...West Virginia is not in the South. It might *look* like "the South", to an outsider but it most definitely is not. I grew up there and I think most West Virginians would consider it to be Appalachian - in general I think people who live there are proud, independent, suspicious of outsiders... and in its history this is the state that broke away from Virginia over the issue of slavery during the Civil War.
I know, I know to say it's Appalachian and not South might seem to be a very fine point of difference, but it's important.
And frankly, I think it was very brave for the Huntington schools to take this on. It's not JUST people in WV who have poor eating habits...walk into any high school or middle school or grade school and ask the students how many vegetables or fruit (not including that starchy favorite of potatoes) they have eaten within a day or two or even within a week. WV doesn't hold the patent on eating nasty junk, that stuff is sold everywhere all over the country.
agnes!
I'm not sure what you are trying to say about the south, but this description of the people of WV could be describing Southerners, except for the suspicious part-southerners are very friendly and open to strangers. This is coming from a Yankee who moved South 25 years ago. My kids have had silverware in their schools since kindergarten.
I like to keep things on the side of facts...outsiders might think that West Virginia is "in the South" or "of the South" but I never thought of myself as being a Southerner when I lived there and the people I know who still live there don't think of themselves as Southerners either. That's all.
... Yeah, but the reason he started there was some country wide health survey that was done that showed the residents there to be the most unhealthy in the entire country. Considering the state of affairs country-wide, that's really saying something. The town was not just picked at random. ...
Yeah, I know about the survey. Maybe the people of Huntington were actually honest when they took the survey? With the exception of the Census, do people really tell the truth on these things?
I watched and was was very disappointed by the way Jaime was treated. Those lunch ladies were mean,and yes, taking it personally. They need to realized it's not about them but the kids.
W.V. is my home state and I would hate for Jaime and everyone watching to think that all West Virginians have such a bad attitude and are so unhealthy.I hope the parents who saw the food demonstration are serious about wanting change.
I am quite sure you could take schools/families in just about every state, and all over Britain for that matter,and find the same situation. Processed easy to prepare food has become the norm.
Sad but true.
I think that if people would keep a food-diary for a week and see what their actual food-intake was they would be shocked...too much sugar, too much salt, too much un-needed/unhealthy fat, the unholy trifecta that our addicted bodies will absolutely crave if it's too much in the foods we ingest.
agnes!