Good to be fat and fit
Just when I put my French fries down for carrot sticks, to keep from gaining weight, a new study says that my weight is less important than my overall fitness. The New York Times reports a story suggesting that your favorite offensive lineman, weighing 320 pounds, with his gut bursting from his jersey, is actually more fit than a skinny, unfit calorie counter who has exchanged over-priced specialty coffee for food.
Last week a report in The Archives of Internal Medicine compared weight and cardiovascular risk factors among a representative sample of more than 5,400 adults. The data suggest that half of overweight people and one-third of obese people are “metabolically healthy.” That means that despite their excess pounds, many overweight and obese adults have healthy levels of “good” cholesterol, blood pressure, blood glucose and other risks for heart disease.
At the same time, about one out of four slim people – those who fall into the “healthy” weight range – actually have at least two cardiovascular risk factors typically associated with obesity, the study showed.
So here’s the big secret: skinny does not always mean healthy. While it’s true that obesity is associated with many health problems like type-II diabetes, heart disease, and so on, “skinny” and “fit” are not synonyms. The Times article reports a study by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Cancer Institute demonstrating that overweight people appear to have longer life expectancies than so-called “normal weight adults” as well.
In the end, it is possible to be both fit and a little chubby. When researchers conducted treadmill tests, overweight persons have much lower heart risk than people who are slim and unfit.
A person’s body mass index (B.M.I.) is actually a poor indicator of true health within a certain range. Among 2,600 adult 60-year-olds and older studied over a 12 year period, death rates among the overweight, those with a B.M.I. of 25 to 30, were slightly lower than in normal weight adults (normal B.M.I. ranges from 18.5 to 25). Once B.M.I. passed 35, death rates increased.
What does all this mean? First, while you’re watching football this fall, drinking a diet Coke and eating from the vegetable tray (without the ranch dressing), don’t feel sorry for the 300-pound center hiking the ball to the quarterback, even with his gut he may be more fit than you. Second, your non-exercising skinny friends who whine about not being able to gain weight are no better off. So, when you leave the gym this afternoon say “yes” to dessert after dinner guilt free!




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back to top32 Comments to “Good to be fat and fit”
Anthony is correct. BMI does not take into account bone structure plus a lot of other factors. I’ve talked to several folks who register at the obese BMI level who look terrific. Two of them have been very nice looking, healthy fitness instructors. And how your clothes fit is a much better indicator of how much weight you’re losing than that bathroom scale.
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Dark chocolate is good for you, too! (What a happy day it was when I discovered that!)
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Jalepenos are good for you too. Love those frijoles.
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Coffee is also a health food. It helps circulation and prevents diabetes. It also has no effect on your blood pressure. I want to be real healthy so I drink a lot.
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My treadmill keeps calling me “Fathead.” No matter how much I step on it.
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We must be reading different material, going to different doctor’s –
Relatives and friends of ours who are over-weight, obese are NOT healthy – they have back, knee, problems because they are just to fat. Some have experienced heart problems, and other related health concerns due to their not controlling their food intake.
The comparison in the TOPIC post of an —–”offensive lineman, weighing 320 pounds, with his gut bursting from his jersey, is actually more fit than a skinny, unfit calorie counter who has exchanged over-priced specialty coffee for food.” —— might get away with that regimen while young, but it won’t serve him well as he gets older.
Watching over-weight people walk, unable to keep up with others because of their weight isn’t missed by anyone.
This appears to be nothing more than an excuse to be fat.
Where I live people want to be healthy, eating right is the goal -
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Many slim people may indeed be in poor health (and in worse health than some slightly to somewhat overly heavy people). It is not their slimmness that is the source of the poor health.
Some slightly to somewhat overly heavy people may not be unduly unhealthy. All of them would be in better health if they were less overwieght.
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I like Bradley’s columns so much better since he stopped writing all his anti white screeds. Don’t know if it was his choice, or WoW told him to knock it off, but no matter which, his recent a great improvement over his hate columns.
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“his recent stuff”…
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I’ve known slim people who were diabetics, so don’t think because you’re slim, you won’t get it.
Momof5: in my family chocolate is considered “medicine” and must be consumed on a daily basis in some way, whether ice cream, bon bons, etc. My mother, sister and I were agreed on that — and that’s saying a lot. That rarely happened.
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#5 Random,
It’s not the only one. Couldn’t resist
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#6
The overweight people who have back and knee problems and have trouble walking fast enough to keep up aren’t the ones this report is saying are relatively healthy. This is specifically about overweight people who are fit because they get plenty of exercise. Someone who has knee and back problems or who has trouble walking at a normal pace is not getting much exercise (unless perhaps they’re doing a great many laps in the swimming pool).
When I met my husband, he was somewhat overweight but in excellent health because he worked out several hours a week. Unfortunately longer work hours, then children, cut into the time he used to spend working out, and he didn’t cut back on his eating to match the lower activity level. Then he did end up with back and ankle problems.
Eating right is certainly the best plan for everyone. The people who are overweight but have good cholesterol probably are watching what they eat to some extent. This report isn’t an excuse to eat what you please, it’s an encouragement to exercise more.
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My wife is fit as a fiddle and tries to walk 4 miles every day in 45 minutes or so. She looks great and is pretty proud of herself. She should be too. She will live to be a 103 like her great uncle. I tell her that looks can be deceiving though but she pays no attention and says she hopes so as she looks at me. It is sort of disconcerting to tell you the truth. She is a rare red haired llama and you know they can be pretty mean spirited if given half a chance or spit on too often.
She got me an at home portable defibrillator, a lot of life insurance and I got her Dr. Mandelberg’s Hi-Voltage Portable Electroshock Kit and twice as much life insurance as anyone could possibly need for anything. It didn’t come cheap for either of us but we have been lucky so far.
We’re ready for anything short of a direct hit from a very large comet (I got insurance for that too) or the second coming of Christ – only one of us is ready for that.
I did read that fat people live longer. It’s one piece of MSM that I hope, dream and pray is true – so I can have a future worth living – or at least until it almost comes true if it is a horribly bad future like Obama getting elected.
I’d rather get hit by a comet or live to be 103
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Pauline,
YOU WRITE:… “Someone who has knee and back problems or who has trouble walking at a normal pace is not getting much exercise (unless perhaps they’re doing a great many laps in the swimming pool).”
This isn’t true for those I know. Exercise was always part of their life, but when they began to over-eat, they couldn’t exercise as much or as long as they had before – their stamina diminished as they gained weight. The extra weight puts stress on the back and knees as well as ankles and feet.
The people I’m talking about WERE healthy, but when they began eating, gaining weight, problems developed.
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Well, not to brag or anything, but I am still using the same belt size I used when I was 20 years old. This is a point of some pride to me.
Of course, I have to buckle my belt somewhere down around my knees now, due to my chest being CONSIDERABLY LOWER and (lamentably) less splendidly firm than it used to be. Cussed gravity, of course.
Well, I GUESS the belt is around my knees – I SUPPOSE I have knees. Haven’t seen them for a while, come to think of it. But they MUST be there; I suppose my doctor would surely have mentioned it, if they were gone. Anyway, he found SOMETHING to hammer on, in order to test my reflexes, last check-up I had.
But I am glad to know from this post that I am probably in good shape. This relieves my mind no end.
I will go out to the all-you-can-eat buffet down town tonight and celebrate this.
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As my father who was a) a health food fanatic b)did not exercise much c) a very angry person and d) at least depressed and perhaps bi-polar died of a heart attack before he was 40;
and one of my brothers had a heart attack about the same age (but is still alive) and was recently diagnosed with bi-polar mental illness;
I am amazed that I am still alive at 64 and that I am still sane [pause for drum roll].
I am gradually losing weight. I work out at the gym and use the treadmill. I take a cocktail of high blood pressure medicines as well as omega fish oil and calcium. I eat organically grown food some of which we grow in our own garden where I daily fight bunnies, squirrels, chipmunks, deer, coyotes, grizzly bears, Big Foot in rubber suits, and Religious Right Commentators for the food.
I was amazed that the last 6 times I check my BP (at a variety of different locations for cross verification) it was lower than it has been in perhaps 20 years.
My wife exercises very vigorously. We both fight all the time, but stop to laugh about it once in a while. I figure she will outlive me by about 20 years. (She is 61 now.)
We have both updated our wills, as we figure we should be ready to go at a moment’s notice. We are both non-believers and are quite sure that death is lights out.
Perhaps what is keeping me alive is looking forward to yanking chains each morning.
Stay tuned for the new model combination Treadmill–Nautilus Machine–Rabbit Shooting–Conservative Christian Chain Yanking Exercise Machine. What does not kill you and irritates others makes you stronger.
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Victoria,
So those people are in the one-half of overweight people and two-thirds of obese people who are not “metabolically healthy” according to the study. I don’t know why some people can be overweight and still able to exercise vigorously, while others can’t. Perhaps it has to do with just how fit they were before gaining weight, perhaps it’s partly hereditary.
My husband had trouble exercising when he got to be over 400 lbs. He tried to play racquetball and he hurt his ankle and had a lot of trouble with his back. His doctor wanted him to get bariatric surgery, but the insurance company objected to covering it because my husband was too healthy (no diabetes, normal blood pressure, no heart trouble, cholesterol wasn’t high).
He got the surgery finally, with my insurance covering it (oddly, his insurance had no trouble paying for the hospital stay which was the biggest expense), and lost 200 lbs. He’s still obese (and has an 8-inch hernia where the incision had been made and didn’t fully heal), but he is back to playing racquetball, an hour at a time once or twice a week (and usually beating his opponents), as well as working out at the gym.
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This is interesting. I walk five miles (sometimes more) a day. And I am perpetually trying to lose that “extra.”
One day someone yelled at me, “You’re gonna be healthy!” And I yelled back, “I don’t want to be healthy. I want to be skinny!”
Little did I know, I was speaking truth! I’ll keep walking and keep the “extra.”
Good article.
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I understand that you can be healthy with a paunch. However, I don’t think the 320 lb linebacker example is accurate. That’s too big.
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Random Name,
I am sorry to hear of your Dad and brother’s struggles with Bi-Polar. You have been through alot, I’m glad you still have a sense of humour. I enjoy reading everybody’s posts here, even yours.
Maybe I’ll take the risk and try to enjoy some of those organic veggies as I dodge the bullets. I used to speed walk at least 2 hours a day, then I had six children, then 2 bouts of pneumonia… I force myself to use the treadmill 3 times a week to increase my lung capacity. It would be dreadfully boring, but I play my Bible CD’s, ought to add in some prayers for you guys too while I’m at it.
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Pauline,
Those I have known, or related to, gained weight, and became out of breath, or did not have the stamina to exercise as before – and YES they were VERY fit before gaining weight. The weight prohibited them from maintaining the exercise they once enjoyed.
People can have low cholesterol, but not check the difference between HDL and LDL. HDL cholesterol is the good cholesterol, even those with higher cholesterol will not be at much risk if any, if theirs is the HDL. Having a full body scan (CT) is very helpful in determining the heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, pancreas, gallbladder and stomach – A CT screening is very helpful in diagnosing problems – For instance, I am very slender and tall, my cholesterol tends to be high, but my ‘good cholesterol’ is very high (A GOOD THING) – my husbands cholesterol is average, but when taking the Full Body CT, it became apparent that he had plaque build-up, but I had NONE – You can see there are many variables which need to be taken into the entire picture –
Gaining weight around the mid section of the body next to the heart is unhealthy – check it out, research the results, check with your doctor.
California is noted for healthy living, and I don’t mean living within a ‘health food store’ and eating tofu products – We are very committed to grilling our fish or meat, eating fresh vegetables and fruit, staying away from fatty foods, and those with high salt and sugar content. There’s lots of wonderful food to eat.
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It just goes to show ya that we can’t know a person’s health habits merely by their appearance. There are some thin people who don’t exercise or eat right, & there are some overweight people who do.
My thin daughter one time made a disdainful comment about an overweight woman. Knowing a bit about that woman’s history, I explained that she had once been much more overweight, but had lost A LOT of weight over the years. This woman, though still overweight (but not nearly as much as before) was doing her best to eat right & exercise. She may always be somewhat overweight, because it is a huge struggle.
Some people may always struggle with being overweight, but the important thing is to keep trying.
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That 300-pound center is more likely to die in his fifties than the skinny guy watching him play on TV. Life after professional football is often not pleasant, especially for linemen and centers. That activity takes a heavy toll on the body. Fitness should take into account the health of joints and tendons as well. The skinny guy may be able to improve his fitness at 60. The center is more likely to have lost a considerable degree of mobility.
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My sister has been saying this stuff for years, ever since she heard that studies show that a person who’s too thin is actually MORE likely to die of a heart attack than an overweight person. And for sure they’re saying now that thin women are more vulnerable to osteoporosis. Heavy people are more likely to get diabetes and have joint problems, but thin people have their own problems. (Here’s one: When my dad was in the hospital and the doctors were running tests to find out what was wrong, he lost a lot of weight, weight he couldn’t afford to lose. Mom finally took him out of the hospital because of it, and eventually he had to be readmitted. But my 5′7″ father got down to 85 pounds in the hospital because he had no surplus weight whatsoever, and in the hospital he wasn’t getting fed what he needed.)
One thing no one takes into account is that we all have weights that are healthy for us. I’m the ideal BMI on the charts, but most people in real life see me as too thin–but the fact is, no matter what I do, I don’t gain weight. So I’m the right weight for me. And I have tiny little bones, so I’d have to be greatly overweight for me before anybody else would see me as overweight. Yet I know healthy people with larger body structures who might be considered obese by the skewed-toward-thin weight charts. And yes, we thin people can get away with poor diets and little exercise, and everybody simply assumes we’re fit.
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I think the low carb craze has really hurt a lot of people. Our bodies need carbs for energy. The problem is the simple carbohydrates, not the complex ones. And not pasta and potatoes! I highly use and recommend a plant-based diet, especially for those who just can’t seem to lose those pesky 10-20 lbs. I don’t endorse the political side of veganism because the consumption of meat and dairy is lawful according to the Word of God. But there’s no reason that people cannot at least cut down on meat (because of the fat) and dairy because of phlegm and digestion issues for many folks. Beans, whole grains, seeds, fresh fruits and vegetables have been a lifesaver for me as far as getting the figure I want and the health I enjoy. It may work for others.
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Americans eat too much meat anyway. It’s not just the fat that causes a problem. Meat requires more stomach acid to digest. The process of maintaining proper acidity can leach calcium from the bones. Eat less, but better quality meat and more vegetables. People eat too much bread, too.
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#18 Connie,
“I don’t want to be healthy. I want to be skinny!”
I say anyone who walks 5 miles a day deserves both a healthy and skinny bod – or they should get a job instead
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#20 Contented-Joy,
Right before I quit smoking I took a lung test only to find out I had the lungs of an 84 year old. I was amost 30 years older than I was at the time. I am trying to force myself, with zero luck, to gain a better lung capacity byu walking or treadmill but it has improved dramatically just from not smoking
But, now I have a ral bad limp. I think I would rather walk normal and learn to breathe less.
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I was happier last week when being fat was genetic and I thought i could take a pill to live forever.
What is this world coming to? You can’t trust anyone anymore. I feel victimized by fallacious medical statistics and studies based on bad science. Somebody better be paying for my pills too, or I am going to feel like I was cheated
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Llama,
No fair, I never smoked! I am only in my mid 30’s, never had asthma or allergies. Yet I have the lungs of an 84 year old too. I only walk on the treadmill, don’t want to kill my knees with ttoo much running – they are rather useful things. But I walk at least 4 mph which is at least expanding my lung capacity. I hope it’ll make me fit too and help avoid heart trouble down the road.
I’ve got alot of reasons to stay healthy. I think everyone should try to walk regularly, do it for their spouses and children and grandchildren
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BMI is a very very crude standard (and is likely canted too low – not that the US as a whole isn’t actually heavier than it should be, the BMI measure is not a really good gaugeof it).
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31 – Very true!!!
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