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Why We’re Overweight


It seems simple – almost as easy as the easiest mathematical equation. Eat less, burn more calories through exercise and activity, and we will all be at our ideal weight. If it were as simple as that, then why are more than 60% of people in the western world overweight and more than 25% obese? Why we are so much fatter than our parents were 30 years ago? After all, there are more sports clubs, fitness centers and gyms than ever before. Let’s take a look back to see when and how the overweight epidemic began.

After the 1972 Olympics, road races gained in popularity and physical fitness became popular as well. By 1978, according to U.S. News and World Report, America was in the midst of “fitness mania.” But, it was also about this time that obesity rates began the rise that continues to this day. Yes – there is a genetic predisposition for many, which makes them more prone to being overweight, and some people do have a naturally higher metabolism, but basically weight gain works like this:  if we consume more fuel than we burn, we get fat. Does this happen from the occasional binge, the extra slice of pizza or the extra scoop of ice cream? This is most likely not the case; rather, it is usually a slow and gradual process. Let’s say that you eat 2,300 calories a day and only use 2,000 or so. Everyday you are left with 300 extra calories that turn into extra pounds every few weeks. Aside from this, driving instead of walking 20 minutes on a daily basis is good for gaining 5 pounds per year. Drinking a single can of Coke every other day will add another 4 pounds. As you see, it’s just a few extra grams a day and a few pounds a year, but that’s enough to create the epidemic which includes a wide range of disease and illness, and which kills 325,000 per year just in the United States alone.

It is no accident that about the time that this epidemic started, the low-fat and no-fat phenomena began. People think that just because their food is lower in fat, they can eat as much as they want. Not true! You can get fat on brown rice and whole wheat bread if you eat enough of it, let alone reduced fat cookies, frozen yogurt and dietetic cakes. These foods tend to have more sugar and can even be higher in calories than their non-dietetic counterparts. In fact, the American Heart Association has modified their endorsement of these types of foods, to advise consumers of this information.

What is the alternative? First, learn how to read food labels. Check the number of calories per serving, not just the fat content. Second, eat more fresh produce and other fiber-rich foods. More bulk and fiber tend to reduce the sensation of hunger for a long period of time. But most important, watch the size of your portions! Once upon a time, people would go out to eat and consume normal amounts of food, even though it was the high fat, fast food variety. Today everything is super-sized and oversized. The portions have gotten bigger and so has the public (at large). Consumers are getting more for their money but, as it turn out, more of the wrong stuff – more coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes, various cancers and a host of other health problems. What a bargain… NOT!

Learning proper portion control and expending calories through proper exercise and activity are important ways to “add hours to your day, days to your year and years to your life.” 

Alan Freishtat is an A.C.E. CERTIFIED PERSONAL TRAINER and a LIFESTYLE FITNESS COACH with over 15 years of professional experience. He is the co-director of the Jerusalem-based weight loss and stress reduction center Lose It! along with Linda Holtz M.Sc. and is available for private consultations, assessments and personalized workout programs. Alan also lectures and gives seminars and workshops. He can be reached at 02-651-8502 or 050-555-7175, or by email at [email protected]  www.loseit.co.il  US Line 516-568-5027

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)



8 Responses

  1. A tip I’ve heard – use a smaller plate. The same size serving will fill up more of the plate and look like it’s bigger!

  2. Lowfat and fat-free foods leave you feeling hungry. Believe it or not, consuming foods containing saturated fats is healthy and necessary to keep you feeling full. Saturated fat does not cause heart disease or other issues. On the contrary, your body needs it to develop the proper cells that are constantly being created. The main cause of all health issues and obesity today is the consumption of to many carbohydrates, high fructose corn syrup and transfat.
    For more on this topic, listen to R’ Hersh Meisels on Kol M’vaser hotline (if you understand yiddish). You will be amazed and enlightened.

  3. bla bla bla. this author has an agenda and it drips from each and every column of his in each at each and every media outlet.

    when a manufacturer makes a “free” or “reduced” version of their real product, they are adding something to help offset the missing flavor provided by the missing ingredient.

    there is NO sure method of losing weight or staying thin. you have to find what works for you and stick to it. most diets leave you STARVING which is why they DONT work.

  4. I do indeed have an agenda–the health and well being of Clal Yisrael. There is no one more against “diets” than I am. In Lose It!, we don’t even use the word. We give a program to help ensure that our weight loss clients aren’t hungry. And if they are, we modify the program.

  5. I agree with what the author and Ploni Almony are saying but you should also know that adding fluoride to the water is a major contributor to obesity. It lowers the thyroid function and in turn makes you sluggish and fat. Proof is that in the countries that fluoride is added to the water (England and USA) as opposed to countries (the rest of Europe) where fluoride is not added to the water there is many times the amount of obesity. Speak to your local councilman and ask to have this toxic substance removed from the water supply.

  6. anon poster, that’s interesting. Do you mean that most people in the US, if you would test them, would have thyroid numbers putting them in the category of needing supplementation?

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