“The End of Overeating”
I have just started listening to yet another audio book called “The End of Overeating” and while it may not pertain to you, almost all of us know someone that suffers from the inability to control what and how much they eat.
The book, which is written by Dr. David Kessler, former Commissioner for the FDA, starts off with some fascinating interviews with people who simply can not control their eating habits. They are literally obsessed with food and spend all day thinking about it. One of the ladies Dr. Kessler interviewed said she was able to control her weight through a lot of exercise but that she still obsessed with food.
The book then talked about how this obesity epidemic is a rather new phenomenon. Up until the 1980’s the weight of the average American was pretty constant and predictable. They would add a few pounds through adulthood and lose a few pounds as they got into old age but most people kept a healthy weight and the overweight people were the exception, not the norm.
However, statistics showed that trend changed drastically in the 80’s. For example, in the 70’s the average weight of a female between 21-29 years old used to be 126 pounds (I am writing these numbers from memory so they may not be exact but they are pretty close). However, in the year 2000 that had jumped to 159 pounds. These jumps were seen across the board and one of the most disturbing trends was how much fatter the kids were getting.
While I am just starting the book and have a lot left to get through, I can tell you that there is a sinister underlying force at work here. Much like Big Tobacco learned how to combine nicotine with other chemicals in just the right amount to increase the addictiveness of cigarettes, “Big Food” has learned how to combine sugar, fat and salt in ways that make food much more addictive.
For example, there was a study on how a sugar and fat solution affected a strain of mice that had been bred to be obesity prone vs. regular mice. The regular mice would eat regular food until they were full and then stop while the obesity prone strain would tend to overeat and gain weight. However, when the sugar and fat solution was introduced to both groups, that difference completely disappeared.
Both groups would gorge themselves and the regular mice would be just as prone to gain weight as the obesity strain. This is pretty scary stuff – there are literally food combinations that will short circuit your body’s normal mechanisms of controlling how much food you ingest. The Big Food companies have literally researched how much salt they can add to certain foods in order to maximize how much we love it without being too salty so that we hate it.
I just find it ironic how quick we are to levy huge taxes on cigarettes and demonize Big Tobacco while we give companies like McDonalds and products like Big Macs a pass on their role in a much bigger problem. Literally 2/3 of all Americans are considered overweight, far more than the number that smoke, and the health risks associated with obesity are real and well documented.
I’m excited to get further into the book and learn more about the causes of this problem and what can be done to solve it. While I do not personally struggle with an obsession with food, I have friends and family members who eat too much. And while I still think that will power and exercise play a role, the truth is that there is a new enemy out there who wants your money and will do whatever they can to get it, even if it means having people literally eat themselves to death. The more we can do to help educate people about “Big Food” and how it is manipulating them, the better we will be as a society.

This is an awesome post, I watch my sales guys eat so bad every day and it makes me mad. They will go to Taco Bell and get a “light lunch” What is light about lard, sour cream and face plastic cheese? I don’t know?
I agree this is a great blog. My brother and sister-in-law went on a “what-are-we-spending-our-money-on” self-discovery and found out they spend about $600.00 a month eating out. This explains their finances and their difficulty in being slim.
Wow. Can’t wait to hear the rest when you finish the book!
This came to me from a friend of a friend via email, and I am so glad to have read it. My ‘womans intuition’ had been on alert for decades that something peculiar was up with this growing overweight epidemic because, as a child in the early 60’s, we just didn’t have fat kids! There was an occasional one, but nothing like today. As a mother feeding two kids in the 80’s and 90’s, I felt like I was fighting a Tsunami wave trying to keep my kids away from the junk food. It was SAD what they were serving in the school cafeteria – compared to what I was served ‘back in the day’ at my gradeschool. It is going to take a couple generations of hard work – and some lawsuits – to reverse the harm caused by the Big Food industries.
Mrs. Master of Pro-Master Painting
Peoria, Arizona