Tag Archive: obesity


FORKS OVER KNIVES documentary film directed by Lee Fulkerson (USA, 2011)
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There are three main reasons why I am a vegan :
1. I oppose the unnecessary and unjustifiable maltreatment and slaughter of animals.
2. I believe that the intense factory farming is slowly but surely destroying the planet.
3. I have personal experience of the health benefits which far outweigh the minor inconveniences and small sacrifices needed to maintain this diet.

I gain sustenance for my position from some excellent documentaries that make the case for veganism.

For the animal welfare issues, Earthlings (2005) sets out the arguments powerfully and compassionately.

The environmental effects are efficiently outlined in Cowspiracy (2014).

Forks Over Knives focuses on the health question centering primarily on the persuasive views of two eminent doctors – Caldwell Esselstyn and Colin Campbell. The former is a physician and heart surgeon while the latter is a nutritional biochemist. Both have spent a large part of their professional lives researching the links between diet and wellbeing.

thechinastudyCampbell’s influential China Study found 94,000 correlations between diet and disease, surely too high to be dismissed as coincidence.

Esselstyn’s work with patients who have suffered heart attacks has demonstrated that following a plant-based diet can halt and, in some cases, reverse the debilitating and often fatal effects of heart disease.

Despite this, US bodies like the National Academy of Sciences continue to routinely promote the consumption of animal related products as essential health requirements. They are part of the mass brain washing process whereby people are conditioned to repeat the falsehoods that protein comes primarily from meat and calcium can only be found in cow’s milk.

The film makes it clear that a large number of those behind official nutrition programmes have a stake (steak?) in preserving the status quo and ensuring that the level of meat and dairy food production continues unabated. Agribusiness and junk food manufacturers are more concerned with promoting diets that produce short-term profits than ones with long-term health benefits.

The consequence is plain to see. Studies on the worldwide rise of obesity show that this has reached epidemic proportions.

In Forks Over Knives, clinical psychologist Doug Lisle explains that one of the key reasons why consumers resist change is due to what he calls the Motivational Triad. He says that people’s diets are driven by three main factors : pleasure-seeking, pain avoidance and energy conservation. This leads to diets containing a high proportion of artificial and highly processed foods and a preference for anything that tastes sweet or salty. Anything that involves more effort and commitment tends to be resisted.

The challenge is to break free of these habits and to question the so-called dietary experts who refuse to acknowledge that a fundamental change in lifestyle choices is necessary.

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Mac Danzig – not your typical vegan!

In the documentary, the testimony of ultimate fighting champion Mac Danzig and Ruth Heidrich, a marathon runner and recovering cancer patient,  are used to prove that you don’t need meat to stay fit, strong and healthy.

Danzig is not on a personal crusade for veganism but merely explains how changing his eating habits improved his performances stating matter of factly  “I tried the diet and it worked for me”.

The default defense mechanism of many meat eaters is to mock the ‘holier than thou’ attitude of vegans rather than defend their own food choices. All I would ask anyone reading this post who remains sceptical is to try a plant-based diet and see if it works.

There’s nothing to lose and plenty to gain.

Further reading:
The Pleasure Trap – Why It’s Hard To Do What’s Right – Article from the website: ‘Plant-Based Food for Health’
Prevent & Reverse Heart Disease – Website of Dr Caldwell Esselstyn’s health program.
Live A Whole Life – Website of Dr. T. Colin Campbell’s Center for Nutritional Studies
Transition To Health –  Website of Dr Lederman promoting food as medicine
Forks Over Knives – Official website for the film with related articles and recipes.
How The World Got Fat  – Guardian article about the rise in obesity over the past 40 years.
Great vegan athletes – Website containing profiles of top athletes who follow a vegan diet.K

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS directed by Tom Ford (USA, 2016)

“All the animals come out at night” – Travis Bickle – Taxi Driver (1976)
“Now it’s dark” – Frank Booth – Blue Velvet (1986)

nocturnal_animals_posterInspiring comparisons with the finest works of Martin Scorsese and David Lynch is a sign of how impressed I am by this magnificent movie.

Tom Ford’s equally fine debut A Single Man from 2009 can no longer be dismissed as a one-off.

Well-established as a hugely successful fashion designer, Ford does not need further acclaim or money. Wealth does not guarantee creative inspiration but it does buy a certain freedom. Perhaps this is how he has been able to be so uncompromising and daring in his adaptation of Austin Wright’s novel Tony and Susan. Continue reading

All shapes and sizes

Some girls are bigger than others.

Teaching teenagers is tough. They are neither children nor adults. They think they know everything but still need guidance and advice about growing pains and general insecurities.

Schools have a responsibility to show sensitivity and respect towards these inbetweenies. They also have to be careful about choosing appropriate topics for discussion in the classroom. Sex, politics and religion are the most obvious subjects that need to be handled with care. But there are others.

Today,  in my daughter’s French language class,  the teacher started talking about obesity and anorexia. She spoke in Italian so there was no linguistic content. Why she felt the need to raise this topic is a mystery, I suspect she was just filling in time at the end of a lesson on the general topic of food. The effect of her ad-hoc discourse was to provoke expressions of revulsion and disgust which made my daughter feel exposed and deeply uncomfortable.

Happy teenagers.

You see, she has an eating disorder and ,what’s more, the teacher knows this. I won’t go into details, suffice to say that my wife and I take her problem seriously and are seeking solutions through professional carers. It’s a slow process and we have learnt enough to know that there are no quick fixes.

She is not a solitary case, many of her age, girls especially, have serious worries over their shape and size – comparing themselves with images of ‘perfect’ bodies  on TV, in movies and magazines only makes things worse.

In my opinion, teachers in high schools should not use this topic in classroom discussions and, above all, they should avoid asking the type of questions recommended on one website for teaching kids :

  • What causes some people to develop eating disorders?
  • How do people with eating disorders feel about their bodies?
  • Does the person they see in the mirror always match reality?
  • How might an eating disorder affect a person’s family and social life?

These are all good questions but sufferers will not feel comfortable talking about in a group which is not there to offer support or comfort.

Parents have every right to expect educators to be more sensitive to delicate issues than the mass media and teachers have to recognise that they are not psychologists or health advisers.

FAST FOOD PORN

Food porn is probably the best way to describe the spate of explicit (but non-arousing) articles and videos that take on the never-ending debate about obesity. Their target is, more often than not, the fast food giants who feed our faces without caring too much about long-term health consequences.

The BBC Two series The Men Who Made Us Fat  is just the latest to state the bleeding obvious that people eat too much junk food and do too little exercise and, surprise, surprise they put on weight.

In the same way as death threats on cigarette packets fail to put consumers off smoking, no amount of exposés will change the habits of many lifetimes.  Get fat – die young seems to be a badge of honour for too many.

A less earnest, but just as revealing, video about preparing an epic lasagna shows just how supersized the problem is. Take a look – it’s quite funny but ,be warned, the finale will probably make you barf:

PRECIOUS LIFE

Precious – directed by Lee Daniels (2009)

It has taken over two years for the video of this movie to reach Blockbuster in Italy and it’s not hard to see why. The characters and story could almost have been beamed in from another planet for all they seem to connect with this country’s  ‘normal’ life.

The depiction of sexual, physical and verbal abuse is fairly relentless only lightened by Precious’ fantasies of a more glamourous life on stage and screen.  These  sequences are a bit heavy-handed and add little to the drama. I suppose they show in some way how she manages to keep her sanity in the family home from hell.

Plenty of critics and viewers have praised the movie for its realism and raw honesty although there can’t be many of these who have lived through such experiences to be able to say whether they are authentic or not.

I only feel able to judge this as a piece of cinema rather than how accurately it represents  the  catalogue of social diseases: notably obesity, incest, illiteracy and poverty.

As a movie, I was initially fascinated by the sheer physical substance of Gabby” Sidibe in the lead role but never felt drawn in on an emotional level. I felt almost voyeuristic watching her tale of woe and ultimately it felt like watching a freak show than a ‘slice of life’.

That Precious survives her dreadful experiences is miraculous but is only truly heart warming if you choose not to dwell on the thought that there must be countless others who are stuck in such a cycle of negativity and violence with no hope of escape.