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“When you’re resigned to the fact that you’re going to owe money, it doesn’t matter how much. When you’re resigned to the fact you’re going to gain weight – same thing.”
She’s right, too. When a situation becomes inescapable and oppressive, it often doesn’t matter how much more is piled on. To borrow a psychiatric term, we usually have to hit bottom before we actively decide to change. But how does this happen in the first place? Is it societal pressures? Or our own lack of awareness?
To read Maxed Out, James D. Scurlock’s treatise on the predatory credit industry, you’d think that we’re all being victimized, and debt is as culturally ingrained as closing our mouths when we chew. Undoubtedly, there’s some truth to this. Banks, credit card, and loan/mortgage companies make it their goal in life to profit from us as much as possible, whether or not we can actually afford it. They target us with advertising from birth, and all too often, exploit the uneducated and poor to bulk up their bottom lines. What’s more, the business of money is difficult to navigate, and it’s only getting harder. It’s easy to see why anyone could give up – why anyone just wouldn’t want to know – and I think the same principles apply to food marketing and weight.
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If the internet is to be believed, Dave Ramsey is second only to FDR in rescuing Americans from financial ruin, while Weight Watchers has turned a nation of 500-pound Krispy Kreme devotees into an army of lean, fit triathletes. (Slight exaggerations both, but you get the picture.) I believe this is because they do the following:
- Emphasize permanent lifestyle and behavioral change over temporary band-aids and quick-fix scams.
- Give people the information and tools to make changes.
- Ask people to take responsibility for their actions.
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Of course, this doesn’t apply to everyone. I’m a middle-class, semi-educated white girl with no kids and no mortgage. My realm of experience is incredibly limited, which is why I’m VERY interested in opinions from readers. Assuming that weight and money are tied together...
- How much does personal responsibility factor in?
- How much do outside/industry pressures factor in?
- Do you have a good story?
- What are the solutions to either problem (obesity and/or debt)?
(Photos courtesy of smallbiztechnology.com, daveramsey.com, and jupiter images.)
Finance, Food, and the Role of Personal Responsibility: A Question for Readers
![Finance, Food, and the Role of Personal Responsibility: A Question for Readers](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCNRBukEcd6F0q34LDaU1Hs8O_D7tpCm-2cw0WLeLAYmRRtxIDuchamW984BrxyIduMJWflmhsRNxPxFzlDAb56JtODT-JzuhO9Mx27f0Sgn39h_dsIrGhr0Ek6ZkkIXvDIw8hMat40UY/s72-c/Money.jpg)
Reviewed by pada mama
Published :
Rating : 4.5
Published :
Rating : 4.5