a display of chocolate bars and crisps. Oh and crisps lol,
when I were a lad lol, it was Smiths potato crisps that came with a little bag of salt, that was it, there were no other flavours, no choice, today you can buy pretty much any flavour you can think of in any shape you can imagine.
So whats the point of this historical rant, well there is now all this stuff available 24 hours a day to tempt us
BUT it is still up to us whether we eat it or not. I have been overweight since my late teens as I stated earlier in this thread or another one, not obese, that came later but certainly overweight, and I got to be overweight by eating and drinking too much, I cant blame the food industry because I ate too much, I have no one to blame but myself for eating 3 chocolate bars a day and having twice as much for lunch as I needed. It wasnt till my diabetes diagnosis that I started looking at what I was eating and I was staggered at the amount of rubbish I was stuffing my face with.
We cant turn back the clock to the 1950's or 60's we have moved on, we have to decide what we will eat and if we chose to overeat that is our choice, I think to blame the food industry for obesity is naive, a bit like blaming the automotive industry for the general lack of exercise today, we need to temper convenience with self discipline, I could drive to the local shop or I could leave the car at home and walk or I could eat a whole packet of Jaffa Cakes or I could just have one and put the rest back in the cupboard or better still just buy them for a treat for the kids to have occasionally, cos lets face it, no one
needs a Jaffa Cake, ever, do they?