Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very simple:
Screens
Overly processed food/DoorDash/Starbucks...all the BS "food" that's at their fingertips
We're not allowed to tell our teens to eat less/be more active when they're looking chunky because that's body-shaming
I live in a college-town outside of the DC area and I can't get over how these college kids and what they wear showing off their huge butts and fat bellies. Nobody was walking around like that when I was in college.
One thing I have noticed on this board is the successful, UMC dismissal of the importance of actually preparing real food for one’s family. Way more important for both parents to always be hustling to make as much money as possible. Why bake bread when you can buy it? Why cook a meal when you can get takeout? Why prepare your teenager’s dinner when they can eat a peanut butter sandwich or a bowl of Cheerios. (And this is not meant as a SAHM vs WOHM debate. My parents worked but also prioritized cooking for the family with actual real food. My generation seems to have completely different priorities from my observations.)
So if the kids these days don’t think that what they’re putting in their bodies matters, that’s on the generation before them.
My mom worked part time, she will teach a couple class in the am, take a nap at noon and tutor a few students in the evening, and make dinner.
I work from 8-6pm plus 3 hour commute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re constantly sitting down playing video games while eating crap and drinking soda. Are you seriously surprised?
Actually most Gen Z kids grew up playing tons of sports. I don’t even think travel leagues existed in the 70’s-80’s when I was a kid.
Yeah, because in the 70s and 80s all the kids were playing outside all day. Did you even know a fat kid?? I think I met a fat kid for the first time in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So we’re talking ages 12 to 27? OP’s observations don’t match what I see at my kids HS, my work, or the gym.
Your observations don’t mean squat. Epidemiological data shows 50% of all U.S. adults will be obese by 2030. Gen Z is the fattest generation in U.S. history.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very simple:
Screens
Overly processed food/DoorDash/Starbucks...all the BS "food" that's at their fingertips
We're not allowed to tell our teens to eat less/be more active when they're looking chunky because that's body-shaming
I live in a college-town outside of the DC area and I can't get over how these college kids and what they wear showing off their huge butts and fat bellies. Nobody was walking around like that when I was in college.
One thing I have noticed on this board is the successful, UMC dismissal of the importance of actually preparing real food for one’s family. Way more important for both parents to always be hustling to make as much money as possible. Why bake bread when you can buy it? Why cook a meal when you can get takeout? Why prepare your teenager’s dinner when they can eat a peanut butter sandwich or a bowl of Cheerios. (And this is not meant as a SAHM vs WOHM debate. My parents worked but also prioritized cooking for the family with actual real food. My generation seems to have completely different priorities from my observations.)
So if the kids these days don’t think that what they’re putting in their bodies matters, that’s on the generation before them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very simple:
Screens
Overly processed food/DoorDash/Starbucks...all the BS "food" that's at their fingertips
We're not allowed to tell our teens to eat less/be more active when they're looking chunky because that's body-shaming
I live in a college-town outside of the DC area and I can't get over how these college kids and what they wear showing off their huge butts and fat bellies. Nobody was walking around like that when I was in college.
One thing I have noticed on this board is the successful, UMC dismissal of the importance of actually preparing real food for one’s family. Way more important for both parents to always be hustling to make as much money as possible. Why bake bread when you can buy it? Why cook a meal when you can get takeout? Why prepare your teenager’s dinner when they can eat a peanut butter sandwich or a bowl of Cheerios. (And this is not meant as a SAHM vs WOHM debate. My parents worked but also prioritized cooking for the family with actual real food. My generation seems to have completely different priorities from my observations.)
So if the kids these days don’t think that what they’re putting in their bodies matters, that’s on the generation before them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lack of fat shaming.
Fat shaming is a form of oppression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re constantly sitting down playing video games while eating crap and drinking soda. Are you seriously surprised?
Actually most Gen Z kids grew up playing tons of sports. I don’t even think travel leagues existed in the 70’s-80’s when I was a kid.
Yeah, because in the 70s and 80s all the kids were playing outside all day. Did you even know a fat kid?? I think I met a fat kid for the first time in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re constantly sitting down playing video games while eating crap and drinking soda. Are you seriously surprised?
Actually most Gen Z kids grew up playing tons of sports. I don’t even think travel leagues existed in the 70’s-80’s when I was a kid.
Anonymous wrote:They’re constantly sitting down playing video games while eating crap and drinking soda. Are you seriously surprised?
Anonymous wrote:I manage teams of Gen Zers and they’re either jacked (much more than men my age were) or obese. There is very little middle ground.
Anonymous wrote:They’re constantly sitting down playing video games while eating crap and drinking soda. Are you seriously surprised?