`Don`t Steal our Meals!` Say Dieting Experts

Released on = August 31, 2006, 11:44 am

Press Release Author = Malcolm Evans

Industry = Healthcare

Press Release Summary = Weight-control charity The Weight Foundation exposes new
exploitative food industry tactics and launches a free and collaborative web-based
self-help system for problem dieters.

Press Release Body = A prominent weight-control charity has launched a "Don\'t Steal
Our Meals" campaign against what it says is a disturbing new escalation in the Food
Industry\'s hard sell.

Extra pressure is reported to be piling up on the millions of people already
suffering confusion and panic regarding what they should do next about their growing
dieting and weight worries.

And the attack on promoting unhealthy habits coincides with the release by The
Weight Foundation of its new 3 Small Steps self-help system, designed to be a
collaborative solution towards assisting problem dieters worldwide to regain
self-control.

"We are used to seeing sex, fashion, love and status being used to sell food and the
food companies can and will quite naturally do everything within the law to promote
themselves," says Malcolm Evans, secretary of the non-commercial eating behavior
organization.

"However, we are now seeing more and more attempts not just to squeeze certain foods
on to the menu but also to force themselves further in as major dietary staples."

He points to three areas which illustrate the trend. The first concerns breakfast
cereals, the advertising of which has traditionally been about the choice of
start-up fuel early in the morning. Recently, however, there have been many
advertisements presenting packaged cereal as an all-day food option.

Another example he gives is the attempted re-branding of flavored noodles from being
a snack into the status of a traditional food staple.

A third area is that of convenience shopping. He says, "Just last week there was a
commercial portraying the multi-role juggling of a modern homemaker. Her late
evening eating comprised ice cream, to be bought on special offer from her local
convenience store."

The general pattern is reported to be similar both in the US and the UK.

The Weight Foundation does not support suggestions that the law should be changed to
clamp down on food advertising, concentrating instead on developing strategies to
assist individuals to make more informed choices about their eating lifestyles.

Evans explains that an answer must also be found for what he has identified as "Diet
Shock", which is the distressing uncertainty of many persistent dieters whose
natural instincts have become paralyzed by an overload of conflicting and frequently
bad dieting advice.

"Seduced away from conventional eating by advertising on the one hand and bamboozled
on the other by the ceaseless tide of eating and dieting advice, many people have
simply lost a clear picture of how to feed and care for themselves," he says.

The Weight Foundation already publishes online its highly popular The Hardcore
Dieting Index free self-test questionnaire, helping dieters to assess their personal
behavior. Feedback from many long-term dieters in several countries has allowed the
refinement of a fresh methodology to tackle unhealthy obsessions with eating,
weight-loss and self-image issues.

"3 Small Steps is designed to loosen the three restricting bands which usually keep
dieting fixations in place despite endless failed dieting attempts," says Evans, 46,
who has worked with dieters for the last 15 years both as a private counselor and
through the Manchester UK-based charity which he founded to share his work more
widely.

These ties are identified as the emotional, the cultural and the commercial
pressures which make Hardcore Dieting - Evans\' term for persistent and obsessive
dieting - so rampant in the West. Many experts now acknowledge that repeatedly
failed dieting is a contributory factor to the Obesity Endemic. Evans says that the
growing frustration and disillusionment with dieting approaches stems from their
inability to address these wide-ranging underlying concerns. Ignoring any one of
them will almost certainly condemn a problem eater to weight-control failure.

Dieters are invited to question closely what they are using food for. Is it a
substitute or a comfort for other factors in their lives? Emotional over-eating is
thought by Evans to be a significant contributory factor in the majority of cases of
overweight.

On the cultural front, persistent dieters are asked whether they are unthinkingly
buying into a cult of excessive thinness, or following the herd instinct in the
stampede from one fad diet to the next.

"Everyone thinks they operate as individuals but, in fact, we are all under great
pressure to conform. For many women that can mean aspiring to excessive thinness,
which in many cases is bound to lead to a rebound from self-deprivation into
overeating and even greater misery," comments Evans.

"Less widely appreciated than the unrealism of waif-thin icons is the need women
especially feel to be involved with dieting - the need to fit in with your friends
and society generally by being able to talk, live and suffer it. Hardcore Dieting
has sadly become for many a rite of passage into womanhood."

The 3 Small Steps approach to the commercial pressures to eat abnormally or diet is
to ask "Who\'s stealing my meals?" and to refuse to be dragged from a natural and
normal eating rhythm.

Evans concludes, "All the calorie-counting and all the BMI charts in the world
cannot teach what actually matters. The difference between a lighter, happier person
and a heavier, unhappy one is that for the latter food is a major and dominating
issue.

"Mind-shifts do not happen on paper charts, or through contrived and unnatural
diets. Changes of attitude occur in the mind and that is where the battle over
dieting and obesity is won."

Web Site = http://www.weightfoundation.com

Contact Details = 137 Wendover Road, Manchester, United Kingdom, M23 9JS
Tel: 0044 793 9033225
Email: info@weightfoundation.com

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