|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 13:21:57 GMT
I wanted everyone to read this article because I think it is disgusting what these companies will stoop to doing. But basically it talks about how users of weight loss drugs are either choosing healthier options or their cravings/taste has changed so they are not indulging in as much ultra-processed foods. And the Big Food companies are actively trying now to develop products that will circumvent the healthier choices people are making. Gift Link: Ozempic Could Crush the Junk Food Industry. But It Is Fighting Back.I know we have a lot of people here taking these drugs with different effects and much success. I, myself, am still on the fence about them. However, I have always believed that ultra-processed foods are not healthy and whole food eating is the way. So, I have thought for a long while that Big Food is as bad as Big Tobacco. But this attitude is even more insidious. I'm just, I hate this whole thing.
|
|
|
Post by jill8909 on Nov 20, 2024 13:40:13 GMT
thank you for gifting this article. The market is going to have to win this fight. It's only when people like me stop buying these awful foods that those companies will have to find another way to make money.
|
|
|
Post by bbkeef on Nov 20, 2024 14:00:12 GMT
Very interesting. I have a couple friends that have lost significant amounts of weight on the GLP-1 meds. I'll have to ask them if their tastes have changed. I know mine changed after having gastric bypass surgery. I can't tolerate packaged sweet treats like ho hos or twinkies, etc. either (mentioned in the article). They leave a weird film in my mouth and taste of chemicals. I do crave healthier foods-but I grew up in an ingredients house with very little packaged food used. I have always been a vegetable lover. It was interesting to me the people they studied seemed to crave fresh produce, but most of it mentioned was fruit.
|
|
lisaknits
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,535
May 28, 2015 16:14:56 GMT
|
Post by lisaknits on Nov 20, 2024 14:00:14 GMT
Thank you so much for sharing this link!
|
|
|
Post by iamkristinl16 on Nov 20, 2024 14:01:19 GMT
That's horrible and frustrating. I watched a Sanjay Gupta special on CNN that talked about Ozempic and similar meds. I have also listened to his podcast and I believe he had one of the doctors on an episode that was in the TV special. That doctor says that obesity is a disease and my understanding was that he was implying that people don't have any control over that. I don't think it is that simple. The experts are seeing that these meds can have positive impacts on various health issues, which is great. But I think we need to have a better understanding of how people get to the point that they need these meds to begin with. That is not to blame people, but to look at why we have more people with issues like obesity, behavioral and mental health disorders, etc now than we did in the past. I think it likely comes down to food and environmental factors but we need to know details of that. Are our bodies not getting what they need to naturally increase the hormones that we need to regulate these issues? If so, why? The answer is less processed food, not even more hyper-processed food.
|
|
SweetieBsMom
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,784
Jun 25, 2014 19:55:12 GMT
|
Post by SweetieBsMom on Nov 20, 2024 14:15:39 GMT
Thank you for sharing the article. Interesting read. I do agree that "Big Food" is just as bad as big tobacco. The fact that there are things still in food in the US that have been banned in other countries illustrates that.
|
|
Tearisci
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,236
Member is Online
Nov 6, 2018 16:34:30 GMT
|
Post by Tearisci on Nov 20, 2024 14:18:37 GMT
Very interesting. I'm just now starting to experience taste change with my latest increase on Mounjaro. I take it for diabetes but would Love to lose some weight on it as well.
Two things I've noticed so far is that I am full much faster and meals I used to love don't interest me anymore. I haven't really noticed anything around processed or fast food yet but it wouldn't surprise me if I lost my taste for those as well. My brain still thinks I'll enjoy the meals I've made but after a few bites, I'm done.
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 14:51:36 GMT
The market is going to have to win this fight. It's only when people like me stop buying these awful foods that those companies will have to find another way to make money. I agree with this, but I hate that these companies can get away with very little regulation over what they pass off as food. There is this delicate balance, I think, between government regulation without becoming a nanny state and freedom to make choices despite how stupid and frequent they might be. There are so many arguments from cost to availability in relation to fresh foods and I get that. But those of us who are in a position to make better choices need to be advocating for people who aren't. I love cooking and I haven't yet met a vegetable I didn't like. (I thought I hated beets because of those god-awful pickled ones, but turns out, a roasted beet is delicious) I love baking and I cannot tell you the last time I had a store-bought cookie. And yet, some nights, I don't have it in me to cook and well, I will resort these days to raw vegetables and a can of beans with a slice of toasted sourdough. Nothing about that is sexy. So I think the biggest issue driving this is convenience. Until we have good options that are convenient and healthy, people are going to just do what they do, choose what they choose because the taste of a Stouffer's lasagna is not near as good as my homemade one, but it's way more attractive that my beans, raw veggies, sourdough dinner. And that's where I think they are going to make their headway. Convenience.
|
|
|
Post by rainangel on Nov 20, 2024 14:52:58 GMT
Very interesting article, thank you for sharing!
|
|
iowgirl
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,314
Jun 25, 2014 22:52:46 GMT
|
Post by iowgirl on Nov 20, 2024 15:14:50 GMT
Very enlightening. I have always found things like Hostess cakes and such have a weird mouth feel and taste plastic. I can still manage to eat them! Oatmeal Creme Pies are my nemesis. I seldom buy them, but at harvest I like to put one in my lunch bag.
I crave things like fried chicken and salty foods. I can easily bypass the sweets, but dang - I love a good burger! And I love root beer. I try not to buy it, but I love one of those little tiny cans of A&W rootbeer... ugh! I can't do the diet pops either. I'd rather go without.
I was lucky enough to be at home when my kids were little, and we had very little processed food. I made their baby food from what we were eating at that meal. I never pushed the 'clean your plate' agenda. I did let them have treats, because I feel like if you forbid that type of food, they go for it with a vengeance when they can. School lunches now are horrible. I'm going to slam on Michelle Obama for that. While I think her intentions were good, the results were not. Our school lunches went from a mostly homemade meal that the kids liked and ate to pre-packaged food that had no taste and an 800 calorie limit per meal. UnCrustables on a school lunch menu! I am horrified! While that is a lot of calories, the food they were serving was ultra processed and nasty. They just were figuring the 800 calories, the rest be damned. They also reduced the cooking staff, so that was all they could get put out. No peanut butter or anything like that allowed. My kids were starving, as teenage athletes. I made sure I sent something along they could eat, and as parents we cooked meals for them to eat before they went to sporting events.
Thank you for linking a gift article that we could open without a paywall!
|
|
|
Post by iamkristinl16 on Nov 20, 2024 15:17:35 GMT
Very enlightening. I have always found things like Hostess cakes and such have a weird mouth feel and taste plastic. I can still manage to eat them! Oatmeal Creme Pies are my nemesis. I seldom buy them, but at harvest I like to put one in my lunch bag. I crave things like fried chicken and salty foods. I can easily bypass the sweets, but dang - I love a good burger! And I love root beer. I try not to buy it, but I love one of those little tiny cans of A&W rootbeer... ugh! I can't do the diet pops either. I'd rather go without. I was lucky enough to be at home when my kids were little, and we had very little processed food. I made their baby food from what we were eating at that meal. I never pushed the 'clean your plate' agenda. I did let them have treats, because I feel like if you forbid that type of food, they go for it with a vengeance when they can. School lunches now are horrible. I'm going to slam on Michelle Obama for that. While I think her intentions were good, the results were not. Our school lunches went from a mostly homemade meal that the kids liked and ate to pre-packaged food that had no taste and an 800 calorie limit per meal. UnCrustables on a school lunch menu! I am horrified! While that is a lot of calories, the food they were serving was ultra processed and nasty. They just were figuring the 800 calories, the rest be damned. They also reduced the cooking staff, so that was all they could get put out. No peanut butter or anything like that allowed. My kids were starving, as teenage athletes. I made sure I sent something along they could eat, and as parents we cooked meals for them to eat before they went to sporting events. Thank you for linking a gift article that we could open without a paywall! Was all of that because of Michelle Obama or other changes during that time and since?
|
|
|
Post by leftturnonly on Nov 20, 2024 15:32:17 GMT
This is not intended as a political statement.
Robert Kennedy Jr has been appointed DHHS for these very reasons. He's been fighting these companies a long time and maybe more than anyone else he is on to their manipulations.
It's going to get very interesting!
|
|
|
Post by scrapmaven on Nov 20, 2024 15:49:52 GMT
That was a truly interesting article. It talks about big food vs. big pharma, two industries that are all sorts of underhanded. I have a love of Ho-Ho's that goes back for decades. Though I haven't had one in several years. Since I don't eat 99% of food, because I can't I might not be the best person to weigh in here. However, I feed a family and I wish that they had grown up with much healthier food. Produce shouldn't be an alternative. It should be the focus point of a meal w/protein.
That so many people have a diet of processed food is a sad fact of life in this country. It's interesting that other countries like France have a much "smaller" population, but they eat butter, cream, etc. Perhaps the difference is due to the fact that they use fresh ingredients and smaller portions. The low calorie/reduced fat stuff is loaded w/chemicals and I wonder about the damage that processed foods are doing to our bodies?
I'm most interested to find out the long term effects of the weight loss drugs. Over time will they prove to be a miracle drug or will we find out that they cause significant damage to the body? It scares me that big food and big pharma might start working together. If we start eating produce and lean proteins more than junk then companies lose money or go out of business. Likewise, if cures happen for disease then big pharma is out of business. We're crash test dummies.
|
|
|
Post by ~summer~ on Nov 20, 2024 15:53:31 GMT
It’s amazing that the food industry wants to make junk food in plastic bags more appealing than a perfect, delicious plum.
|
|
naby64
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,418
Jun 25, 2014 21:44:13 GMT
|
Post by naby64 on Nov 20, 2024 15:56:39 GMT
Very interesting read. I have read something in the past month or so sort of saying the same thing. I can't remember where I read it but it was basically saying you know how when you eat a Lay's potato chip and you can't eat just one? Well, you can't. The Big Food scientists are figuring out how to make those items even more addicting. I am a savory person more than a sweet person. But I do like those Little Debbie Christmas Trees, not gonna lie. Are they good for me, do anything for me? Nope, not one bit. But at 9pm, when I remember the spot I hid them, I will grab one before I grab an apple. And yes, I do hide them from myself and it usually is a game I win. However, I am an emotional eater. Addicts of some sort run in our family's DNA.
I have been wanting to think on the use of GLP-1s but the cost is keeping me away. What I do know is when I eat correctly and for me that is whole foods, I feel better. When I work very hard to not have fast food for lunch, I see a difference on the scales and the way my clothes fit. Then I hit a wall and I break and reach for the Christmas tree. Or the Oreos that DH must have in the house. I really need to tell him those need to stay in his office. I am really good if I don't see it, I won't crave or eat it.
My autoimmune issues have taught me a lot of my aches, pains, etc will flare with foods I eat. I have wondered for a very long time if our eating (the US) habits and the foods that are out there have contributed to the rise in the health crisis. Not just the obesity factor. But general overall health. And knowing that the Big Food industry is actively doing what they are doing to the food truly makes me believe they are walking hand in hand with big pharma. You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours kind of thing. I have discussed with my rheumatologist alternate things to get off some of my meds for my fibro. He is 1000% behind getting off as much many as possible. Unless there is no alternative for the need.
I used to love to cook and then just hit the blahs. I do love it when I know it will be enjoyed and eaten. The past couple of months, I am getting a bit of spark back. I am hoping that 2025 is the year I take me back.
|
|
|
Post by crimsoncat05 on Nov 20, 2024 15:59:30 GMT
I wanted everyone to read this article because I think it is disgusting what these companies will stoop to doing. But basically it talks about how users of weight loss drugs are either choosing healthier options or their cravings/taste has changed so they are not indulging in as much ultra-processed foods. And the Big Food companies are actively trying now to develop products that will circumvent the healthier choices people are making. Gift Link: Ozempic Could Crush the Junk Food Industry. But It Is Fighting Back.I know we have a lot of people here taking these drugs with different effects and much success. I, myself, am still on the fence about them. However, I have always believed that ultra-processed foods are not healthy and whole food eating is the way. So, I have thought for a long while that Big Food is as bad as Big Tobacco. But this attitude is even more insidious. I'm just, I hate this whole thing. but RFK Jr will fix it! He'll get them to make the food healthier! /s (sorry for making this political... it's just the ultra-cynical sh!tty moods I'm in today. He will NOT FIX IT, by the way, in case anyone wonders.) But these companies ARE just as insidious as big tobacco (they're using the tobacco playbook after all), and HAVE gotten Americans hooked on sweeter, fattier, saltier foods. And they know they're doing it. For the $$$. (which is why RFK Jr. will NOT be able to fix it, for the people in the back.)
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 16:02:50 GMT
I'm going to slam on Michelle Obama for that. While I think her intentions were good, the results were not I find this interesting because I don't think her effects were even much noticeable. I had one child who ate school lunch frequently and I had another who wouldn't touch it. My children attended 6 different public schools between 2004 and 2018. I didn't see any noticeable change at all in quality.
|
|
|
Post by crimsoncat05 on Nov 20, 2024 16:03:13 GMT
It’s amazing that the food industry wants to make junk food in plastic bags more appealing than a perfect, delicious plum. the McDonald's corp, or Keebler, or Kraft, DOESN'T MAKE ANY MONEY off of that perfect delicious plum. And plums (or any other fruit / vegetable) don't have lobbying / marketing councils, the way beef, chicken, pork, sugar, eggs, corn, etc. do. So there will never be commercials about JUST HOW GOOD those delicious plums taste, or how good they are for you. But eggs, or chicken, or sugar... THOSE have plenty of marketing and lobbying money.
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 16:05:19 GMT
Robert Kennedy Jr has been appointed DHHS for these very reasons. He's been fighting these companies a long time and maybe more than anyone else he is on to their manipulations. While I will agree that he's on to these companies' manipulations, I have very little hope that he will make any difference in any way. Because Big Food has a lot of sway in politics. I don't believe at all that business interests will be put in jeopardy over public health interests because they haven't all this time. No matter which administration is in power. (I think he was chosen because his last name is Kennedy and he's anti-vaccine)
|
|
|
Post by scrapmaven on Nov 20, 2024 16:06:43 GMT
Very interesting read. I have read something in the past month or so sort of saying the same thing. I can't remember where I read it but it was basically saying you know how when you eat a Lay's potato chip and you can't eat just one? Well, you can't. The Big Food scientists are figuring out how to make those items even more addicting. I am a savory person more than a sweet person. But I do like those Little Debbie Christmas Trees, not gonna lie. Are they good for me, do anything for me? Nope, not one bit. But at 9pm, when I remember the spot I hid them, I will grab one before I grab an apple. And yes, I do hide them from myself and it usually is a game I win. However, I am an emotional eater. Addicts of some sort run in our family's DNA. I have been wanting to think on the use of GLP-1s but the cost is keeping me away. What I do know is when I eat correctly and for me that is whole foods, I feel better. When I work very hard to not have fast food for lunch, I see a difference on the scales and the way my clothes fit. Then I hit a wall and I break and reach for the Christmas tree. Or the Oreos that DH must have in the house. I really need to tell him those need to stay in his office. I am really good if I don't see it, I won't crave or eat it. My autoimmune issues have taught me a lot of my aches, pains, etc will flare with foods I eat. I have wondered for a very long time if our eating (the US) habits and the foods that are out there have contributed to the rise in the health crisis. Not just the obesity factor. But general overall health. And knowing that the Big Food industry is actively doing what they are doing to the food truly makes me believe they are walking hand in hand with big pharma. You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours kind of thing. I have discussed with my rheumatologist alternate things to get off some of my meds for my fibro. He is 1000% behind getting off as much many as possible. Unless there is no alternative for the need. I used to love to cook and then just hit the blahs. I do love it when I know it will be enjoyed and eaten. The past couple of months, I am getting a bit of spark back. I am hoping that 2025 is the year I take me back. Don't wait until 2025. Start now. Take yourself back and start making yourself happy now.
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 16:13:49 GMT
Produce shouldn't be an alternative. It should be the focus point of a meal w/protein. If we start eating produce and lean proteins more than junk then companies lose money or go out of business. There is a cultural issue at play here even within this. My morning breakfast consists of 1/3c rolled oats, 2/3 cup plain soy milk, 1 T each chia seeds, hemp seed, and ground flax seeds. I chill that overnight and then microwave in the morning because i like my oatmeal warm. Then I add 1/2-1 banana and a tablespoon of peanut butter. My morning oatmeal has more protein than two eggs. Eating plant based for a while now, I have to say that people cannot seem to get beyond the idea of meat & eggs = protein. It's happening in my own house. Last night I made BBQ chickpeas, crispy smashed potatoes, and broccoli. My husband insisted on a chicken breast. And then the chicken breast he brought home was bigger than the serving of broccoli he took. And then he followed up his dinner with a bowl of cocoa pebbles and milk. I've been setting a good example here, trying to change a mind, cooking everything for him, and I still can't get him to believe that it is a meal without meat. The serving I had of the broccoli last night was half my plate. Yet, the veggie is just something to throw on the side of his meat and potato. Produce seems to my mind to be an uncreative after thought (for reference see the dinner thread and how many people don't even talk on the regular about what produce is involved in their dinner) for darn near everybody and I can't even change up that mentality in my own house.
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 16:15:31 GMT
The past couple of months, I am getting a bit of spark back. I am hoping that 2025 is the year I take me back. Do it! Do it! I'm going to join you on this train! Don't wait until 2025. Start now. Take yourself back and start making yourself happy now. Yes! Me too!
|
|
naby64
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,418
Jun 25, 2014 21:44:13 GMT
|
Post by naby64 on Nov 20, 2024 16:28:56 GMT
scrapmaven I am making small baby steps now. I love the cheerleader that you are. There are holidays and a wedding between now and the end of the year. I will do the best I can on the days I can. I am hoping that 2025 is the no excuses year for me. I have a rower, a stationary bike, a walking pad, weights and 2 dogs that need walking. I make the excuses every.dang.day! jeremysgirl are you sure your DH and my DH are not somehow in the same gene pool? The exact thing will happen at dinner for us. He feels there must always be a meat and some starchy veggie on the plate. I will do broccoli and it is like a toddler made his plate. Just enough for me to see he has some. I am like you. There really is no veggie that I have tried that I don't like. I love love roasted brussels sprouts. That is an ABSOLUTELY no touch for DH. For me, I need to learn how to make my veggies seem substantial. I know how the whole protein numbers stuff work out. You are right that it is a old fashioned mind set of what used to be thought of as "good for you" as to what we now know works out better for you. I really to be more on my game for breakfast and have it ready to grab from the fridge. Get in my rut and stay in it. So let's cheer each other on!!
|
|
|
Post by monklady123 on Nov 20, 2024 16:46:30 GMT
The market is going to have to win this fight. It's only when people like me stop buying these awful foods that those companies will have to find another way to make money. I agree with this, but I hate that these companies can get away with very little regulation over what they pass off as food. There is this delicate balance, I think, between government regulation without becoming a nanny state and freedom to make choices despite how stupid and frequent they might be. There are so many arguments from cost to availability in relation to fresh foods and I get that. But those of us who are in a position to make better choices need to be advocating for people who aren't. I love cooking and I haven't yet met a vegetable I didn't like. (I thought I hated beets because of those god-awful pickled ones, but turns out, a roasted beet is delicious) I love baking and I cannot tell you the last time I had a store-bought cookie. And yet, some nights, I don't have it in me to cook and well, I will resort these days to raw vegetables and a can of beans with a slice of toasted sourdough. Nothing about that is sexy. So I think the biggest issue driving this is convenience. Until we have good options that are convenient and healthy, people are going to just do what they do, choose what they choose because the taste of a Stouffer's lasagna is not near as good as my homemade one, but it's way more attractive that my beans, raw veggies, sourdough dinner. And that's where I think they are going to make their headway. Convenience. I grew up with my mother eating those pickled beets, the most disgusting thing ever in my child's mind. Then I got my first Instant Pot and discovered that beets are lovely! I pressure cook them, then eat them warm with salt, or cold with feta cheese and a vinaigrette dressing. mmmmm Can't comment on the rest of it yet because I haven't read the article, although I'm sure I agree with everything everyone else has said about the processed food/snack business.
|
|
|
Post by Merge on Nov 20, 2024 16:48:42 GMT
So I have a confession to make - after posting some long post here a while back about how I wouldn't use semaglutide (though I've never criticized others for doing so), on impulse, I signed up with a company that does weight loss with compounded semaglutide.
I'm currently on week 7 and have lost 13 lbs.
What is relevant to this conversation: yes, I'm eating a lot less. Like there is no point in taking me to a restaurant. Snack food? No interest. I'm very worried about losing muscle, though, so I eat a lot of protein, and the easiest way to get that is through protein shakes and bars. I do my best to buy ones that don't contain more additives than they need to, but there's no getting around that these are highly processed foods. I supplement those with simple whole foods - usually just protein like salmon or chicken and a veggie or fruit. But there's no denying that I am now consuming more highly processed food each day than I have in years.
I'm sure it would be better for me to find whole food ways to get adequate nutrition, but honestly I can't eat enough real food in one day to get the amount of protein and fiber I'm supposed to have. Another problem is that I'm tired. Exhausted, actually. I assume this is because I'm not eating "enough" (I am tracking and average about 1000 calories per day) but I cannot eat more. The exhaustion has also made working out very difficult as I simply don't have the energy for it. And it means that food preparation, which takes both forethought and physical energy, is difficult. I'm hoping this phase of tiredness will pass because I can't imagine spending the rest of my life like this.
I don't know what the answer is. I haven't been a real consumer of Big Food for years, so they're not feeling any pinch from me continuing not to buy their products. It seems to me that if they want to reel in the Ozempic crowd, the best thing they can do is make high-quality products that deliver maximum nutritional benefit with the least volume.
|
|
|
Post by mom on Nov 20, 2024 17:00:17 GMT
This is not intended as a political statement. Robert Kennedy Jr has been appointed DHHS for these very reasons. He's been fighting these companies a long time and maybe more than anyone else he is on to their manipulations. It's going to get very interesting! While I am not a fan of Kennedy, I am anxious for someone to take on Big Food. And as you've said, he's been fighting them for years. IMHO, Big Food is worse than Big Tobacco - you can drill into your children not to use tobacco but it's much, much harder to teach our kids to avoid process foods (they're everywhere) and to avoid the dangers of the extra crap going into our food.
|
|
|
Post by Zee on Nov 20, 2024 17:03:58 GMT
So I have a confession to make - after posting some long post here a while back about how I wouldn't use semaglutide (though I've never criticized others for doing so), on impulse, I signed up with a company that does weight loss with compounded semaglutide. I'm currently on week 7 and have lost 13 lbs. What is relevant to this conversation: yes, I'm eating a lot less. Like there is no point in taking me to a restaurant. Snack food? No interest. I'm very worried about losing muscle, though, so I eat a lot of protein, and the easiest way to get that is through protein shakes and bars. I do my best to buy ones that don't contain more additives than they need to, but there's no getting around that these are highly processed foods. I supplement those with simple whole foods - usually just protein like salmon or chicken and a veggie or fruit. But there's no denying that I am now consuming more highly processed food each day than I have in years. I'm sure it would be better for me to find whole food ways to get adequate nutrition, but honestly I can't eat enough real food in one day to get the amount of protein and fiber I'm supposed to have. Another problem is that I'm tired. Exhausted, actually. I assume this is because I'm not eating "enough" (I am tracking and average about 1000 calories per day) but I cannot eat more. The exhaustion has also made working out very difficult as I simply don't have the energy for it. And it means that food preparation, which takes both forethought and physical energy, is difficult. I'm hoping this phase of tiredness will pass because I can't imagine spending the rest of my life like this. I don't know what the answer is. I haven't been a real consumer of Big Food for years, so they're not feeling any pinch from me continuing not to buy their products. It seems to me that if they want to reel in the Ozempic crowd, the best thing they can do is make high-quality products that deliver maximum nutritional benefit with the least volume. It will eventually pass, your body isn't used to this yet. I only use a maintenance dose of tirzepatide now and it's definitely different than in the beginning. I feel great and have energy. The first probably six months I was adjusting, losing weight, couldn't eat, sometimes felt dizzy and had to make sure I was staying hydrated. Sometimes all I could take in in a day was a hard boiled egg and Gatorade. That passes. I ended up losing 52 lbs and backed off on the dose because I was getting too skinny and looking drawn. I maintain my weight between 115-120 now (I'm 5'2") and got my usual healthy look back, and no one tells me I'm "too skinny" anymore or asks if I'm ok. Lol
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 17:05:06 GMT
are you sure your DH and my DH are not somehow in the same gene pool? Hahaha... I will do broccoli and it is like a toddler made his plate. Just enough for me to see he has some. OMG! They are brothers. So let's cheer each other on!! Dinner thread peeps! They will support us.
|
|
|
Post by Zee on Nov 20, 2024 17:17:59 GMT
You're fighting biology here, plus convenience is a huge factor. Biologically we are programmed to consume fat and sugar because we evolved, like pretty much all wild animals, to either feast or famine.
Nowadays, it is all too easy for us to feast, and famine in this country isn't really a thing for most of us. It's very easy to eat things we don't need to stay alive. Vegetables give us vitamins but very little caloric rewards for the effort, so naturally, we don't tend to overeat those. Instead we go to sugar and fat. Protein in the form of meat is also societally programmed into us as being needed for a "complete meal". But historically, only rich people or people who could hunt freely ate meat every day.
No one is making anyone eat anything, it's a human choice. You can certainly choose to eat a plum instead of a Christmas Tree cake. But do you want to? That's up to you. (Personally, I hate those Christmas Tree cakes, but I'm not wild about plums either)
Whenever I see articles blaming "big food" on making people sick and fat, I wonder why we're not pointing out that we all have a choice in what we feed ourselves and our children. No one is making us eat McDonald's and HoHos. I think it's obvious that this things aren't good for us. They taught us that back in the 70s and 80s in school (remember Mr Goodbody?).
I grew up eating healthy foods because that's what my mom preferred. Didn't stop me from becoming a lifelong McDonald's lover though. I like one half of a crispy chicken and a diet Coke for lunch and I don't want anyone telling me I can't, and that's one thing I'm sure Trump will protect from RFK 😁
|
|
|
Post by jeremysgirl on Nov 20, 2024 17:18:29 GMT
But eggs, or chicken, or sugar... THOSE have plenty of marketing and lobbying money. Even if someone finally goes after Big Food, no one is going to go after Big Ag which is just another kind of nuisance.
|
|