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I am a 44 year old single mother of two beautiful children; Brian 20, and Nicole 17. Being a mom is the thing I am most proud of; I could sit and ta...
 
 
 
 

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Are Americans Becoming More Honest About Their Weight?

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Are you honest about your weight?  Although I would prefer not to be asked, when I am asked, it never occurs to me to lie about it.

It used to be that women were thought to always lie about their age and weight, but a new CDC study finds that Americans are becoming more honest (at least about) their weight.  To be honest, I didn't even know that there were studies measuring the number of people who lie about their weight.  It seems a little odd, but who am I to judge?

The new report also found that in nine states at least 30 percent of the adults were obese in 2009. The states were Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Oklahoma, West Virginia and Mississippi, the highest at 34 percent. In 2007, only Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee topped 30 percent.

No states met a national goal for 2010 of limiting obesity to 15 percent. Only Colorado and the District of Columbia were lower than 20 percent, and just barely.

It did get me thinking a bit about why?  Why are Americans becoming more honest about their weight, especially considering that obesity is on the rise?

Could it be that we are finally getting to the point of loving and accepting ourselves, even with our perceived imperfections?  That wouldn't be so bad, maybe those Dove ads (you know, the ones using average and plus size models) are having an impact on how we see ourselves.  Whatever the reason, if women are feeling better about themselves, I think that's wonderful.  Anyway, that's my idealistic way of looking at this story, and I think it could be true.

However, it seems the researchers have their own opinion (go figure), and it does make sense.  They believe that because of all the press coverage over the ever-growing obesity epidemic (and the health problems associated with it), that Americans are becoming more aware of their weight and therefore more honest.  The benefit to this observation would be that Americans are becoming concerned about the health risks of being overweight (rather than the stigma), and are keeping a closer eye on it.  In the long run (idealistically), this change in behavior may actually prove to be the catalyst to American's changing their eating habits from unhealthy to healthy, and that would be a good thing.  Wouldn't it be great to go from a society facing an obesity epidemic, to a society facing a healthy living epidemic?

Woman measuring waistline

In a related story, another study finds belly bulge contributes to four serious medical conditions that can ultimately lead to death.

It seems women should have a waist circumference no greater than 33- 35 inches, otherwise they are at a increased risk for heart disease, asthma, breast cancer as well as dementia.

"Even if you haven't had a noticeable weight gain, if you notice your waist size increasing that's an important sign," said lead author Eric Jacobs of the American Cancer Society, which funded the study. "It's time to eat better and start exercising more."

Bulging bellies are a problem for most Americans older than 50. It's estimated that more than half of older men and more than 70 percent of older women have bigger waistlines than recommended. And it's a growing problem: Average waistlines have expanded by about an inch per decade since the 1960s.

Although I'm not past the recommended girth, I have noticed an evolution of how my body is distributing its weight.  I wrote about how I've been carrying my weight differently since I hit 40, and the difficult time I've been having trying to lose the last 10 pounds.

I can’t help but think that my age has something to do with my inability to get rid of those last ten pounds. At 42, I’ve been observing some strange happenings to my body.

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BumbleBeeRunning 5 pts

I'm honest about my weight. While I wouldn't advertise it, if I know someone well enough to be talking about my weight with them, I'm going to tell them the truth. I think it's part of a larger honesty about my weight loss journey and the ongoing struggle to maintain a weight that works for me.

Maybe Americans are starting to accept that health and fitness is about way more than weight, so perhaps that number isn't as "scary" to share.

mandalaymoon 5 pts

I just wanted to comment that it would be hard to love your body when you're fat and everyone panics about the "obesity epidemic." I think if we separated weight from the idea of health it would actually be easier for people to get to a healthy weight because there could be recognition that naturally some people are fatter than others and it's not always about health. Another thing I'm wondering is how exactly they were able to calculate how honest people are about their weight.

JennaHatfield 10 pts

I don't know. Because I've stopped weighing myself. It's too triggering for me to stalk my weight.

Jenna Hatfield (@FireMom ( http://twitter.com/FireMom )), from Stop, Drop and Blog ( http://stopdropandblog.com ) and The Chronicles of Munchkin Land ( http://thechroniclesofmunchkinland.com ), is a freelance writer and newspaper photographer.

Catherine Morgan 5 pts

Thanks for your comment and for your link.
:-)

Contributing Editor Catherine Morgan
Also at Catherine-Morgan.com ( http://catherine-morgan.com/ )

Chocolate Mama 5 pts

I agree wholeheartedly that everyone is being more honest about weight. In today's society, unhealthy weight is finally becoming everyone's business. I even posted about my own fatness:

http://chocolatemomrants.blogspot.com/2010/05/fat-...

What doesn't kill me will only prove to make me stronger!!