Archive for ‘Deb Lemire’

April 17, 2012

The HAES Files: A less traveled road

by healthateverysizeblog

by Deb Lemire, President of the Association for Size Diversity and Health

Those of us who incorporate the Health At Every Size® approach in our work and personal life continually run up against the over-culture that hates larger bodies, dictates weight loss as the path to health, declares all fat bodies are automatically sick bodies, and holds that if you don’t agree then you don’t care about yourself, the children, the economy or global warming.  It’s as though everyone, except HAESSM practitioners, are haters and part of a larger conspiracy to eliminate the fat body.

But when you sit down at the table with people working on task forces or in clinics, schools, and doctors’ offices; and when you talk face to face, you find that your goals are very much the same.  Everyone truly wants to be a part of a community that supports health for people of all sizes.  It is only when we get down the road a bit do we find ourselves facing the “two roads diverged in a yellow wood.”

I recently had lunch with a colleague of mine.  Both of us work in an elementary after school program focusing on health and wellness.  While she could appreciate my HAES point of view, and knew I cared about the kids we worked with as much as she did, still she could not get past her fear for the children that she believed to be at risk for disease because of their high weights.  She felt very strongly that we would be irresponsible if we did not teach them how to lose weight. I imagine this is a familiar discussion for many of us, and there are many ways to respond.  I could remind her that we actually don’t know how to teach anyone to lose weight permanently, or that the odds of a child developing an eating disorder are far greater than the odds of that child developing diabetes.  I could point out that children of all sizes eat the same lunch in the cafeteria and play on the same playground.  I could share information on how socio-economic status, genetics, environment and stigma impact the physiological development of a body.  In fact, in past discussions I have brought all of this to the table.  It seemed to me that she simply wasn’t hearing what I was saying.  But I realized that it was I who wasn’t listening.  It isn’t about the statistics or disease.  It is about fear.  Fear that if we do not comply with the over-culture we will harm our children.  And speaking as a parent, there is no fear greater.

So maybe we should take the opportunity to reframe their fears and then re-imagine those outcomes defined by fear as outcomes defined by hope.

Road Not Taken

We shouldn’t fear that children won’t eat the right thing, but rather that they will go hungry and have no access to healthy food; so we are motivated by hope to provide better sustenance for our children.

We shouldn’t fear that our children will sit in front of video games all day, but rather that they will not have safe places to play outside; so we are empowered by hope to curb violence in our communities.

We shouldn’t fear that our children will be bullied because their bodies are different, but rather that they will never realize their true awesomeness; so we are fueled by hope to create a community of belonging and love.

These fears are not unfamiliar to those of us who embrace the HAES model.  We’ve all traveled the fear road. But unlike the traveler in Robert Frost’s poem, we did come back to where the two roads diverged in that wood, and this time we “took the one less traveled by”: Hope. And that can make all the difference.

January 5, 2012

the HAES files: georgia on my mind

by healthateverysizeblog

by Deb Lemire, President of the Association for Size Diversity and Health

The Children’s Health Alliance of Atlanta has launched a campaign using short 30 second videos with chubby children talking into the camera sharing their shame and fear of being a fat person. 

Yes Tina, it is hard to be among the one million fat kids in Georgia.  And we agree with Jaden that it’s no fun getting picked on because you’re fat.  But the Strong4Life folks in Georgia decided that instead of building a community that supports healthy behaviors in children of all sizes they have chosen to build a community of stigma. 

Instead of working within their communities to provide access to fresh foods and safe places to play, they choose to encourage a culture of bullying.

Instead of using funds to challenge kids’ imaginations and encourage them to explore and create, they chose to fund fear.

Instead of standing on the side of compassion, they chose to stand on the side of cruelty.

Health comes in all shapes and sizes.  Being physically active and eating nutritious foods will generate health.  Convincing children that they are sick or failures because of their body size will not.

November 22, 2011

the HAES files: holiday food for thought

by healthateverysizeblog

by Deb Lemire, President of ASDAH

The holiday season is upon us and for many it can be a source of great anxiety around food and weight, particularly for women. For me  my most favorite and least favorite part of the holidays has always been the food.

First, there are so many wonderful smells and delicious recipes that you look forward to and wait for all year.  My aunt always makes homemade chocolates and my favorites are her chocolate peanut butter buckeyes.

But my most favorite holiday food is my grandma’s potica.  A nut roll made from a recipe with Gram’s own personal touch and its Slovenian roots all rolled into one; just the right mix of flavors, not too sweet with lots of nuts.    Christmas would not be Christmas without Gram’s potica.  Gram would make one for each of our families. We try to make our roll last as long as possible, but it never makes it to Boxing Day. Gram had five children.  And even as our individual families grew, she would continue to make one for every household; whether it was your college dorm or your newlywed apartment.  From those 5 children Gram has 16 grandchildren.  That’s a lot of nuts!  (Literally, but that’s a different story.)  In the last few years of her life Gram was not able to make her potica because of ill health. So my aunt had taken on the duty and continues to do so since Gram has passed.  It’s not exactly the same, but she is the one who makes the buckeyes, so it’s pretty darn close!

My least favorite part starts in October.  Everywhere you look it seems, there is a magazine with some fabulous, mouth watering dessert or delicacy on the front cover.  As the holiday’s get closer the push to create amazing meals that will delight the senses and send your family into dizzying, euphoric states of ecstasy gets more intense.

And even though it is a challenge to suddenly find time in your schedule to be that creative; even if you enjoy cooking whether or not you are particularly good at it; even though you generally are the one who has to do all the shopping for these recipes and all the clean up after the creation is complete…It would all be worth it, if you were allowed to actually enjoy your masterpiece along with everyone else.

But you can’t.  Because right next to that front page picture of the “latest must have on your holiday table” dessert, is a quote from inside “how to avoid those extra holiday pounds!” 

So we go through the holidays being pulled in two directions.  Wanting to cook something special for our family maybe because we enjoy it or maybe we just enjoy making the extra effort for them during this time of year.  And at the same time we go through the season miserable because we feel guilty licking the damn spoon once in a while.  We hold our wooden spoons in the air and shout “Why?!” and “It’s not fair!” 

And we are right.  It’s not fair.  And I will tell you why.

Now I don’t know that the women’s magazines purposefully seek to betray us.  In fact it is more likely their editors feel they do just the opposite.  But we are so used to these mixed messages we barely recognize the damage they do to us as women in our society; a complacency rooted in our patriarchal culture.  Okay, you’re thinking—what kind of feminist rant are we in for now.  For crying out loud, they are just innocent magazines (and let’s not forget all the fitness commercials) trying to make a buck.  They don’t do any harm.  But that is not exactly true.  (Well the ‘trying to make a buck’ part is.)

What happens to us when we are subject to these mixed messages?  Messages that tell us to put ourselves last, that we don’t deserve the same goodness that everyone else does.  We start to feel guilty.  And that guilt begins to manifest as anxiety and negative feeling about how we look and how we perceive ourselves as a person.  And that is damaging.  Not just to ourselves, but to our daughters that witness and ultimately imitate our self sabotage.  Ensuring the cycle continues.

So this holiday season I want you to keep in mind a couple simple things they don’t tell you in those magazine or commercials.  First of all, it is perfectly natural for mammals to gain some weight in the winter; just as it is natural for mammals to shed that weight in the spring.  Dieting only interferes with your body’s ability to take care of itself and be healthy.

And secondly, your great aunt Mary baked that homemade pie from scratch, not because she enjoys slaving in the kitchen, but because she loves you and she enjoys watching you enjoy it!

So sit down and share a piece of pie with great Aunt Mary.   After all, how many more pies will there be?  But most importantly, make sure you invite your daughter to share a piece with you too.

September 6, 2011

the HAES files: time to own it

by healthateverysizeblog

by Deb Lemire, President of the Association for Size Diversity and Health, adapted from the opening welcome for the ASDAH’s 2011 Conference

Those of you who know me, or have seen my recent talk at the Endangered Species: Women’s Summit, know my daughter is the foundation of my activism, my work and my desire to make change in the world.  She hears my conversations on ASDAH Board and committee conference calls, phone interviews, counseling friends on the Health At Every Size® model, she has helped me with workshops;  she really knows no other way of feeding herself. Not that she gets it perfectly right all the time, neither do I.  Not that she doesn’t struggle at times; but dieting is not something she would ever consider because it doesn’t make sense to her. She claims the Health At Every Size way of life as her own.   There has never been any other way for her.  It is simply how things are.

Rachel likes to sit on the hill of our front yard and just watch the traffic, think, play her guitar. She is 14 yrs old.  A couple of weeks ago, Rach  was sitting out front.  After she was there for about a half an hour she comes bursting into the house and says to me “Well …I was just sitting there in my own yard, minding my own business, when this jerk drives by and yells out the window to me ‘go on a diet fat ass.’ In MY OWN YARD!“

Now if that were me at 14, I would have been devastated.  I would have come in the house, told NO ONE, especially not my mother, and crawled into my closet and ate a bag of Hershey bars.

But because Rach has had the HAES inoculation, she was mad more than anything else.  I gave her a hug and said I was sorry someone was such a jerk to her.  She said, “yeah, he’s just a dick.”  OOOOkay well that was interesting….never really heard her say that before… but I thought given the circumstances, we’re gonna let that go.  So in my best cool mom voice I was like, “yeah… he is!”  We spent the next hour making dinner and of course going over all the things she could have said in response, you know how that is….but it didn’t last long.

 Just to make sure she was going to be okay, I went for a booster shot and we watched the Body Positive’s new dvd for teens.  Of course I didn’t want to be too obvious so I told her I needed to see it to give feedback, and it was for teens so I needed her input.  She tried to pretend that I wasn’t so obvious and that she wasn’t that interested, I did mention she was 14, right?  When it was over I asked what she thought.  She said it was good.  I asked if she thought this would be a good thing in schools.  She thought for a moment and then said “yes, but I think it should be on TV at the same time all around the word and everyone should be made to sit down and watch it.”  Immunization secure!  While for me the experience would have shredded my sense of self, destroyed my ability to live fully, as many similar experiences had done;  the HAES thought process protected Rach’s self esteem ,  capacity to love herself, literally saving her ability to live fully in her body. 

That is the power of owning the Health At Every Size mindset for yourself.  That is the power we can imbue on our clients and colleagues.  That is the gift we can bring to our communities.   

It is time to own it. ASDAH has secured the trademark on behalf of ALL Health At Every Size practitioners and advocates, whether members of ASDAH or not, so it literally belongs to us all.  But it will mean nothing unless we fully embrace the knowledge that we are standing on the side of truth, standing on the side of science, standing on the side of health, standing on the side of love.

June 28, 2011

the HAES files: stop the insanity!!

by healthateverysizeblog

by Deb Lemire, President of ASDAH

Ahhh….flashbacks to Susan Powter’s infomercials.  Little did she know that her brow beating, “knock the ice cream cone out of the fat kid’s hand” approach back then would be the norm now.  She was a woman before her time.  Of course we all know that the insanity is not that people come in larger sizes as Powter and her reality TV progeny (The Swan, The Biggest Loser) would have us believe; the insanity is that we as a culture have bought into hating people for their health’s sake and for their own good!  That is insane!

At a funeral I recently attended my friend was quoted saying “life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you react to it.”  I have been thinking a lot about that and how we in the Health At Every SizeSM camp  react to the ‘war on obesity’ and the frustrating lack of attention paid to a HAESSM approach to health.

We, in the HAESSM movement, know that dieting, surgery, weight loss center approaches have no data to support their claims of success and ultimately do harm; harm not just to the larger people they are targeting but to “average” and smaller people who live in fear of becoming the other.   We know that  learning to eat well so we feel good, being physically active in a way we enjoy and makes us strong, honoring and loving our bodies, taking care of our whole selves, physically, mentally, spiritually is the best way to health and wholeness.  In fact we don’t just know all that in our heads, we understand it in the deepest depths of our being.

When we read about another conference with the goal of ‘ending obesity’ or read crazy, horrible stories that surface on HAESSM friendly listserves and blogs; stories of weight loss surgeries ending in early death, children being stigmatized because of their bodies, children taking their lives because of bullying about their size, eating disorder behaviors rising; alongside stories that go on and on about how “fat is killing us” and we have to “save the children”, we react defensively, and understandably so.  In fact there is often a warning that accompanies the post: ”warning uses up lots of sanity points!”

We look forward to the conferences and workshops so few and far between that help us restore our sanity and connect with others working with the Health At Every SizeSM paradigm.  These conferences help us recharge so we can face the daily often well intentioned yet destructive onslaught from the media, from our doctors, from our family and friends.

When I think about it, I wonder if we are giving more than 10% of the power to “what happens to us” and holding onto less than the 90% we control.

Now I know folks are just going about their daily lives, minding their own business when WHAM!!  You are attacked by some billboard or TV commercial or family member or clothing store person or random catcall: ’you’re too fat’  ‘you’re gonna die’  ‘you are not worthy.’  So it is no wonder we react defensively.

But once you start to practice the Health At Every SizeSM Approach, you quickly learn that none of that is true.  (Well except for the dying part, we can’t avoid that no matter what our body size).  Once we have that truth in our hands–the truth that health is more than just a number on the scale, that people of every size and shape, ability and chronic condition can participate in healthy behaviors that result in positive outcomes, we can take back our power. 

I know it is not that simple, particularly if you are new to the HAESSM process or have powerful negative obstacles to overcome.  Not everyone can walk into a ‘Conference to End Obesity’ without hyperventilating.  But there are enough of us who have been doing this long enough that we owe it to ourselves and those that follow the opportunity to turn this around.  We need to start walking into those conferences, with our HAESSM arsenal.  We need to speak up when someone is spouting negative, false rhetoric about how weight and health conflate.  We need to take that 90% of ‘how we react to it’ and make that reaction one that creates change. 

So when an article quotes experts saying (actual quotes from the last couple of weeks)  disease is “almost entirely directly related to obesity”  (I am sure that is very scientific)   or “we have known that starvation is a good cure for diabetes” ( yes you read it right, starvation) or “parents and child care providers can do small kids a favor by not letting them get too big” (because we have total control over that don’t you know) we have a choice in how we react to this.   We can allow it to suck up our sanity points or we can call them out on their absurd, harmful rhetoric and then move on and spend our  energy building a truly health centered paradigm that all people can benefit from.  Health At Every SizeSM, where No BODY is Left Behind!

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