You can walk down any street in our country
and in front of you will be a large group of people who are waddling off to buy
a 1,000-calorie latte. When you
get on a plane to fly off on vacation, you know that secretly you’re praying
that a fat guy doesn’t sit next to you and take over half of your seat as well
as his own.
Likewise, when you have a ticket to a football game, you attempt to get there first before that overly plump fan arrives to try and take your allotted few inches of hard metal bench (unless you have a pricey ticket which may have separate seats).
Likewise, when you have a ticket to a football game, you attempt to get there first before that overly plump fan arrives to try and take your allotted few inches of hard metal bench (unless you have a pricey ticket which may have separate seats).
I know you remember an earlier blog and are
saying, “Coach Jay, you’re biased because you have a degree in Physical
Education.” What you don’t know
though, is that I got that degree partially because it bothered me to run into
PE coaches with bellies that looked like they had tucked a bowling ball under
their belts.
Okay, I’ll be honest too, I could use shedding
a few pounds. I’ve gained more
weight than I’d like lately, but I’m obsessed enough about the issue to want to
do something about it.
It all began years ago after I read “Fit or Fat?” by Covert Bailey. I was
working as a study hall monitor as I attempted to break into the Austin ISD
click as a PE teacher. One of the
biggest points I remembered about that book was Bailey explaining one big reason why we
gain weight as we age. It’s
because we eat like we're still kids.
As a child, you probably ran around constantly, driving your parents
wild but naturally burning off lots of calories.
As we age, we do less running around. Unfortunately, most people don’t adjust how many calories they take in daily. In other words, people are still eating the tons of food they could get away with as a child once they have passed college or high school and have joined the workforce.
As we age, we do less running around. Unfortunately, most people don’t adjust how many calories they take in daily. In other words, people are still eating the tons of food they could get away with as a child once they have passed college or high school and have joined the workforce.
Let me interject here that—as you can guess from above—it’s a myth that you naturally gain weight as you age. No, it’s not
part of the aging process. Although your lean muscle mass declines with age (thereby not burning as many calories as in your younger years), the real problem is that it’s part of Americans' habit to eat too much and not exercise.
One of the things I did after reading that book is that I decided
to just eat an apple for lunch.
Yeah, that’s a little extreme and I began to do a little more later in
life (probably why I could use with losing a few pounds now), but that was the
idea. I no longer was as active as previously, so I cut back on a lot of calories.
There are charts that give you estimates of how many calories you
should consume (also Body Mass Index charts to see where you stand) and you’ll note that it’s less as you age, and also
it’s less if you’re female. For example, an 18-year-old moderately
active male should consume 2800 while a female 2000. Once you hit 55, a male should take in 2400 cals, a female
1800.
Of course, Americans don’t do this. They do not cut back calories, instead preferring to amp
them up. Ergo, fat Americans.
I am often perplexed when driving home late at night and notice
big crowds of people in fast food places.
I always wonder why people are eating supper so late, but subconsciously
I know that they’re not eating supper—they’re eating a snack that has as many
calories as supper! That’s
insane! If you want a snack then
eat an apple (50 calories) rather than that 1,000-calorie double-meat hamburger
covered with cheese and sour cream and maybe an extra piece of bacon thrown on
top.
Of course, that won’t happen. Greasy food is too alluring, especially compared to an apple. It’s also super cheap. Plus, often it’s hard to find an apple because many cities have food deserts. They don’t have a grocery store nearby, instead they have 20 fast-food joints.
Fast food isn’t the only culprit in our national disgrace, we also
have an easier life than previously.
Now people will drive to the corner fast food place instead of walk down
the street to the Mom and Pop grocery store. Obese children are a big problem in the US nowadays
partially because they find it more fun to play games on the computer, rather
than tag or hide-n-seek outdoors.
Admittedly, it’s difficult to make lifestyle changes once you’ve
gotten into a well-worn and comfortable rut. However, if you are tired of folks like me trying to shame
you into changing, then maybe you should give it a shot.
There are a few simple things you can do to start the
process. One is to weigh yourself
every morning. Buy one of those
cheap digital scales and hop on it when you get up. No, it won’t take pounds off you, but it will begin to make
you think about your weight more seriously. If you weigh yourself and notice you gained a pound since
yesterday, it may not stop you from grabbing that donut during a coffee break
that morning, but you may begin to think twice. And that’s a start.
Also, consciously think about those calories you consume. We were supposed to have menus at
restaurants and charts at food stores showing the calories available by now,
but sadly, Trump in his anti-regulation craze has delayed (if not stopped) this
from happening. So you’ll have to
either guess or look it up somewhere.
Do it though. Find out how
many calories are in that Big Mac before you buy/eat it. Like the scale idea, it may not stop
you from consuming, but again it may begin to change your perception of what
you’re putting in your mouth.
Another thing to try is to find snacks you might enjoy and that
are low in calories. For example,
years ago I read an article about what are the best fruits and discovered that
watermelon was #2 (guava #1). I
like watermelon. So I decided to
buy a seedless one and cut it up into small chunks and have it sitting around
to snack on instead of something like calorie rich chips or M & Ms. Find
one you really like and snack away.
And don't get me started on exercise. Of course you need to do this (as well as watch your calories). Not just for weight, but because it will improve your health and mental well being.
Lastly, don’t give yourself or your friends a pass. Don’t say “she’s naturally big-boned”
or “he is too busy to exercise” or any of the hundreds of apologies/excuses you
or your friends may use. Sure,
some people gain weight because of medications or other unavoidable
occurrences—but those are the rare occasions. This epidemic won’t resolve
itself until we all resolve to fix it.
So next time your coworker invites you to lunch at some diner or
fancy establishment, counter-offer that he/she join you on a walk to the park a
few blocks away and present him/her with half of your apple. Tell them Coach Jay insists.
I like your counter-offer idea. I'd also like to add that lots of gas station stores do actually have (a very limited selection of) fruit now.
ReplyDeleteYou're reminding of a diet plan that a friend of mine told me about that he called the little kid diet: eat everything you want; run everywhere you go.
I'll also add that I am highly opposed to fat-shaming. There are a lot of factors involved from added sugar in virtually everything, weird hormone/plastic/whatever mysterious effects (even lab animals weigh more now than in the past), and hormone problems. Plus, super fat people are still worthwhile human beings of course.
That said, I agree with exercising more, eating better, and in some cases eating less.
As for me, my weight used to be one of the two things I could totally control. Now it's just my finances. :-(
Daily weighing has shown me some surprising things such as that eating home-made cookies does not make me weigh more the next day, but having extra cheese does. Everyone's different!
I like to try find recipes that let me eat stuff I love with minimum crap in it. I cook only with whole wheat flour now (both white whole wheat flour and whole wheat pastry flour taste just as good as white flour to me, but they have fiber). And I keep cutting sugar until I get down to the minimum I still love (cutting down to one part sugar: one part cocoa always works for me).
I haven't tried just an apple for lunch, but I have tried just a salad. No matter how big it is and how much cheese or nuts I put in there, I still feel unsatisfied, so I'm working on finding something decent to accompany that.
Sometimes chocolate syrup mixed with yogurt satisfies a craving for serious chocolate. (And I make chocolate syrup by boiling 1 cup sugar, 1 cup cocoa, 1 cup water for 1 minute.) It's plenty of sugar, but still less than in pre-sweetened yogurt. So I still eat plenty of delicious crap (I enjoyed your pictures of fried food), but do try to eat less than as-much-as-I-want.
I'm also trying to find fun exercises. I like the usefulness of jogging. I like how doing push-ups makes me feel macho. (Not that I can do real push-ups yet. Grr.) I have an exercise tape I like that makes me feel kind of used up but kind of good at the end. And this summer, I'm going to get season passes at Typhoon Texas and try out the ropes course with a friend.
Hi Debbie, thanks for reading and commenting. I was leery of shaming because as a coach I've been schooled in positive reinforcement. However, we're at epidemic levels now and too many people just let others (or themselves) off the hook too easily and so there are no repercussions and people continue to abuse themselves. like your food suggestions. Good luck in the Typhoon ;-)
ReplyDeleteI have never been to Typhoon Texas, so we'll see!
ReplyDelete