Self Knowledge Avails Us Nothing… A Recovery Adage Proving to be True Concerning the Obesity Epidemic in the Big Apple
Every morning, I take a small jaunt to Starbucks (my apartment building sits on top of it, literally) for my Venti-3-pump-sugar-free-gingerbread-half-calf-Pike’s Place coffee. And every morning, I can’t help but notice the three-digit numbers adorning the drink menu and baked good case that lists the calories–a NYC law enacted by the NYC Board of Health and Mental Hygiene in 2008, to help fight the obesity epidemic. Food addicts could’ve told NYC policymakers that merely listing the calories in chain restaurants and fast food outfits wasn’t going to cut the mustard. Moreover, I’m guessing that the Board of Health failed to consult anyone who has had a food addiction. If they had, they would’ve known that food addiction and obesity is much more powerful and complex than knowing what the calories are in a food or beverage. I mean, really. Way to reduce such a huge problem to an education issue. I’m not saying education isn’t helpful–there are just so many other, more deeply-rooted layers.
A couple of months ago, and nearly one year after the law had been in effect, The New York Times ran a story about a study conducted by professors at NYU and Yale University, which measured the fast food spending habits of consumers in low-income neighborhoods, both before and after the employment of the calorie-listing-law. While consumers felt like they were making healthier choices, the evidence–fast food receipts collected–showed that consumers were, in fact, choosing higher calorie items, thus contributing to the perpetuation of the obesity epidemic.
By the way… pardon the repeated mentioning of calories. I couldn’t avoid it.
While the intention was good, the Board of Health is now, for lack of a better word, in a bit of a pickle I’d say. The plan has backfired, so now what? Clearly, there is no easy answer. Just the fact that the study was conducted in low-income neighborhoods says that at least one of the issues around obesity concerns the social environment in which one lives and the type of food readily available to people with a low socioeconomic status.
I wanted to write about this article, even though it was back in October, for a couple of reasons. First, I’m currently running a therapy group for people in recovery who have cross-addicted to food and are now overweight (more on that in another post!). Second, it reminds me of my own experience. Both I, in my addiction, as well as my group members, knew what to eat. I planned every day to be a perfect food day, even in the height of my addiction. And every day, I’d louse it up. Why? Because, as we know, it’s so much more than about food.
I’m living in a city where, depending on the geographic location, a large percentage of people vacillate between orthorexia and obesity. I’m surrounded by thousands of restaurants, as well as athletic clubs, spinning, yoga and pilates studios. Whether in the weight ranges of under, “normal,” or over, people in this city are definitely into food. I’m also living in a place where free exercise is at one’s disposal; however, we have one of the highest obesity rates. I think if policymakers are really into tackling the obesity epidemic, they need to look a little deeper.








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