■Men ■ Women Prevalence of Obesity and Overweight in the U.S. (adults, estimated %) Source:NIH |
the issues that the documentary presented. It seems crazy how many people are overweight or obese! Yet, when you stop and think about it, it starts to make sense. What it all boils down to is processed food.
The vast majority of the foods we see in the supermarkets are highly processed. Processing itself is not necessarily bad, but unfortunately most of the processing has to do with adding a lot of sugar, salt, fat and artificial ingredients to enhance the food’s shelf life, flavor or texture. Micronutriens, such as vitamins and minerals (except for sodium), are absent, or perhaps added to make the food seem better than it is. Processed food is all around us, it is convenient and tasty – how can you not eat it?
Let’s look at these three contributors to the appeal of processed food. The first, and one of the biggest, hurdles in eating less processed food is convenience. Living in Silicon Valley, it is not hard at all to feel the pull of convenience over health – since I am using most of my time for studying, while also attempting to add some exercise into my routine, cooking is just a very time consuming activity that becomes hard to fit in. Time is difficult to come by and it probably takes some serious prioritizing and reorganizing of one’s life to change that.
Americans get most of their calories from processed food |
Cash register temptations |
So let’s all just stop buying
processed food. We’ll simply close our eyes when we drive down the street, make
time to cook and buy nothing that is bad for us. That is of course if we can afford to choose. Some people rely on processed food to provide them with enough calories for every day activities, whereas buying processed food for others may mean being able to buy more of something else, like clothing. Furthermore, healthy food is sometimes difficult to have access to
– not necessarily because it is more expensive, but because supermarkets
selling fresh produce are not close to everyone, not even here in the Bay Area,
the mecca of technology and innovation.
So what should we do?
Convincing big food companies to ditch the bad stuff and produce healthy food is probably not going to happen any time soon and the government will not be
able to shift their subsidies from wheat and sugar to kale and oranges. Part of
the answer is education, but no amount of education is going to help if people
don’t have the means to do what they are taught.
What we can do is to look at our own choices. Question them. Why do I buy the products I buy? Are these products good for me? Is there a better option? Could I make some more time each week to cook from scratch? Even small changes matter, as they will eventually lead to big improvements.
What we can do is to look at our own choices. Question them. Why do I buy the products I buy? Are these products good for me? Is there a better option? Could I make some more time each week to cook from scratch? Even small changes matter, as they will eventually lead to big improvements.
Love,
Anna-Kaisa
References
NIH Obesity and Overweight statistics
USDA Food Consumption Statistics
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