Kidding our way through the fat of the land
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DAVID SILVA
It was the low-carb nachos and beer that did it.
I had been fruitlessly searching the wine aisle of my favorite
specialty store for a particular brand of red wine when I finally
realized the label had been removed from the shelves. In its place
were row after row of low-carb nacho tortilla chips and low-carb
lager beer. I’m still not sure if it was the loss of my favorite wine
or the thought of some glutton trying to snack and booze his way to
fitness that made me snap, but suddenly I had had enough.
“Oh, give me a break,” I said to my girlfriend, Sharon. “When you
think of all the work that has to go into ‘de-carbohydrating’ vats of
beer, wouldn’t it be easier to simply not drink a few six-packs?”
“Oh, no,” Sharon replied. “It’s a lot easier to take the carbs out
of the beer.”
Right here is where I should have shrugged resignedly and moved on
to the canned foods aisle. But I couldn’t. I just couldn’t let go of
the fact that the low-carb craze was starting to affect my quality of
life directly.
“Do you realize that in the half-hour we’ve been here, we’ve seen
low-carb pizza, low-carb French fries, low-carb waffles and low-carb
chocolate-chocolate-chip brownies?” I exclaimed. “For God’s sake,
they even have low-carb chili verde burritos! I’m sorry, but if you
want to lose weight, maybe you should stop eating so many burritos!”
Sharon just smiled, knowing that anything she said would just add
more fuel to the fire. And to her credit, she politely resisted the
urge to point out the obvious, which was that I was clearly a man who
had a hard time passing up a good burrito.
I knew that I was oversimplifying the seductive power of junk food
to the point of absurdity. But this was something that had been
building.
Over the past two or three years, I’d watched with growing dismay
as the low-carbohydrate craze swept the country. It seemed that every
time I turned around, another shelf of precious store space was
switching over to foods I wouldn’t touch if I were snowbound in the
Sierra.
And then the restaurants starting getting into it. Suddenly,
everywhere were so-called “sensible” menu items sporting piles of
charbroiled meat rolled in leafy vegetables and marketed as
Atkins-friendly. I saw this as less a trend toward sensible eating
than as the onset of a kind of mass psychosis. It was as if the
entire nation had suddenly decided that the best way to battle the
bulge was through smoke and mirrors. Instead of eating less, millions
of Americans had chosen to try to buffalo their bodies into shedding
those unwanted pounds. No, that’s not food we’re eating. It’s just --
fuel. Burn, baby, burn!
But the problem, I’m convinced, is that the human body is much
smarter than that. It knows that lump of spongy tissue sitting on its
shoulders isn’t the sharpest organ on the donor list. Natural
selection has conditioned the body to constantly find ways around the
bad ideas that regularly come down the pipe, which is how it manages
to keep us from continually grabbing hold of hot stoves or holding
our breath until we die. The body is smarter than the brain. It has
to be, or the brain would Atkins or Scarsdale or Deal-A-Meal the
species into extinction.
And that’s why, as the variety of low-carb menu items grows more
and more plentiful, America continues to get larger and larger and
stores such as Lane Bryant get richer and richer. One man’s meat is
another’s fortune.
The body knows a bad idea when it’s afflicted by one, and it’s
really good at getting the brain’s attention. If common sense can’t
get the head to figure out for itself that an all-T-bone diet might
not be the best way to go, then perhaps a repugnant dose of chronic
bad breath might bring it around. Nothing like a little social
ostracizing to counter the benefits of a slim physique. If that
doesn’t work, how about turning up the olfactory senses to 10 to make
the smell of a nice cheese manicotti too tempting to resist? And if
none of these work as wake-up calls, there’s always the standbys --
kidney and heart disease.
So far, the only crash diets that ever worked for me were the
times I’ve come down with the flu or really bad food poisoning. Just
a few weeks ago, I lost more than seven pounds in four days after
eating a bad hamburger at a local restaurant. But that’s a diet I
wouldn’t recommend to anyone.
Of course, this is just me, and I could be completely wrong. No
one will ever mistake me for an expert on nutrition. But I’m
convinced the only lasting way to get the body to do what you want it
do is by giving the body what it wants. And after all the junk foods
and low-fat foods and no-carb foods are said and done, what the body
really wants is a balanced diet. Meat, dairy products, grains, fruits
and vegetables in sensible portions. And maybe a little more time
outside taking walks and a little less time in front of the tube
taking notes on the latest diet craze.
Again, this is just my opinion. And I ask you not to hold it
against me that I don’t practice what I preach.
A week before my meltdown in the wine aisle, I was forced to wait
in line at an In-N-Out for 10 minutes longer than I should have while
the guy in front of me argued with the cashier over the carbohydrate
content of a hamburger patty wrapped in a lettuce leaf. The man was
apparently infuriated by the fact the cook had used three leaves
instead of two.
Trust me when I say that it was everything I could do not to tap
the guy on the shoulder and say: “Look, buddy, you can wrap that
burger in romaine all you want. Eventually your body’s going to
figure out it’s not a head of lettuce. Now why don’t you go and get
some professional help and let me order my lunch.”
* DAVID SILVA is a Times Community News editor. Reach him at (909)
484-7019, or by e-mail at [email protected].
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