Archive for the ‘diet’ Category

What we eat creates the environment in our body that leads us to health problems in the future.  We are, as they say, what we eat.

What we eat creates the environment in our body that leads us to health problems in the future. We are, as they say, what we eat.

The human biology by 10k years ago was finely tuned to live a hunter gatherer society. When we killed something we gorged on it because of food scarcity, we turned off the trigger in our head that told us that we were full because it simply was not the right thing to do in an environment were we didn’t have security in food supply the next day or down the week.  But the human population couldn’t take on that sort of life style in the long run because of our population growth.  That lead to the development of an agricultural society where villages and farming became central to survival.

Thats how society was up until the end of the 19th century.  The US was at a turning point in history where we had to start coming up with the means to deal with food scarcity, how will we ensure that there is a secure way to maintain the availability of food for the entire population?  Thats when the process being applied in the industrial revolution began to appear in agriculture, giving us industrial agriculture.

We go modern agriculture out of this industrial revolution.  We needed to be stronger militarily but we needed food security.  The government began subsidizing farmers, supporting research and scientific development.  We immediately saw this impact the per acre yield of farms, by nearly 20 times.  An acre that would once eek out 20 bushels was now giving up upwards of 200 bushels.  This abundance of grains results in a new problem- lots of extra grains that we don’t know what to do with.

So the government began selling it abroad and farmers were now involved in what developed as a commodity.  The grain was no longer staple food source, but rather the raw product that government scientist with added industry application had created from the raw grain ingredients.  The prices fluctuated and various government policies development until 1973 when the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture, Earl Butz, demanded that farmers either get big or get out.  With that a new stage in agriculture began, one that continues to this day: Big Agriculture and the demise of the family farm, that farm that is idealized or romanticized in our current food marketing environment.

Farmers kept producing an over abundance of subsidized grains that inundated the market to which the government and industry kept looking for new ways to use.  Because the grain was cheap and high in sugar it began to be used to feed livestock.  We wanted to keep food prices cheap and very stable.  We built a food economy around this idea of surplus.

While all of this was happening around the way we approached food, other technological advances were changing other parts of our lives.  Quite simply technology was all about connivence.  We now live in places where we are car dependent, which has cut off our ability to burn calories.  We don’t bike, we don’t walk we don’t do physical activity because we have engineered it out of our lives.  our work as adults has become sedentary.  We are an automated society that is eating food that is cheap and heavy in calories.

The food environment itself is now hostile to healthy eating because we are bombarded by queues through marketing that tell us to eat fast food, food that provides convenience, things that hurt us in the long run because we don’t have a lifestyle or a community living environment that is conducive to burning off all those sugars, fat and rich calorie foods.

Its not that there are evil corporations, incompetent government and an American population that is driven by a lack of self control.  The current reality we live in was rooted in a real human problem, has grown in the context of sociological challenge of providing food (at one point 45% of an American households expenditure) for cheap.  The government pays farmers $45 billion every five years to over produce soy, corn, dairy and wheat as commodity crops not as staple foods.  The foods that contain these products is cheaper because the government is paying you to buy it through the money that they pay Big Agriculture.

Good example is soft drinks and raw fruits.  In the past 20 years the price of Soda went up 20% whereas the price of raw fruits (healthy stuff) went up 117%.  Soda’s main ingredient is high fructose corn syrup, made from the overly abundantly corn grown in America.  Surprisingly enough, fruit and vegetable growers don’t get government subsidies.

These abundant and cheap ingredients have stimulated the growth of a food industry with a financial incentive to use corn and soy products (such as high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, modified corn starches, etc.) to produce a huge quantity and variety of highly processed foods and not vegetable and fruits.  The reason is that corn and soy have, over the century of industrializing agriculture, were found to be the product that lent itself best to the industrial process, not broccoli or squash or sweet peas.

Our farm policies are driving farmers to overproduce exactly the types of foods that are driving obesity in this country while our desire to have the greatest degree of convenience (i.e. freedom) in our lives especially the degree to which we can spend money on “other” items rather then on food.  In the end though, our indulgence in eating is producing obesity, but this national pastime has not developed outside of a historical context.

http://rice.bio.indiana.edu:7082/images/Drosophilidae/Drosophila_melanogaster_m/Drosophila_melanogaster.jpg

My quest to grow food at home began with wanting to get healthy.  Getting healthy began with the hope of eating better and losing weight.  To get to the point of growing food at home, I set out to compost, in particular to compost with worms.  So by extension I knew I was going to learn more then I want to about worms.  However, I never thought I would also learn about fruit flies.

Currently I am dealing with an invasion of fruit flies in my compost bin.  I got rid of the big fat ugly ones, but there are gazillions of little red bodied nuisances that I discovered are fruit flies.  The drosophila aren’t new to me, in the lab we did all sorts of things to them, now, its like their descendants and relatives are back to take their vengeance on me.

The thing I couldn’t figure out was what was attracting them.  I had hoped the worms would eat up the food, but I guess with the onset of winter, their appetites are not as voracious so the kitchen scraps remains.

  1. Fruit flies go gaga for banana’s.  Its like crack in fruit fly physiology.
  2. Coffee grounds souring attracts these pesky fruit flies.
  3. Ripened or fermenting fruits and vegetables, in general, bring the fruit flies to your yard.
  4. The moist film associated with damp places, is perfect environment for them to stay and have sexy time.

Which brings me to something totally crazy, and probably you don’t care about at all: Fruit flies have one of the fastest life cycles out of all the living things on Earth.

Fruit flies lay their eggs near the surface of fermenting foods or other moist, organic materials. Upon emerging, the tiny larvae continue to feed near the surface of the fermenting mass. The entire lifecycle from egg to adult can be completed in about a week.  Which means that the potential to multiply is ENORMOUS and when given the opportunity for optimal conditions, a female Drosophila will lay about 500 eggs.

What the hell.  I am screwed.

let food be thy medicine

Sage advice from Hippocrates, the father of medicine who said “Let food be thy medicine”

This is not giving us a license to live to eat whatever we want, but rather the way I interpret the quote is about understanding how food is the frontline and the continuing anecdote to the health problems the human body is challenged with over time.

My journey has been an interesting one.  I started as an advocate for American Muslim civil rights, and I worked for CAIR, an organization described as the “bull dog” on these issues.  We fought back, we fought hard and we didn’t care if it meant being excluded form the table when we knew that the issues that affected the community was not even being discussed in an honest and sincere way by Federal, state or local agencies.

Somewhere during my six years of doing this fighting my body began to give out.  My body stopped while I tried to fight on.  The consequences of which were evident in that I suffered from severe insomnia, severe back pain, anxiety attacks, headaches and the simplest task of walking a block from one meeting to another resulted in loss of breath and complete sweat storm.  I had gained weight because my daily routine involved me sitting at my desk at work, to sitting in my car commuting, to sitting on my coach, to sitting and eating and then sleeping.  This was on repeat for six years, intermittently I would try to get out and do the activities I once loved but with greater and greater failure.

I got my act together because at the end of the day I believed that my health was my personal responsibility and Islamically its an amana, a trust between an individual and God that the individual is held responsible for.  But each time I got to working out I failed.  Sometimes the worst was me working out and rather then losing weight, gaining weight.

The realization I had, after a lot of lecturing from my mom and health conscience friends, boiled down to food consumption.

The bottom line was that the more conscience I became of what I put into my body, the more weight I loss, the less I felt fatigued and all the other things.  That realization over time was revolutionary for me because I now understood something that I couldn’t quite comprehend before this, there was something fundamentally wrong with the foods in restaurants, on the shelves of grocery stores especially those being advertised and promoted as “healthy” alternatives.  This food was not nutritious, it was not filling me up , I ate it and was hungry to eat more of it or stuff similar to it.  But why isn’t our food nutritious?  How am a an informed consumer when everything I eat is hurting me?

Here I am standing at the doorstep of another David-and-Golith advocacy struggle: our current policy on health, food and agriculture is not designed to benefit the citizens of America.

Which is an utterly sad trend across the board, whether its civil rights or on education or employee rights, it is easier in the United States to be a consumer rather then to be a citizen.

Today consumption of food is probably just as dangerous to your health as is joining the Army and going off to fight in Afghanistan.  While in the army one would be in the direct line of enemy fire, Americans at home have no idea that we are eating ourselves to a shorter life span.  What good was all the scientific and technological developments since WWII of decreasing child mortality, increasing life expectancy, lowering cost of living, when the foods we eat push us further and further along the path of medicated life and eventually death?  Death that could have been avoided altogether.

What stands in the way is our Government, Corporate interests and foolish people who believe in true American values and principles but only as much as it benefits them directly.

So Hippocrates was right and at the same time wrong in modern standards when he said “Let food be thy medicine.”  Today not all foods are equal, not all choice is free and none of this wrapped up in personal responsibility.  However, food can be our lifeline out of this when it isn’t packaged in plastic with a long list of ingredients the majority of which we can’t pronounce let alone clearly know where in nature it comes from.

farming with skyscrapers

I am a loss as to what to call this.  The folks in the video call what they are doing an “urban homestead” and in other instances I have seen “urban farming” and just plane ol’gardens.  But calling it something is important especially if there are certain key characteristics that set it apart from the other terms.  But first you need to watch the video below.

That video is inspirational.  I can’t see, nor do I want too, myself going to the extremes the Darveas family has gone into their “Urban Homestead” lifestyle but I do feel I found an outlet for my outdoorsy disposition.  The following is what I find attractive:

1.  Utilizing land appropriately.

We have yards with lawns.  Lots of green grass that gets cut every week.  We pour abundant amounts of water from a limited, if not scarce, supply of water.  In fact, in Southern California our lawn lifestyle drains an entire natural environment, the Owns Valley, of its water leaving it a barren salt wasteland.

We pour in tons of chemicals to keep the lawns green, free of weeds and green.  The idea of keeping a lawn to me sounds completely idiotic.  Having spent years cutting and maintaining the lawn I value the life lessons its taught me- doing chores, yard work, manual labor.  However, its just not sustainable.  The question I ask myself is that if we were to ration the water supply, would the lawn get priority?

The answer is no, it wouldn’t.  Therefore, like Arizona, Californians need to come to terms with the reality of desert life.  If you can’t turn your lawn into a local-scape because the green is very attractive, then atleast consider turning it into something edible.

In that sense I think I like the idea of Urban Farming: taking vacant properties in urban areas to turn them into neighborhood farms.  I also like the Urban Homestead: converting available space on your plot of land into manageable growth areas for vegetable gardening.

2.  Growing Organic veggies.

Proposition 37 in California was all about knowing what is in your food.  We are informed about the fat, the ingredients, nutrient content; well I want to know if I am ingesting genetically modified food.  I should be able to make the choice based on my wallet, that way farmers and producers can decide how good for their wallet this product will be.

The fear for those supply side folks is that if I choose not to buy genetically modified foods their task of producing factory-like-products will be affected.  That genetically modified food is cheaper for them and therefore cheaper for me on the consumer end of the equation should be a good thing, however, there is one way to test this model- tell me what is genetically modified and what is not.  Let them sit side-by-side so I can choose to buy the foods I want to eat.

I believe that is the ultimate test, however, since I can’t do that I like the idea of growing my own food stuff.  The basics sound good right now- tomatoes especially.

3.  Sustainable living- seasonal, local and fresh.

I talked about the idea of meat consumption in my previous posts.  I am beginning to realize that a similar morphing has happened with the availability of vegetables throughout the year.  We basically have lost sense of whats in season.  This has driven us to live a life of entitlement and disregard to how our choices affect not only others but also the environment.

That takes me to the second issue: buy local.  I stopped buying from Walmart ages ago.  I would only go into a Walmart if my parents take me there.  Similarly, I when I travel I like to find local places to eat, I refuse to be a patron at chain restaurants.  The purpose of chain restaurants was to standardize the your food intake.  When going place to place you knew that eating at one of these chain restaurants you could get your meal the way you got it at home.  All of that is changed now, I don’t want to eat the same meals, and even more importantly, I dont want to eat the fat injected, carb-loaded beasts sold at these restaurants.  I want to buy local.  Local grocery, eat at a local mom & pop restaurant, buy from small sellers on Amazon or Etsy, get my clothes from sellers that are unique and most likely won’t be on the backs of every other person I meet.

Finally, the idea of eating fresh just sounds good.  Imagine picking up a fresh egg.  Cutting off some fresh tomatoes.  The idea of eating food that isn’t or hasn’t packaged and transported and stored for a length of time seems romantic indeed.

In the end I think for me its about preserving a slower, nature connected, environmentally conscious intentional modern lifestyle that values the art of gardening, cooking and being human.

4.  Returning to the land.

I guess the idea itself is a romanticization of the “goo’ole days.”  Up until the mid-1960′s we were still living a consumption lifestyle that was grounded on seasonal eating.  While I appreciate refrigeration and the science behind transporting all the wonderful produce we eat in the country it is something else to be able to grow your own food.

Part of “returning to the land” mentality I have also stems from the whole “end of civilization” thought process.  If our civilization were to end, how do we survive?   Besides scavenging and survival of the fittest it comes down to having some basic level of skills such as hunting and farming.

I am not delusional, doomsday-prepper-I am-not; though its probably not a bad idea- I do think its good to be able to grow your own food.  If not for that skill set, then at least for the ability to impart simple science to my kids; “hey, Fatima, look this is your chicken Molly, ‘whaaack’, now Molly is going to be our tandoori chicken dinner.”

5.  Alternative to the the consumption driven farming policies.

There is a lot to say about this.  Sufficient for now is that I don’t like our current farming policies and I wish to opt-out.  While I can’t completely opt-out, I can begin to make certain lifestyle choices that free my conscience of this crazy farming-complex.  Watch these really informative, unbiased, PBS documentaries on farming (long), transportation (long), energy production (long) and the edible backyard (short, 4 mins).

I don’t know if its a “revolution” or its just a passing “fad.”  What I do know is that growing things in your backyard that isnt just purdy-and-green has been a long established tradition here in America.  A plot of land signified independence.  During the WWII there were plantings of victory gardens.  To that end, I, This American Muslim, have taken it upon myself to start taking steps to beginning a organic vegetable garden.  Homesteader-urban-farmer I am not, but backyard garden I shall have.  Will post up on my first step toward an organic garden shortly: its gonna be a wormy experience!

Watch this incredible 20 minute video on Victory Gardening by the USDOD!  AMAZING!

Taking the advice of White Parents to deal with your immigrant parents is a bad idea.  Its similar to getting advice from your White friends about how to do things.  (See Russell Peters video below)  I learned real quick that while I might be living in America, there is no way that my White friends behavior will fly at home.  My parents would stamp that reality to smithereens.  The way my parents raised me was the way they were raised, and while it may be in the context of my American upbringing, they put very little effort toward utilizing the American parenting style, if anything they spent more time laughing at some of its most basic assumptions found there.  Concepts of grounding, taking away privileges, or positive reinforcement through assignment of chores and getting a weekly allowance- these gave more power to the kids in my parents eyes.  That was contrary to everything that my parents believed about of what good parenting meant.

So don’t laugh at me when I say that as an adult, my relationship with my parents is still one of that between a child-parent, to a certain degree, not completely.  While I may have inclinations to change my own parenting style when I have kids, my relationship with my parents is still governed by a respectable mix of fear-awe-severe deference to their opinion.  Thats why when I read Huffington Posts article “6 thing you shouldnt say to your adult child” I couldn’t help but laugh at the idea of how my parents would respond if I presented this advice to them. Their voice could be heard retorting to each claim made by Linda Bernstein.  The following is what an amalgam of immigrant parents say, based on my observations of various friends parents, about her parenting advice for adult children.

1. Have you gained [lost] weight?

Bernstein advices that parents shouldn’t focus on their adult child’s weight no matter how glaringly obvious, instead be glad they came to visit and that parents should state how they missed them.  An immigrant mother (South Asian, Desi, Pakistani in particular) would say:

Aaaaah, they look fat. There it is, its obvious, I look at my child, I see how fat they are. Seeing is believing.  What they eat is my concern, I cooked and fed them for 20+ years, I am not going to just stop now.  If they eat like a fat person, they will get fat, that is a fact.  

If they don’t change they will not get married, because no one wants to marry a fat person.  If I don’t tell my child they are fat, who else is going to tell them, let alone encourage them to make better life choices.  Parents are meant for this, I am only fulfilling my role.  Life is not a joke and you can not just cruise by, I must act.  

They sit around and eat garbage.  They start their day by sitting in the car, they get to work and sit in front of a computer,  they go to a restaurant to sit and stuff their face for an hour so that they can return to their desk and sit some more, then go home and sit on the coach while they eat more nonsense and then they sleep.  They do this on repeat, no wonder they are getting fat.  I am the positive force that breaks a cycle, that is my role.  I am telling you, until they get married and settle down, there is no fat business.

2. What’s that on your face?

Berstein advises that parents shouldn’t point out physical blemishes like zits.  I think this one made me laugh the most.  A immigrant mother would say:

That thing on their face, its not normal.  They are adults not little kids running around in high school.  Go to a doctor, get medication.  See a specialist.  Do something!  How will they get married?  Who will want to marry my child if they look like that! (Immediately proceeds to pop the pimple or touch in some weird way all while shaking her head.)  Often times this would happen out in public not just in the privacy of your home.

3. How come you hardly ever call (or text) these days?

Berstein advises parents should have a mantra they repeat about how if the child doesn’t call today, its going to be alright.  I guess in a way White parents are trying to exude selflessness, but a immigrant mother, she’s all self.  Her response:

Its my child’s duty to call.  They are responsible to tell me what is happening in their life.  (God forbid a child tells their parent to make the call instead…)  I put food in their mouth, I put up with their crying, I lived through 9 months of carrying them, I drove them to soccer practice.  I gave and I gave, having them call me every single day at 430PM on the dot is not asking to much.  Busy, what the hell are they busy with?  They aren’t some CEO or President, they don’t have a life until they are married.  Until then they are responsible to their mother and father only.

4. It’s all for the best; [So-and-so] was a jerk anyway.

Berstein’s relationship advice is probably up their on laughable immigrant parental advice from a white parent.  She says parents should instead focus on how the child feels and let them know that they are there for them to talk, even if its not about the broken relationship.  No, you see relationships, the marriage ceremony and marriage are the ultimate point of concern for immigrant parents, especially Desi ones:

They are just being picky.  My husband and I were introduced three times maybe, what is this business of talking and getting to know each other, that happens after the marriage.  Look at our marriage, we are happy after 30+ years.  You dont see us doing what these white people do, get old and feel like its time to find someone new because of some crisis about our age.  No, the tradition is best.  They need to lower their standards and be realistic, if I dont help them how will they get married?  If I let them have their way I will be dead and they will be on their deathbeds single and alone.  All this talk about feelings, feelings wont get them married.

5. How can you live like this?

Okay, these have been funny, but I dont think I even need to write an immigrant parents response to this.  Remember going off to college, living in a dorm, how all the white kids parents dumped their stuff and then went out to eat, while you and your parents moved in the mini-fridge, the rice cooker, the 50 different sheets for the bed, ironed all your clothes, went over the laundry procedures while Dad set up the computer and got all your books and school supplies…yeh, you think immigrant parents wont have an opinion about how you live as a adult.  All I will say is that two weeks prior to my parents visiting my apartment, when I lived alone, I would start super deep cleaning and when they visited they would still spend a few hours “cleaning” things up.  Silly Bernstein, I don’t know how you survive giving all this advice.

6. What do you expect me to do?

So this one is probably the only piece of advice where there would be no disagreement between an immigrant parent and Bernstein’s advice.  So I guess there are points of similarities.

To get a sense of where I am coming from, if you can’t relate, watch comedian Russell Peters do his thing.

graphic courtesy of Muslim Matters

Muslim Matters posted a ‘5-Step Guide to Healthy Ramadan Weight Loss‘ which is worth your time to read (its a bit long), but in summary the 5 Steps in brief are:

  1. Stop speed eating at Sahoor
  2. Don’t obsess about food
  3. Exercise (Duh)- doesnt take Sherlock Holmes to figure that out.
  4. Stop feasting after iftar
  5. Be Mindful of other- something I wrote about already in my previous Ramadan posts.

I personally am following the Rehan Jalali Ramadan Nutrition and Workout Plan (which is on Suhaib Webbs blog) this year.  I made some modifications to it because I needed it to suit my lifestyle a bit better, but for the most part I started on Ramadan Day 1 and have been going strong.  While I have been successful in not gaining weight the past four years, and the past two years actually losing weight, I wanted to take things up a notch and get back on track for my 70 Day Challenge which abrubptly came to a stop on Day 35 (Law School, things not working out with a girl, law school, midterms and tests, moving out of apartment, law school doubts).

I think I fell off the blogging roll.  Even doing a simple post is pretty taxing.  I will leave out the update for the past several days and continue to update you on my progress once I catch up.  But here is the link to the 70 Day Challenge and also the link where you can find the links for all my days- hold me accountable at youtube, pinterest, and twitter.

Most influential for my health consciousness was Men’s Health magazine because it introduced me to “The Abs Diet.”  The magazine editor and author of the book is David Zinczenko.  Although the book is written in a way to attract males towards the diet, any dieter can follow it. I learned that each person has to make a personalized way to get to the goals you have and the book I think best presents the way to do it on a great foundation.

Following the steps in the book  I got a way to transform the fat into muscle, as well as steps to sculpt the rest of the body.  I know I put down the “diet” trend, and yes, I am not a fan of diets but that term is associated with a “lifestyle” where you purge yourself of your natural desire to eat carbs or other things.  Here your body and your personal habits are taken into account and there is a way for you to incrementally change and add the healthy lifestyle choices to your life.

The Meal Plan

The meal plan consists of a 7-day plan, filled with what the author calls “power foods.” There are twelve power foods listed in his book, accompanied by recipes. You get one meal per week that is considered a “cheat” meal so you can et anything you want. The diet suggests that foods, such as fat-filled meats, processed and refined carbohydrates, as well as foods high in sugar, should be avoided.

The Power Foods

The foods below are referred to as the “Power 12,” and play an important role when following the Abs Diet.

  1. Nuts: almonds, walnuts, pecans, hazelnuts, etc. These should be eaten with the skin still in place.
  2. Beans and otherLegumes
  3. Green Vegetables: spinach, asparagus, broccoli, lettuce, etc.
  4. Dairy: This includes fat-free milk, low-fat milk, yogurt, cheese, as well as cottage cheese
  5. Instant Oatmeal: When eating this food, no sweeteners should be added and it should also be unflavored.
  6. Eggs
  7. Turkey and other lean meats: This includes lean steak, chicken, as well as fish
  8. Peanut Butter: This selection should be all natural and contain no sugar.
  9. Olive Oil
  10. Bread and Cereals: These items should consist of whole grains.
  11. Extra Protein Whey Powder
  12. Berries: raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, etc.

Checking in for Day 9 on my 70 Day Challenge- hold me accountable at youtube, pinterest, and twitter. I recovering from my 8-mile ordeal…funny how it was incredibly amazing yesterday and today its not feeling wonderful.

Ever wonder why all the Speedo advertisements have these super lean in-shape people sporting their goods, or for that matter any clothing brand out there?  Besides the image and body issues that the fashion industry and music, Hollywood and magazines push on us, they utilize our inner sense of beauty- symmetry and health.  You will never find Speedo using the above graphic to advertise their product nor their brand.

Like I mentioned before, throwing aside all the negativity that comes with what is being pushed on us today in the Hollywood-Fashion-Industry-complex the essence of the marketing suggest that society defines fitness as something in particular.  When we see those images its meant to tug at the perception that a person needs to  control, being in control also mean being in control of their body, and by extension in control of your health.

David Zinczenko says that “you’re telling the world that you’re a disciplined, motivated, confident, and healthy person—and hence a desirable partner.”  (The Abs Diet, Kindle Locations 249-250)

I don’t want to promote the idea that I support the current advertising, because I don’t.  Let me be clear the advertising has created some of the worst sorts of psychological problems for kids- eating disorders, depression, anxiety to name just a few.  Social pressure and bullying based on the notions of fashion and advertising have created a monster of a challenge when it comes to the way we need to teach kids about health and fitness, versus the images of health and fitness are used to (hyper) sexualize, dehumanize and deconstruct social norms and behaviors that are for the most part necessary for a vibrant society. There definitely is a tension and I am not ignoring that at all when I am posting this.

How do you balance the two?  I don’t have an answer for that, but I do know that society and cultures over the span of history and geography have approached being fat differently.  As I mentioned in my earlier post, at one time being fat meant that you had reached an elite status in nobility; in certain parts of Africa, being fat is a means of showing off ones wealth even today.  The problem is with so much obesity, diseases that were once regulated to the “wealthy” few are much more wide spread, with even greater impact.  A parents lifestyle choices- and by extension their health issues/challenges- are inherited by their children, not through genetic disposition but merely by being socialized to a unhealthy lifestyle.  Normalization of bad health choices is the linchpin to hurting our national security.

You know me, I always find ways of politicizing everything, and  surprisingly enough I ran across a quote in a biography I was reading about President Kennedy who wrote back in his 1960′s Sports Illustrated article titled “The Soft American” that “[o]ur growing softness, our increasing lack of physical fitness, is a menace to our security.”  According to President Kennedy “[p]hysical fitness is not only one of the most important keys to a healthy body, it is the basis of dynamic and creative intellectual activity.”

President Kennedy was writing this at a time when the GREATEST GENERATION OF AMERICANS ever to have come along were making their mark on history.  We are talking about President Kennedy, who shortly after this speech launched the “New Frontiers” initiative that took us to the moon among other achievements.  Imagine what that means if he were to look at us now.  We aren’t “soft Americans”, he wouldn’t recognize us today, he would consider us to be “SAD FAT (OBESE) Americans.”  I find that President Kennedy was spot on in terms of connecting the nations national security with the health and fitness of its citizens.

Checking in for Day 8 on my 70 Day Challenge- hold me accountable at youtube, pinterest, and twitter. I went out to run an 8 mile trail near my apartment early in the morning today, it was amazing.

Funny that our society spends time eating everything and sitting on a couch doing nothing.  With such little physical activity we are faced with being overweight, obese and suffering from all sorts of diseases that are easily curable.  The irony is that we want to loose that weight over night.  There is the lap-band, you can take pills, you can sit in front of your TV while an electrical pulse goes through your abominable muscles to give you that rock hard 6-pack.

We want the shortcut to get out of the problems we have spent years putting in our efforts to acquire.

The fitness industry is a 25 billion dollar industry in the US with a .9% growth.  The diet industry is a $40 billion dollar industry, supplements and vitamins net in $20 billion a year (stats from here).  This is a massive industry- its aims are to get your money by utilizing your soft spot- desire to loose weight without the effort.  Gyms know that you will pay monthly installments and probably only show up a few times a year- around the “Fat Seasons” spring/summer transition, post Thanks Giving and Christmas/New Year resolutions.  They bank on your weakness to not follow through with those goals, to eat without thinking and to continue to reveal in your bad habits.   This industry preys on your real desire to loose weight and the video exemplifies how the vultures use tricks and short cuts to present something that is credible.

At the end of the day you are the tool for any change that needs to happen in your life.  Don’t rely on these shortcuts and don’t sit around looking for short cuts, get out there and start living the change that you are capable of making in your life!  You are the change that you need to believe in.

70 day challenge

Checking in for Day 7 on my 70 Day Challenge- hold me accountable at youtube, pinterest, and twitter. I done good and went for a run at the gym, did a crap load of sit ups and push ups, the best was the fact that I ran my mile under 11 minutes.  Tomorrow I am thinking about going for a run on a local trail that is about 10 miles long.  I haven’t run something like that since cross country days, should be interesting.

They can because they think they can~ Virgil

I can totally see myself doing this, I already am seeing the results and I believe that this will be a good all around.  So get off your butt and start changing your life!

If you continue to reflect on the past and fantasize about what can happen, but you do absolutely nothing to achieve your goal, then you aren’t truly thinking that you can ever be that healthy person.