Anonymous wrote:It's a combo of factors including:
endocrine disruptors in the environment
chemicals in foods
antidepressants
paradoxical effects of stimulants like adderall...can take away appetite and make someone super skinny, but theory is years later may make same person super fat
body positive messages might need to be mixed with health messages. It's OK to be overweight if your bloodwork, etc says you are healthy, but if not, let's aim for health. Instead, we focus too much on making everyone feel no matter the size it's fine, when health should be part of it.
Both overweight moms and anorexic moms (who are able to get pregnant) put their fetuses at risk of obesity later on according to some articles I read a while back.
Anonymous wrote:It's a combo of factors including:
endocrine disruptors in the environment
chemicals in foods
antidepressants
paradoxical effects of stimulants like adderall...can take away appetite and make someone super skinny, but theory is years later may make same person super fat
body positive messages might need to be mixed with health messages. It's OK to be overweight if your bloodwork, etc says you are healthy, but if not, let's aim for health. Instead, we focus too much on making everyone feel no matter the size it's fine, when health should be part of it.
Both overweight moms and anorexic moms (who are able to get pregnant) put their fetuses at risk of obesity later on according to some articles I read a iwhile back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird you singled out females when it’s just as bad among males.
I was at a restaurant recently and thought a group of guys next to me were all 30s/40s. Nope, they were frat boys. I couldn’t believe how bad they looked for early 20s- overweight, lines on their faces, hunched over posture, etc. I used to think it would be fun to have a fling with a much younger man but now I’m not so sure.
You don’t want to sit across from a guy in his 20s who breaks out in a flop sweat while eating? What’s wrong with you?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They don't value the hard work and dedication you spent on being skinny. They have other things to do.
It's healthier to be a certain range in overweight than to be underweight or, actually, normal weight. We covered this in another thread.
Yeah, if you're 60. Before then, not so much. At 20? No. At 6? Really not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because sometimes we come from badly dysfunctional families and ate our feelings.
Thankfully, some of us untangle that mess at some point and lose the weight, and are in better shape at 40 than 30 or 20 or even 10, but you never know what someone else has been through.
Surely those same problems existed in previous decades when most women were not so heavy at such younger ages.
Please in previous decades we didn’t have food science cranking out prepackaged snack foods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because sometimes we come from badly dysfunctional families and ate our feelings.
Thankfully, some of us untangle that mess at some point and lose the weight, and are in better shape at 40 than 30 or 20 or even 10, but you never know what someone else has been through.
Surely those same problems existed in previous decades when most women were not so heavy at such younger ages.
Please in previous decades we didn’t have food science cranking out prepackaged snack foods.
Anonymous wrote:Weird you singled out females when it’s just as bad among males.
I was at a restaurant recently and thought a group of guys next to me were all 30s/40s. Nope, they were frat boys. I couldn’t believe how bad they looked for early 20s- overweight, lines on their faces, hunched over posture, etc. I used to think it would be fun to have a fling with a much younger man but now I’m not so sure.
Anonymous wrote:They don't value the hard work and dedication you spent on being skinny. They have other things to do.
It's healthier to be a certain range in overweight than to be underweight or, actually, normal weight. We covered this in another thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because sometimes we come from badly dysfunctional families and ate our feelings.
Thankfully, some of us untangle that mess at some point and lose the weight, and are in better shape at 40 than 30 or 20 or even 10, but you never know what someone else has been through.
Surely those same problems existed in previous decades when most women were not so heavy at such younger ages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why this is, but I wonder a lot. I'm a professor in my 40s with two kids and walk around campus wondering why I am thinner than these girls in their late teens/early 20s. When I was in high school, my friends and I went to the gym, went running, etc and continued that in college. Is that still common among high school kids?
If they are forced to eat dorm food, the food is usually extremely unhealthy hence the term Freshman 15.
[i]Yeah and this isn't exactly new. I went to college in 1995 and the freshman 15 was a phenomenon then too. Add heavy drinking to unlimited dorm food. That doesn't help.
Yeah me too. Difference is that we started at a normal weight and then gained 15 pounds during freshman year. These kids today are starting out fat and getting fatter in college.
Anonymous wrote:By 2030, overweight Americans will make up 85% of the population. Even now, 60+% of girls are overweight by age 11. Something is going on, probably many factors, but it isn't good. The cost on the healthcare system will either bankrupt this country or people will be living miserably with no proper healthcare (or probably some combination.)
The statistics show that it is affecting women more than men, but not by huge margins. Men are overweight and obese in unprecedented numbers as well.