Dialogue on Obesity by the Fort Frances Times.
Dialogue on obesity still being pushed
By Duane Hicks
Staff writer
FORT FRANCES—A Thunder Bay man is making headway in his mission to create dialogue about building healthy food relationships through education, awareness, and advocacy.
Touting the message “Against Obesity, Not Against Obese People,” Paul Murphy, a recovering binge-eater, is continuing to try and raise awareness of obesity-related issues through the group, Obesity Thunder Bay.
Always keeping his finger on the pulse of any news related to obesity and weight loss, Murphy most recently extended an invitation from Obesity Thunder Bay to the new Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation that was launched last Monday (Oct. 5).
Nestle USA, ConAgra Foods, Kraft Foods Inc. and Mars, Inc., Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo Inc., Hershey Co., Sara Lee Corp., and other major food manufacturers, as well as several non-profit groups, such as the American Council for Fitness and Nutrition Foundation, PE4life, and the American Dietetic Association Foundation, have joined forces to form the foundation—the goal of which is to reduce obesity, particularly in kids, by an unspecified amount over the next six years.
“I sent an e-mail to them saying I want to participate, I want to work with them,” Murphy noted Thursday. “You know what’s going to happen, but in all fairness, stranger things have happened.
“We have no alliances anywhere else, so maybe Coca-Cola or Nestle may express an interest,” he added. “I think what they have to understand is instead of circling the wagons, they need to start being responsible.
“But anyway, I sent them an e-mail indicating what we’re working on.
“I called Coca-Cola in Atlanta this morning . . . I want them to know Obesity Thunder Bay is eager to create partnerships and we look forward to addressing childhood obesity. That’s what we’re about,” Murphy remarked.
“We don’t want to fight,” he stressed. “It’s certainly not in Obesity Thunder Bay’s interest to be in conflict.”
Another recent headline that caught Murphy’s attention was a penny per ounce tax on sugar-sweetened beverages that may be implemented in California as a means to fund health care costs.
“If this goes through, everybody everywhere is going to follow simply because there has to be a way to recoup the health costs,” he argued.
“The implications are beyond belief.”
Closer to home, an article about Murphy just was published last week in Lakehead University’s “Argus News,” which has resulted in dozens of hits at the Obesity Thunder Bay blog site.
He’s also made it known he’d be willing to do speaking engagements at Lakehead U., and has been in contact with a number of other universities in the province and elsewhere in Canada.
Murphy also has been taking advantage of the power of the Internet, and has been busy networking every chance he can get.
“Our web presence is very, very strong,” noted Murphy, adding the Obesity Thunder Bay website (www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com) has seen nearly 3,000 visits since February, with visitors hailing from Canada and the U.S., as well as the Philippines, Brazil, England, New Zealand, and even Ukraine.
As of this month, the site had 80 registered members “from all walks of life,” Murphy said.
They range from health-care professionals to individuals who have felt the stigma of being overweight.
“They’re tired. Tired of the messages,” he said of the members.
Murphy said he’s hopeful continued online networking, as well as media coverage and direct contact with area leaders and politicians, will foster relationships with larger agencies that will band together to build working platforms and dialogue.
“The best-case scenario would be, in the next year, to raise awareness while lowering ‘fat hatred,’” he remarked.
“We want people to create healthy food relationships, but they need to know what that is,” he stressed.
Murphy said obesity is definitely a hot topic right now, whether it’s in relation to the health-care reform debate in the United States, controversial ads like PETA’s “Save The Whales. Lose Blubber. Go Vegetarian” campaign, or the number-one trending topic on Twitter back on Aug. 25: “Fat people are sexier.”
As such, he feels the time is right to get a dialogue going in Northwestern Ontario—and further abroad, if possible—to work towards change.
A major part of that is altering the blame-based model of obesity, which links it to lack of willpower and laziness.
Citing one example, Murphy said too much emphasis is put on the “activity model,” which pushes physical activity as the solution to eliminating obesity.
He noted that, suspiciously, this same “activity model” often is funded by major industry, including soft drink companies, who benefit from shifting the blame for obesity away from their junk food products and towards activities like television viewing and computer use, which supposedly result in people becoming overweight.
While exercise certainly can be beneficial, Murphy feels building a better relationship with food is even more important.
He added the oft-heard mantra of eating healthy and exercise as the key to weight control is “a nice message, but it misses a step, and that step is the food relationship,” he argued.
“For children who are using sugar and salt to self-medicate, how much is a pair of runners going to make a change?” he asked.
“You know there’s people that go to the gym five or six times a week. Not to say it’s bad, but sometimes you go from one extreme to another,” Murphy continued.
“For a person who is three-, four-, or five hundred pounds, that’s really not an option because they’re beaten down,” he reasoned.
Murphy said the door for discussion is opening more all the time, and hopefully public perceptions will begin to change and that the “blame game” will turn into something more constructive.
“When 90 percent of people believe obesity is caused by laziness, unhealthy lifestyles, no willpower, that feeds the diet industry, that feeds the ‘try harder,’” he remarked.
“What we’re saying is, ‘Sit down. Relax. Enjoy your food, but be mindful of what you’re eating.’”
(Fort Frances Times)
By Duane Hicks
Staff writer
FORT FRANCES—A Thunder Bay man is making headway in his mission to create dialogue about building healthy food relationships through education, awareness, and advocacy.
Touting the message “Against Obesity, Not Against Obese People,” Paul Murphy, a recovering binge-eater, is continuing to try and raise awareness of obesity-related issues through the group, Obesity Thunder Bay.
Always keeping his finger on the pulse of any news related to obesity and weight loss, Murphy most recently extended an invitation from Obesity Thunder Bay to the new Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation that was launched last Monday (Oct. 5).
Nestle USA, ConAgra Foods, Kraft Foods Inc. and Mars, Inc., Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo Inc., Hershey Co., Sara Lee Corp., and other major food manufacturers, as well as several non-profit groups, such as the American Council for Fitness and Nutrition Foundation, PE4life, and the American Dietetic Association Foundation, have joined forces to form the foundation—the goal of which is to reduce obesity, particularly in kids, by an unspecified amount over the next six years.
“I sent an e-mail to them saying I want to participate, I want to work with them,” Murphy noted Thursday. “You know what’s going to happen, but in all fairness, stranger things have happened.
“We have no alliances anywhere else, so maybe Coca-Cola or Nestle may express an interest,” he added. “I think what they have to understand is instead of circling the wagons, they need to start being responsible.
“But anyway, I sent them an e-mail indicating what we’re working on.
“I called Coca-Cola in Atlanta this morning . . . I want them to know Obesity Thunder Bay is eager to create partnerships and we look forward to addressing childhood obesity. That’s what we’re about,” Murphy remarked.
“We don’t want to fight,” he stressed. “It’s certainly not in Obesity Thunder Bay’s interest to be in conflict.”
Another recent headline that caught Murphy’s attention was a penny per ounce tax on sugar-sweetened beverages that may be implemented in California as a means to fund health care costs.
“If this goes through, everybody everywhere is going to follow simply because there has to be a way to recoup the health costs,” he argued.
“The implications are beyond belief.”
Closer to home, an article about Murphy just was published last week in Lakehead University’s “Argus News,” which has resulted in dozens of hits at the Obesity Thunder Bay blog site.
He’s also made it known he’d be willing to do speaking engagements at Lakehead U., and has been in contact with a number of other universities in the province and elsewhere in Canada.
Murphy also has been taking advantage of the power of the Internet, and has been busy networking every chance he can get.
“Our web presence is very, very strong,” noted Murphy, adding the Obesity Thunder Bay website (www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com) has seen nearly 3,000 visits since February, with visitors hailing from Canada and the U.S., as well as the Philippines, Brazil, England, New Zealand, and even Ukraine.
As of this month, the site had 80 registered members “from all walks of life,” Murphy said.
They range from health-care professionals to individuals who have felt the stigma of being overweight.
“They’re tired. Tired of the messages,” he said of the members.
Murphy said he’s hopeful continued online networking, as well as media coverage and direct contact with area leaders and politicians, will foster relationships with larger agencies that will band together to build working platforms and dialogue.
“The best-case scenario would be, in the next year, to raise awareness while lowering ‘fat hatred,’” he remarked.
“We want people to create healthy food relationships, but they need to know what that is,” he stressed.
Murphy said obesity is definitely a hot topic right now, whether it’s in relation to the health-care reform debate in the United States, controversial ads like PETA’s “Save The Whales. Lose Blubber. Go Vegetarian” campaign, or the number-one trending topic on Twitter back on Aug. 25: “Fat people are sexier.”
As such, he feels the time is right to get a dialogue going in Northwestern Ontario—and further abroad, if possible—to work towards change.
A major part of that is altering the blame-based model of obesity, which links it to lack of willpower and laziness.
Citing one example, Murphy said too much emphasis is put on the “activity model,” which pushes physical activity as the solution to eliminating obesity.
He noted that, suspiciously, this same “activity model” often is funded by major industry, including soft drink companies, who benefit from shifting the blame for obesity away from their junk food products and towards activities like television viewing and computer use, which supposedly result in people becoming overweight.
While exercise certainly can be beneficial, Murphy feels building a better relationship with food is even more important.
He added the oft-heard mantra of eating healthy and exercise as the key to weight control is “a nice message, but it misses a step, and that step is the food relationship,” he argued.
“For children who are using sugar and salt to self-medicate, how much is a pair of runners going to make a change?” he asked.
“You know there’s people that go to the gym five or six times a week. Not to say it’s bad, but sometimes you go from one extreme to another,” Murphy continued.
“For a person who is three-, four-, or five hundred pounds, that’s really not an option because they’re beaten down,” he reasoned.
Murphy said the door for discussion is opening more all the time, and hopefully public perceptions will begin to change and that the “blame game” will turn into something more constructive.
“When 90 percent of people believe obesity is caused by laziness, unhealthy lifestyles, no willpower, that feeds the diet industry, that feeds the ‘try harder,’” he remarked.
“What we’re saying is, ‘Sit down. Relax. Enjoy your food, but be mindful of what you’re eating.’”
(Fort Frances Times)
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Comment by Breand Oelbaum on April 25, 2013 at 11:12pm
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Great press Paul...Although I feel that a lot of the "Health Crisis" noise is just that...junk science and Fear Mongering...Fat like male pattern baldness is over medicalized, there are people who are fat and fit. We do need to meet these people in the middle...Mimi Roth? not so much she is just another Ann Coulter only for the diet industry...My opinion...but I stand by it.
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Comment by Paul Murphy on January 8, 2010 at 11:18am
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We are having a health crisis and it is time we opened up to the concept of a conversation. TV WEIGHT loss continues to distort the simple reality of the issue. The fact is obesity is very complex and childhood obesity requires an environmental investigation.
I want to welcome you to my web site at www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com.
This is 100 % not for profit. It does have a little fat 411,and you can follow me on twitter at 2fat2fly.
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Comment by Paul Murphy on November 22, 2009 at 7:01pm
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Unhealthy notions!
It is about time that Canadians stop blaming the individual for all of its social ills and begin to adopt a collectivist rather than an individualist perspective on health. The editors fail to appreciate that individual health does not exist in a social vacuum. The photo of an obese adolescent gorging on cotton candy is typical of the media and only perpetuates the false perception that obese individuals are sloths and gluttons. This needs to stop. I encourage your editors to go to www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com and get educated.
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Comment by Paul Murphy on November 17, 2009 at 7:09pm
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MeMeRoth
...
Re: Obesity
...
Re: Obesity
Thank you for your msg, Paul. I watched your video and agree 100% that therapy, especially on-going therapy, is a must to address the underlying reasons people are using food as a coping device.
NAAO never promotes going on diets. We all know the failure rates. Instead we promote reducing the risk of disease and further weight gain by daily exercise and eliminating obesity- and disease-accelerating substances from the food supply.
The most crucial element to reversing the obesity crisis is PREVENTION, especially among the 0-5 year olds. Attacking obesity before it strikes is far more effective than expecting overweight or obese people to lose weight later on. (I'm working on a project specifically geared toward removal of junk food from America's daycare centers... If you're interested, send me a msg.)
While this is a national health crisis (global too), I find our societal and governmental reaction to be dismal. Corporate America has zero motivation to make change. Imagine the business cost if Americans ate only the portions and foods necessary for optimal health?
Thanks again for contacting me, Paul. I wish you all the best. In my private practice (www.MeMeRoth.net) offering Integrative Nutrition Counseling, we couple nutrition advice w/ counseling from board certified psychologists who specialize in food and obesity issues.
Take Care!
MeMe
Original Message:
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Comment by Paul Murphy on October 18, 2009 at 9:51pm
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Paul: i would like to say, that i am very proud of you and your
accomplishments thus far. You believed in yourself and your mission and it
obviously shows. I would like to take this opportunity to say congratulations
and encourage you to continue on your mission. Paul, i believe, that all of us
have a purpose and a path in life, and if yours happens to be one, that
involves helping others, in providing them with education, and your own
personal experience; then that is exactly what needs to happen. Your
awareness, and perseverance has paid off.
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