January 16-22 is Healthy Weight Week!

Check Your Weight?

Did you make a New Year's resolution to exercise and eat healthy this year? By the third week in January, most New Year's resolution diets are dumped, rebound binges are over and most people are looking for a dose of balance and good sense to get back on track. Whether you've already started or are planning to start, Healthy Weight Week is a great time to learn about healthy lifestyle habits. This year, Healthy Weight Week is January 16-22. The week celebrates healthy lifestyle habits that last a lifetime and help prevent weight problems.

Healthy Weight Week promotes a national shift toward the concept of good health at every size, toward respect, acceptance and an appreciation of size diversity. It's important to understand that a healthy weight is different for everybody. Although you may see skinny men and women on TV and in movies, that body style is not realistic or healthy for many people. Regular exercise and healthy eating patterns are the secret to a healthy weight now and for the rest of your life! Eating a wide variety of foods, limiting serving sizes and starting a regular exercise program are good goals to set during Healthy Weight Weight.

Weight isn't about a number on the scale. The important thing about weight is being healthy.

Eating the right types of foods is important. In Marquette County, only 10% of the population eats at least 5 fruits or vegetables a day. By eating less foods high in fiber and low in calories, the danger is that the foods you eat are higher in fat and as such, higher in calories. Instead of counting calories, count your fruits and vegetables!

The next step is consuming the right amount of food for your activity level. Regular physical activity is essential to health: running, biking, swimming, dancing or other activities that increase your heart rate. Another component of activity is strength training, which helps you build muscle and strengthen bones. In Marquette County less than a third of our population exercises 30 minutes a day, most days of the week.

Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005

Every five years the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Agriculture publish new dietary guidelines.  To view the newly released January 12, 2005 guidelines, visit http://www.healthierus.gov/dietaryguidelines/.

Having a Healthy Weight is important for children also. But there should be no discussion of weight in negative ways. Anorexia, bulimia, and a lack of self esteem can result in harm to our children, more so than worrying about excess weight issues! The below guidelines should be used by all parents!

Guidelines for Parents:  

 

  How to prevent weight and eating problems

  1. Be active with your children. Have fun together in a variety of physical
    activities.
  2. Promote communication and sharing of feelings.
  3. Teach positive self-talk, self-acceptance and self-respect. Praise and
    support each other.
  4. Promote respect for others and appreciation of diversity.  Be a role model of normal healthy eating and lifestyle.
  5. Every body is a good body: emphasize this, and avoid focusing on weight
    or shape in a negative way.
  6. Promote normal eating, and diet-free living.
  7. Eat family meals together at least once each day, if possible, and with the
    television off.
  8. Help children develop interests and skills that lead to success, pleasure
    and fulfillment in areas where appearance is less important.
  9. Encourage friendships with caring neighbors and other adults.

 

From Children and Teens Afraid to Eat: Helping Youth in Today's Weight-Obsessed World. For more information, contact the Healthy Weight Network at http://www.healthyweight.net, the Marquette County Cooperative Extension Service (226-4370), or the Upper Peninsula Diabetes Outreach Network (228-9203) for nutrition education materials.