Sep 23

A new Australian program is helping overweight people of all ages “get their heads around” the fight against obesity. Ned Newman of “Never Ever Diet” has a strong message that “mind over matter” can make the difference between a lifelong struggle against weight gain, coupled with yo-yo dieting, and a healthy weight coupled with enjoyment of food.

The world is getting fatter. Despite the huge and ever growing diet industry, obesity continues to increase.

A recent report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said “The proportion of U.S. adults who are obese increased to 26.1 percent in 2008 compared to 25.6 percent in 2007”.

The agency states, “During the past 20 years there has been a dramatic increase in obesity in the United States. Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or greater. BMI is calculated from a person’s weight and height and provides a reas onable indicator of body fatness and weight categories that may lead to health problems.”

An obvious conclusion to draw from this report is that dieting just does not work. At every turn, we are implored to try this diet or to go on that diet and we are cajoled, punished and made to feel guilty for being overweight. Yet, we get heavier every year.

So if dieting makes us fatter in the long term, what are we to do?

There is a movement towards looking at the emotional causes of obesity instead of the traditional physical approaches of restrictive diets, special foods, meal replacements, pills, chemicals, surgery and tortuous exercise.

Best selling author Jon Gabriel, “The Gabriel Method”, says “Your body has an internal logic that determines how fat or thin you will be at any given time. The way to lose weight is not to struggle or to force yourself to lose weight but to understand this internal logic and work wi th it so that your body wants to be thinner.” Mt Gabriel himself lost 100 kgs before writing his life-changing book.

The UK’s top non-fiction author and hypnotist Paul McKenna, “I Can Make You Slim”, has helped millions to lose weight with his system that re-patterns your thoughts, attitudes, and beliefs about yourself, your health and food.

In Weight Loss for Food Lovers, Australian MD, psychiatrist and author Dr George Blair-West writes about “our deep emotional attachment to food and the research into Restraint Theory”. He says his clients “needed to make a quantum shift in the way they approached losing weight”.

An increasing number of experts are coming to the same conclusions.

Mr Newman’s “Never Ever Diet” program has distilled the wisdom of many of these experts into a simple 21 day meditation plan to turn you into a slim person. He says “If you are overweight and on a diet, you are probably starving your body of the nutrition it needs. Dieting sends your body the worst possible wrong messages”. He states, “You can teach your mind how to make you as slim as you want to be and never ever diet again”.

Client Stacia Biddle says “This program tapped into my subconscious mind and made me pay attention to what I was eating. In fact, at this point, it has completely gotten rid of my snacking urges throughout the day”.

Gradually, people are realising that losing weight is not about what you put into your mouth. It is all about what is in your head. We have been brainwashed by Big Food with cop-outs like being fat is beyond our control, it is in our genes, our inheritance, our hormones, whatever. Or that we are lazy, greedy, self indulgent and it is our entire fault if the latest diet fails us.

It appears that obesity is a problem that we need to “get our heads around&rdq uo; if we are to defeat it.

About NeverEverDiet

NeverEverDiet.com is a new website based in Australia and dedicated to introducing the best of the new ways to tackle obesity.

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Aug 06

This is what I read from LA Times a few months ago. Racial minorities like blacks have a very different opinion on obesity from other racial groups. Why? Since my store have a lot of black customers, I noticed that many people don’t see obesity as a negative thing. I wonder why.

Because of Mo’Nique.

Look up her book. "Skinny women are Evil"

Jul 18

Obesity rates in the states are climbing. Colorado’s rate is also growing but yet they still maintain the lowest obese rate in the whole United States. What is this due to?

Fresh air that encourages people to go outside and be active, instead of stuck in the suburbs or inside their country homes due to nasty weather. That’s my opinion. But look at this website.. http://www.webmd.com/diet/news/20080717/7-slimming-tips-from-the-skinniest-state?page=2 it explains some of the main factors.

Jul 04

A lot of people blame the fast foods like Mcdonalds, Burger King, Dairy Queen. What’s your view on the obesity level?

As Americans we all grow up eating fast food. But we’re not ALL fat!
Americans love the "all you can eat" mentality, which is why we invented the buffet. Some of us take this to the extreme. Fast food tastes alright, and it’s cheap…So, it’s easy to buy more than you should actually eat.
It’s our choices that lead to obesity. We can’t blame fast food vendors for selling the food that WE choose to eat.

Jul 02

Im writing a paper obviously about childhood obesity. I have it pretty much done but i am just looking for a couple new ideas.

Children would be healthier, not have as many medical problems, etc….

Jul 01

I am writing a paper for my english class on childhood obesity. I was just wondering if there was anyone out there who has been through this personally and could give me some good advice for my paper.

There are lots of good ideas out there. Plenty of people chime in on the issue with regularity.

One thing I’ve noticed during my lifetime, and I’m 45, is that when I was a kid, most mothers didn’t work. Therefore, at the end of the day, they were thinking about, and preparing, a real dinner. Now, it seems, no family can do without two paychecks, it’s still mom’s "job" to figure out dinner no matter how exhausted she may be, and there’s a fast food joint on almost every corner.

I’m not placing blame for the obesity on mothers going to work…far from it. I’m thinking, though, that if there were healthier solutions for overworked parents, they would choose them.

Brilliant idea! Someone needs to start a fast-food joint that tastes good and costs the same as all the other ones.

Jun 29

A new study just came out for the first time that tracks childhood obesity y state. This was done by The Trust for America’s help.

The study is called F as in Fat: How Obesity Policies are Failing in America, 2007
Some of the major factors include poverty and lack of excercise. (no brainer)

1. What are your thoughts around childhood obesity?
2. What do you think is the key to prevent it?
3. As parents, how can we play a role in that not just for our own kids, but their friends as well?

I think obesity is a problem not just in children but a lot of adults as well. I think many adults havent learned proper diet and excersice so how can they teach their kids.

Preventing it- well it could be lowering prices on healthy food versues junk food- a poverty family can afford more kinds of junk food to feed a family than they can feed on healthy. Also having more free activities for kids to get involved with- I mean kids would play more sports before but parents cant afford today alot of the prices for these things now days. Having more for them to do in the community would be nice.

I think by helping our kids help other people instead of calling them names- like a heavy child being called fat could be more helped by our children asking if they need a walking partner. We need to as parents ask what is it that we can do for the community, like starting weight camps and teaching children about healthy eating tips, not just a prymid that they dont understand and having the time to give knowledge to others to help them be able to help themselves.

Jun 28

I am having difficulty with this assignment and have had my paper returned three times. I don’t know what I’m doing wrong. Could someone provide an example of an ambiguous statement regarding obesity in the US. Maybe it will help me understand what the grader is looking for, nothing else has!

The reason that alot of people in the United States suffer from obesity is because many of them are too heavy.

The reason that alot of people in the United States suffer from obesity is because they like food too much.

The reason that alot of people in the United States suffer from obesity is because they gain too much weight.

Jun 27

Sweets, sodas, junk food, inactivity: obesity in children is a worry. What can we all do about it?

I am a 14 year old boy myself, and from a young age I have been not forced, but positively encouraged by my parents to eat a healthy, balanced diet whilst taking regular exercise.

I find that it does not only stimulate me physically, but it promotes my well being and mental stature. The only problem is, I can easily look around in my community and see other people my age and younger who obviously follow different guidelines and the effects show.

My brother has a friend of whom shall remain anonymous, and he is extraordinarily overweight for his 12 year age. I never ask him directly about his habits, but our families are good friends. Whilst I eat salads, home made food and low sodium, fat and other reduced ‘badness’ foods on a regular basis he is given an oven mini pizza snatched from the shelf of ASDA. He takes no exercise whatsoever and he waddles around. Honestly. He is small for his age and constantly looked at when he walks through the town centre as he looks so young. When he has meals at our house, he eats like some sort of barbarian; he chews with his mouth open, breaths through his mouth and just gets it all in at once. His father passed away last year, so I can only suspect that he, his mother and his six year old brother (who is also the same) do not eat together, rather they eat on their laps in the front room. When we take trips to the local park for a kick around, he has zero stamina and cannot keep up with the rest of his friends in PE. I worry because I know this can only lead to massive problems in later life both socially and physically.

My brother follows the same routines as me, but takes much less exercise and it sort of shows; he has a much larger abdomen than me. I am an active football referee, swimmer and participator in school sports days. I have a paper round, which take me half an hour each day, which I walk, totalling up to about 10 hours of exercise a week. I enjoy what I do and participate in The Duke Of Edinburgh award which I am in the process of getting my silver status.

In all, I feel that the key to tackling obesity is to maintain regular, healthy eating habits with other family members to help social skills, gain better relations (going away from possible depression, which could lead to comfort eating) with family and of course lots of exercise. I follow these simple rules, and I am 14 years old, 6ft 1" and 11 stone, with a muscled, athletic build. I very, very rarely eat fast food but as a man I cannot resist the odd kebab every few months. I am proud of who I am as I know I make the right decisions and I only wish everyone else could. I love what you’re doing at the moment doctor, and I am fully behind it.

Thank you,
The Famous Peter

Jun 25

im researching teen obesity and i need a good intro paragraph but i cannot really think of anything. any on idea? on how i should start this.

you should start out with Statistics about Obesity
or the definition of it
here’s some ideas..

The percent of children and teens who are overweight also continues to increase. Among children and teens ages 6-19, 15 percent (almost 9 million) are overweight according to the 1999-2000 data, or triple what the proportion was in 1980. In addition, the data shows that another 15 percent of children and teens ages 6 to 19 are considered at risk of becoming overweight.

OR
Obesity can be defined as an excessive accumulation of body fat, which results in individuals being at least 20 percent heavier than their ideal body weight. "Overweight" is defined as any weight in excess of the ideal range. Obesity is a common eating disorder associated with adolescence.

Good luck!!

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