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Of
Information and Obesity
Jay Bildstein |
There
is a cynical expression where I come from that has it that “no
good deed goes unpunished.” Me, I’m an optimist yet I balance
that optimism with another saying; “in nature there are no rewards
nor punishments just consequences.” With that in mind I’d
like to take a look at two issues that are very much of the times;
computer technology and obesity.
Now
before you go jumping to conclusions, I’m no sybarite, but I
do question whether technology has brought us just progress. Frankly,
I don’t think so. The trend to people being overweight in North
America is a serious health threat and I can’t help but think
that a lot of it has to do with decreased physicality based on increased
activities which are sedentary in nature.
When I was a kid growing up in the United States there was a public
service message that played on television that showed a bunch of heads
in boxes speaking to each other. Their bodies were no longer needed
as they had “evolved” technologically to the point where
movement was unnecessary. The point of the advertisement was to instill
in us a respect for physical fitness, to understand that if we didn’t
use our bodies they would wither away. I wonder how close we are coming
to that in the developed world? Perhaps it is even worse, the body
devolving at a frightening pace to pillowy appendage.
The trend in the North American continent is toward less physical
activity and more food leading to fatter less fit people. This unhealthful
state leads to diabetes, hypertension, heart attacks and is even implicated
in a variety of cancers. Are we becoming a society of computer and
television dwelling blobs with all our physical development posited
in fingers and wrists from keyboard, mouse and remote control work?
Is that our average level of activity? For many of us, I fear it is.
Ironically, we are in an age when the body is exposed more than it
has been, probably since the Garden of Eden. Britney Spears and Christina
Aguillera come to mind as part of the latest crop of the almost undressed
set. The human body ... especially the body beautiful is being shown
off in commercial settings more than ever before, scantily clad and
as living artwork. Cosmetic surgery, piercings, tattoos and jeans
with the waist pulled down to the ankles are all about flaunting the
body and its provocative appeal. Are we simply becoming computer and
television bound voyeurs, ourselves getting fatter and flabbier while
the bodies of the buff glitterati are paraded in front of us to sell
what we aspire to be, but are not?
The internet, the computer, the television, cellular phones, fax machines,
they are all tools which can make our lives better by facilitating
the useful exchange of information. However, when we trade in lives
of robust activity and relegate ourselves to being nothing more than
receptacles for our machines, then we have missed the point of their
relevance and have traded down our integral and important physical
being to a shamefully diminished status.
Before we end up as so many communicating heads with our bodies nothing
more than something that takes up a seat, I have a suggestion, we
need to all go take a walk and we need to do it daily. Walking is
not only good physical activity, it helps to clear the mind, reduce
anxiety and improve our health leading to better mental performance.
When I get my walking and physical activity in I feel better about
myself corporeally as well as mentally. When I don’t, well frankly,
after a short time I can feel downright wretched.
I know I am not alone. We all must safeguard our health and fitness
by planning time to get physical. In a world where more and more work
is accomplished by flicking our fingertips on keyboards, we need the
habit if not the steely resolve of incorporating into our lives some
meaningful level of physical activity. Walking is a great form of
transportation and can serve double duty, as exercise and more basically
by getting us from A to B without the cost of gasoline or the annoyance
of traffic.
I could sit here at my computer and type more, but I am going for
a walk. I’ll see you on the street, wear comfortable shoes. |
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