Obesity in America is an epidemic that not only threatens the quality of American living, but American lives. The Centers for Disease Control estimate that roughly a third of Americans are overweight, with 20 percent of us qualifying as obese. During the last two decades. there has been an annual 1 percent increase in the ranks of the overweight. Worse, it is even affecting the very young. 15% of children between ages six and nineteen are overweight, and 10% of those between two and five. John Foreyt of Baylor College of Medicine warns, "This may be the first generation of children who will die before their parents." Like the Coneheads, we are assuming mass quantities and society is prepping us for this acceptance of obesity. Seats in newer movie theaters are on average 20% wider. Everything in America is bigger and not necessarily better: Corporations (through mergers), our responsibilities at work (by downsizing our co-workers and their checks and doling out additional responsibilities to the remaining workers), even the style of clothes being worn—oversized—is another form of this subliminal seduction. The most telling sign of this is that according to one manufacturer, shopping carts are 50% wider than twenty years ago. Why? Because they hold more food, and thus we are hypnotized to fill the cart with more food. We buy more food, we consume more food. The reasons for American's "girth spurt" are many fold, ranging from our sedentary lifestyles and love of television, to our poor diets. German researcher John Komlos, PhD, points the finger at American impatience! He contends this all began in the seventies, when Americans stopped planning for the future, and thus spent more and saved less of their income. He argues that there is a causal relationship between Americans saving less and the frightening level of weight gain in this country. Because we live in a society that promotes instant gratification, we in turn devalue our future, and what we would have saved for our future is instead spent on sources of instant gratification—TV's, video games and grub! Despite having not read the entire study, I believe nonetheless that this theory is way off base. So why are Americans the only ones "beefing up", and why so rapidly? The most popular argument is that the American lifestyle is at fault. That we worship automation and sedentary living—surfing the net, excessive television viewing and constant playing of video games. Others contend we eat too much and exercise too little. But the problem goes beyond computers and caloric intake. I place the blame at the doorstep of the food manufacturers. These persons, simply put, are mad doctors. They lace our food with chemicals—mostly Monosodium Glutamate (MSG)--which leave us addicted and trick our brains into believing that we are hungry, even if we have eaten but a few hours before. Exacerbating the problem is our intake of "fast" and processed foods, which are laden with sugars, fats, and trans-fatty acids. Another reason is that we live in the age of "super-sized" meals. At some restaurants you can Super-size your meal for 49 cents more, meaning you get a larger order of fries and a soft drink you can drown in. Some restaurants have value priced menus ($1.29 or less) offering foods that are laden with artery-clogging, belly busting fat. Carl's Jr. alone has enough burgers on its menu that would make a pothead salivate just thinking about them. Snack foods are relatively inexpensive and are combining flavors to make them more appealing. Vending machines dispensing foods high in fat and low in nutritional value are placed on intermediate and high school campuses across America. Last night I even heard someone on a talk show make a reference to a hot link dipped in, of all things, chocolate. Beatrice Lorge Rogers, professor of economics and food policy at Tufts University's Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy contends, ""Portion sizes have increased dramatically since the 1950s." She cites Pepsi Cola's jingle from that day: "Pepsi-Cola hits the spot, 12 full ounces, that's a lot." Then she elaborates: "(12-ounces) is not a lot any more. For decades, 12 ounces (itself a move up from earlier 6.5- and 10-ounce bottles) was the standard serv
About the author: Timothy Stelly is the 46-year old author of three novels, including "Like A Straight-Up Sucka." He resides in Pittsburg, California with his three youngest children Dante, Kimberly and Lawrence.