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Topic: Are you OK with being fat?

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Are you OK with being fat?

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I want lots of food for my buck. If a restaurant gives me very little on my plate, I feel ripped off.

 

I like pizza too much, I could never give it up.

I hate to exercise

 

I have no time to exercise

 

Chasing kids all day is my exercise

 

I take the stairs once in a while

 

I wouldn't want to be skinny

 

Babes with some meat on them are sexy

 

I am not that over weight

I am too sick to work out

I hate to sweat

 

I just love food, I never would want to eat that rabbit food

 

I love my bread with every meal, I couldn't just not do it.

 

Children and adult obesity are getting out of control. Here they want to tax soda to help with cutting back. Some people are outraged.

 

 

We have thousands of excuses for not eating healthy. Most people actually think they do, but their doctors disagree.

 

Do some people watching some time, people still smoke, are over weight and complaining about not feeling well.

 

Should fat people be ashamed about being obese? No, it could happen to anyone, they should be afraid. Food should not be a habit but a fuel for the body and life processes.

 

There are obese women that have formed groups expressing their rights to be obese without ridicule. They stand to stay obese because it is OK.

 

In some parts of the world, overweight women are a must. The bigger the better, the men want them that way. It signals that the woman is healthy and wealthy.

 

Here, in the States, it means you are unhealthy. You can be poor and obese. You can be healthier than a smaller person even. Usually though, being overweight causes your body (heart, lungs, cells, bones, ligaments, tendons etc) to be over worked and stressed.

 

Is beauty attached to skinny? When watch TV, we see thin, beautiful people. They get dressed up, make up, maybe even a trainer. They are in the public view and we are surrounded by these images. Do we associate with them. When a larger person is on TV or in the media, do we notice their weight first? Are we hung up on a set perception of beauty brought out by the media?

 

Our notions of healthy are tangled in a vast arena of perceptions, interpretations and feelings of pressure.

 

What are your excuses?



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