The Perfect Body
by Deborah Caruana
zone3
Everyone wants it. If we have the perfect body, it becomes a race to
keep it. "I can’t gain that weight back." If we don’t have it we resent
it, some to inconsolable longing. This longing can verge on an obsession
to extreme measures (Al Roker). We strive for those low body fat numbers
8-10% for men and 15-20% for women. We count calories or eat low carb
for that perfect thin body. We want all traces of rolls, dimples and
squishy, puffy soft skin gone. All signs of gravity lifted. Our age needs
to be defied. We want tone, taught and lean skin and muscles. We have to
look like models and superstars who are paid thousands a day to look the
way they do. Lithe. long, lean, sinewy, wispy even drawn. Pay no attention
that these stars can afford the time and trainers to exercise 4 hours a
day in the pursuit of perfection. There's a plethora of diet books out
there. We’re all studying weight loss. Each new book brags a new solution.
But the diet industry has grown as large and swollen as the American
public's waistlines. Diets, pills, patches, concoctions, procedures,
prescriptions and remedies to supposedly 'cure your condition'. Meanwhile
health care costs are spiraling out of control from high cholesterol, high
blood pressure, diabetes and other diseases exacerbated by being
overweight. We can turn away from it in anger, disgust or frustration, to
give up and get fat (1/4 of America). Or continue from one diet to the
next fad, yoyoing into obesity (other 1/4 America). What is going
on?
As life gets easier with our technological advances and our
economic success we become more sedentary. Is it the increased need for
instant gratification causing the obesity? Or is it mass produced fast
foods with no nutritional value that are just too easy to acquire? Add to
this a sedentary lifestyle.
Speaking of instant gratification,
liposuction seems an easy solution. It will suck the fat away making us
look perfectly thin but our blood chemistry doesn’t change. We’re still
overweight inside, ripe for heart disease and sure to gain the weight
back. The weight then tends to come back in all the wrong places
exacerbating the situation (look out Nicole Smith!)
Self-esteem and
body weight are inextricably linked. I have to say that the recognition
I receive (as a woman) for being slim is real. Generally the thinner I am
the more positive the response. My experience probably reflects others, in
that the social recognition for thin is insidious. Media, society, and
culture reinforce these perspectives. Self-esteem and body weight I
conclude are inextricably linked for most. It will take more than a
rebellious few such as Queen Latifa who's refreshing attitude expresses
"Thin for who? For what? I like my meals! I'm happy and successful! And I
like being full figured!" Her message liberates perfectionist thinking.
She's got curves and her body fat is probably a healthy 25%. The
pursuit of the perfect body then becomes a self esteem issue. If we want
recognition we can't eat, drink or be merry! We need to always be in
control to uphold these rigid standards. That's the rub. For naturally
fun loving, giving and sharing folks who want to enjoy life while being
healthy and productive here’s a solution. Lose control! Queen Latiffa does
it by taking off on her motorcycle going from here to who knows where.
Lose yourself in something you love to do and forget the rest. I call it
'zoning' when I lose myself in my writing, exercising, playing with kids,
music, conversation sometimes even in housecleaning (Beware: this ‘zoning’
thing is contagious and starts to infiltrate everything you do). Just lose
yourself in the moment, and find the zone within. It builds self esteem,
burns calories and generates bliss at the same time.
What if we all
completely forgot about having a perfect body and refocused on being
healthy? We’d lose all the emotional baggage that comes with perfection.
We’d focus instead, on health and feeling good. We would eat properly and
sensibly and exercise. Lots of vegetables, lean proteins and some whole
grains. Nutrient packed foods, which have negative calories because
they're work for the body to break them down. It’s the man made foods that
tempt us and make us eat too much because they just taste so…good? These
foods spoil our taste buds: sugar, processed foods, white flour,
hydrogenated oils. They take away the pleasure of simpler more complex
flavors. Plus these once nutritious foods are processed into empty fat
storing, blood sugar raising caloric dumping. Yes, okay sometimes we
can indulge with a glass of wine or piece of chocolate. We can't always
say no. Halloween and the holidays are imminent and we need good habits to
fortify our resolve without being rigid. Here’s a strategy! Eat the
healthy foods first. Relish them and get satisfied. After the meal is when
you go for the 'bad' or 'fun' food if you still need to. You’ll only eat a
little, because you’re sated. There are no diet secrets, only common
sense.
Of course there is the role of social stigma and the media
continuing to rev the engine of needing to have a perfect body. But we
know better now. We may not look like a super star or model but maybe our
natural healthy glow from our zoning through life in good health will give
us the longevity and quality of life we all desire. Part of being
productive in our daily life is exercise. Our advanced technology affords
us the time to make time for daily exercise. Our bodies need, crave it and
respond to it once the habit is formed. One thorough give it your all
effort, for one hour a day is plenty. Exercise is what keeps you looking,
feeling and being young. Exercise for survival is part of our evolution.
Did our predecessors ever prioritize a perfect body? So forget about
perfection. Now get out there eat healthy, exercise and find your zone to
enjoy life to its fullest. PS. Can we have the perfect body?
Absolutely! Can you keep it once you’ve got it? Definitely! But the only
way it will really stay is a lot of rigid control (saying no) or a lot of
losing control by ‘zoning’ and regular exercise.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
DEBORAH is a highly respected authority in personal training for
overall health and fitness, with more than 22 years of experience and
success. Deborah Caruana RN,
AAHRFP, NASM, ACE.;Vital Signs Fitness.com, EMAIL:
deb@vitalsignsfitness.com
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