Mouse House Mama
Luckiest Mommy in the World!!!
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2004
- Messages
- 11,865
Well thank you for clarifying where you are coming from. I can understand what you mean a lot better. With family history etc. it makes sense that this is a very important topic for your immediate family. I can totally respect that.
I misunderstood where you were coming from. The curtness of it made it seem to me that it was not so much a health issue as it was a "fat people" issue. I see now that isn't the case. I do think you can forbid certain eating habits etc. but the point I was making was that you can't forbid food as a whole. Obviously we all need food to survive. I do agree with you there though because we do forbid certain foods (processed junk).
Now I will give you my reasons why I don't like the word "fat". That word is all kinds of negative. It is rarely used to demonstrate positive anything. I know it is an attention getting word and I can say that if someone that I love was in a life or death situation and I knew that I could help them and that would do it then I would use that word. Other than that I would not. The word "fat" is commonly used in phrases like "fat pig", "fat ***", "fat and lazy", "fat slob" etc. I don't think those phrases always apply to someone who is indeed overweight. The word "fat" has negative connotations to it.
Perhaps it is my own hangup but I know how that word affected me as a young teen (and I wasn't fat at all) so I just don't like it.
I am glad though that you take healthy eating very seriously. We take it very seriously here too. I'd be willing to bet that we are more on the same page than you think. After all, we all just want our kids to be healthy and happy.
Wouldn't you agree?
I misunderstood where you were coming from. The curtness of it made it seem to me that it was not so much a health issue as it was a "fat people" issue. I see now that isn't the case. I do think you can forbid certain eating habits etc. but the point I was making was that you can't forbid food as a whole. Obviously we all need food to survive. I do agree with you there though because we do forbid certain foods (processed junk).
Now I will give you my reasons why I don't like the word "fat". That word is all kinds of negative. It is rarely used to demonstrate positive anything. I know it is an attention getting word and I can say that if someone that I love was in a life or death situation and I knew that I could help them and that would do it then I would use that word. Other than that I would not. The word "fat" is commonly used in phrases like "fat pig", "fat ***", "fat and lazy", "fat slob" etc. I don't think those phrases always apply to someone who is indeed overweight. The word "fat" has negative connotations to it.
Perhaps it is my own hangup but I know how that word affected me as a young teen (and I wasn't fat at all) so I just don't like it.
I am glad though that you take healthy eating very seriously. We take it very seriously here too. I'd be willing to bet that we are more on the same page than you think. After all, we all just want our kids to be healthy and happy.
Wouldn't you agree?

Too bad it is in EVERYTHING! How can it be in moderation if it is in just about every common product? We don't buy any foods that have HFCS in it. I cannot justify feeding anyone chemicals. You would not go to the diner and order a burger with a side of chemicals, so I will not cook them at home. It drives me crazy that the food companies use all this junk in their foods so it is cheaper to produce and then charge us more! I buy as much organic and whole foods as possible. I love how now it is called "organic" or "natural" when it is nothing spectacular. It is the same food I ate as a kid that didn't have crap in it except they have now given it a fancy name and price tag.
I always tell people who look at me funny that I am not foraging for nuts and berries, I am simply trying to feed my family the way that I was fed growing up. We had healthy, non chemical produced food. I think that most people don't realize that. We ate really well growing up. I want that for my family.
There's a small, family-owned Mexican restaurant in my mother's neighborhood that imports their Coke from "back home", and I've been known to stop in there just for a taco and a Coke when I'm in the area. In Jewish communities, you can also sometimes find kosher Coke, Pepsi, or other sodas, which have to be grain-free to meet kosher standards and are thus made with sugar rather than HFCS.