I’m here to introduce you to something very special. Brace yourself, it may not be what you’re expecting.
In our thin obsessed culture, dieting and food restriction is approved of. We are told that good health is dependent on being a certain size, and warned of the dire consequences of getting larger. Terrifying news headlines compare fat people to terrorists and tsunamis, and fatness, they claim, is worse.
The diet industry is absolutely flourishing from people’s desperation – Australians spend $800 million dollars a year on weight loss products. People are even resorting to sewing plastic patches onto their tongues in an effort to lose weight!
But trouble is brewing in Dietland. Dissension is building. Educated people are doing the unthinkable. They are questioning whether the pursuit of weight loss is a good idea. They see that this ‘lose weight and get healthy’ message just isn’t working. These are the Health At Every Size people. And they are wonderful.
Health At Every Size (HAES) is a movement supported by professionals from many disciplines, including scientists, academic researchers, physicians, dietitians, exercise physiologists, psychologists, and civil rights activists, who advocate a new way of approaching weight.
Let me tell you what they stand for.
Top Comments
I'm a doctor and this is a load of crock. What's politically correct in no way reflects what we see in hospital. Have you had to dig through layers of fat folds to find the skin horribly infected from a sandwich dropped in there 3 months ago? Have you seen a woman who is so fat she can't stand or walk and is unable to do anything except lie in her bed, eat chips, and soil herself? Have you seen the special cranes and machines and medical imaging devices and beds designed just to take the weight of the obese?
Baseless blogs like this damage public health, plain and simple. The vast majority of overweight and obese we see simply have no reason for it other than overeating. The solution is to stop with the politically correct denial, face the facts, and do what needs to be done.
I am of the conviction that there are no foods or macronutrients that promote obesity. There are always commenters that first applaud the HAES principles but then state that their experience is exceptional. It could be an exceptional weight loss plan that works or addiction to sugar. After so much investigation on the matter I have to go with scientific principle over anecdotal exception. You can go to any subject in the world that you want, and there will always be commenters who make statements that are not factual. While I am not challenging any specific commenter, if you take the comments as a whole, the frequency of exceptions do not make sense. I do not criticize a person for seeing and experiencing the world as he or she does, but I worry a lot that misleading comments may lead others (perhaps those interested in moving away from dieting craziness toward HAES) toward wrong conclusions. They also obscure the important information given in the blog article. I have spent a lot of time investigating the notion of good food versus bad food and have come to the conclusion that it is a false valuation. The notion of bad food is politically driven and has a sordid history of scientific manipulation and fraud behind it. Read more on this at: www.no-obesity-epidemic.org...