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How not to get fat

Even as a child, I knew what was wrong with math teachers. They were mathematicians. Math was easy for them, which meant they hadn’t a hope of explaining it to me.

In a similar vein, I have to throw in my two cents’ worth about staying thin. I’ve always been thin, both my parents were thin, and I should really just keep my mouth shut. But I can’t stop myself. There’s so much nonsense out there, I have to point at it, even if it’s not political nonsense.

1) A huge proportion, say 80% in round numbers, of anyone’s weight is determined by genetics. Trying to fight that is like trying to have the will power to grow black hair if you’re blond. There is no point. Forget it. Besides, obsessing about oneself doesn’t make anyone attractive, even if it does make them thin. Attractiveness comes down to health, fitness, cheerfulness, and caring. That’s true regardless of gender. So, could we all just stop the useless, ga-ga admiration of thinness? (Madison Ave., I’m looking at YOU.)

2) Fitness, on the other hand, is not useless. Get out there and move. Enjoy walking. Do it. (That’s all. There’s really no more to say about it. Memo to self: remember to keep New Year’s resolution about exercising more.)

3) Food, which is not that big a deal unless you don’t have enough of it, should be way down the list of concerns. The most important thing about food is to enjoy it. If there’s any difference — besides genetics — between me and people who have more trouble with weight, it’s that I seem to enjoy food much more than they do. I savor it, and I’m the slowest eater I know. I don’t eat just to have something in my mouth, because there’s little enjoyment in that. And I almost always wait to eat until I’m hungry, because food eaten when you’re not hungry tastes about half as good.

About hunger, one thing I’ve noticed is that lots of people don’t seem to distinguish between wanting a treat and actual physical hunger. It goes so far that sometimes I’m not sure they mean the same thing by hunger as I do. Hunger (when not due to malnutrition or starvation) is a physical sensation at the bottom of the chest, accompanied by a pleasant feeling of heightened alertness and an interest in all food, not just treats. Someone who’s hungry for pizza but not for plain bread is not actually hungry according to me.

I’m just like the next person, as far as that goes. If I eat when I’m not really hungry, I gain weight. The genetic component may be the brain chemistry that signals real hunger sooner rather than later in some people. But the sensation of hunger is also something whose degrees one can train oneself to recognize. And then it’s possible to train one’s reaction to different degrees of hunger. (If it wasn’t, there would be no anorexics, although their overtraining is something to be avoided like the plague that it is.)

Retraining reactions to hunger involves paying very careful attention to the physical feelings of it that your body gives you, and then deciding at which level you’ll act on it. That process is a mental habit, and it can be changed like any other habit. It takes careful and continuous attention for about six months to a year to change the habitual setpoint, but after that it’s just as automatic as the old habit was. It does not involve a lifetime of effort and self-control. (I’m not just gassing, here. This is something I’ve had to do as I get older and my metabolism slows down.)

As to what to eat, that’s easy. In Michael Pollan’s [1] memorable words: Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants. (And if you want to cheat, remember: chocolate is a plant.) No, seriously. Eat what you enjoy, with people you enjoy, and all the rest will fall into place.

Technorati tags: fitness, health, diet, weightloss, New Years Resolutions

(Postscript. For information from someone with actual experience, see, for instance, Kyle Pott’s post on losing 50 pounds [2], via Lifehacker [3].)

4 Comments (Open | Close)

4 Comments To "How not to get fat"

#1 Comment By That Girl On 30 Jan, 2007 @ 08:17

Sadly, eating well will not help you lose weight. It may keep you from gaining more, but it will not help you lose.
For those of us who have gained weight due to quitting smoking, or pregnancy our weight gain is not the result of poor eating habits over a lifetime. It MAY be the result of poor eating habits over a short period of time that results in a huge weight gain.
Even more sadly, excercise (and wholesome food) is something that people are privlidged to have, and those of us not as privileged have a much harder time both losing weight and keeping it off.
And the depression that comes along with being fat in this society is an additional barrier to good mental and physical health.

#2 Comment By Odie On 01 Feb, 2007 @ 01:02

“A huge proportion, say 80% in round numbers, of anyone’s weight is determined by genetics. ”
Nope. But eating habits come from your parents, and what you are fed in your childhood will affect you through your like. So hereditary, yes, in a way, genetically determined no.

#3 Comment By quixote On 04 Feb, 2007 @ 11:23

Odie, actually, it’s “yup, more or less.” I should have phrased my statement more carefully. Weight is, of course, determined by calories eaten versus calories expended. There are no fat starving people, no matter what their genetics. What I really meant was that body type is largely determined by genetics.

No body type automatically results in clinical obesity, you’re certainly right about that. But short and sturdy is a body type that plenty of people seem to try to fight for no good reason. Also, some body types have a much easier time becoming obese than others. The “80%” (very) round number comes from the extent to which things like longevity, height, and body type are inherited, although I can’t remember where I read the specific reference re body type.

Examples of some discussions in the popular press:

Endocrinologist [4], M.D., associate director of the General Clinical Research Center at the University of Michigan Health System.

Children whose parents are obese are 10 times more likely to be obese as well.

“All you have to do is look at families and realize that if somebody in the family is overweight, it’s likely the other people in the family are overweight,” Schteingart says. “But if obesity occurs with a familial pattern, is it because of genetics or is it because people share the same habits and the same eating patterns from the word go?

Research seems to point to some genetic influence and scientists are now working to determine what genes are involved in weight. Genes have been identified that control how fat is distributed through a person’s body.

“There is evidence also that the way people use their energy is probably genetically determined. There are people who are energy efficient and people who are energy inefficient, and that seems to cluster in families,” Schteingart says.

And another one:

( [5])

Your genes determine your body type. Some body types carry more fat than others–no matter what you eat or how much you exercise. Percent body fat does not necessarily tell you how healthy or fit you are, or tell you how you look. There are large-framed students who have a higher percentage of body fat who train for triathlons, exercising several times a week and eating a healthy balanced diet. Other students may be ultra-thin and have a lower percentage of body fat, but don’t consume adequate calories or nutrients, lack physical endurance and strength, and don’t look healthy or fit.

[6] of recent scientific research (full article behind a fee wall, unfortunately): Functional characterization of human NTRK2 mutations identified in patients with severe early-onset obesity. May 2006. Gray, J., et al. International Journal of Obesity (2007) 31, 359–364.

Search for “weight gain” (with the quotes) and genetics, plus if you’re not a masochist, narrow it down a bit by adding “site:.edu” (without the quotes), and start plowing through the results. You’ll see what I mean.

#4 Comment By quixote On 04 Feb, 2007 @ 11:41

Hi Girl! Good to see you again.

About exercise and wholesome food being privileges: yes, you’re sure right about that. It’s not even the money so much as the time. Cooking good meals, exercising, being rested enough to have the energy for all that, is hugely difficult in this insane world we’ve built. All anyone can do is do what they can, and leave the rest. (And do our bit with our teaspoons to dig away at the mountain of insanity.)

Don’t let the turkeys get you down.