Overdue roundup and BIG babies
This morning I woke to the news that my cousin's 15 year old son broke his back on Monday after falling 35 foot from a tree. It was her birthday and while I a Facebooked her birthday wishes they would have been having a terrible day. Anyway thank goodness it looks as if he's going to be OK although will have to wear a brace for a while, one lucky boy!
On the weight front, it occurs to me that I haven't for done a monthly weigh in for a while. You I go into avoidance mode when I've strayed. Isn't this a lesson I should have learned by now... the one time you need to keep a closer eye on your weight youI instead start wearing comfortable elasticated trackies weighing yourself myself 2 years later to find you're I'm 5 stone heavier than you I thought. Today I weighed in today at 87 kilos (191.8 lb).
It could have been worse.
I've been re-motivated -- It was put to me, as my diet recently slipped to the wayside, that perhaps I should start eating 'normally' again. That I was possibly consuming more calories whilst still doing the paleo thing, but at the same time as going off the paleo rails. How horrifying was that!
Not horrifying because of the increased calories but in terms of perceptions of what is a 'normal' healthy diet. I think it is the fact that I managed to keep to paleo at some level, despite the few slip ups, was the saving grace and meant it's been easier for me to return to my WOE. I didn't completely rip out the roots of the lifestyle change that I've been so carefully nurturing. It's probably because my underlying diet has remained balanced that my weight hasn't increased horrifically over the last few weeks. At the end of the day, I don't want to return to the lifestyle that made me fat in the first place, caused me to overeat and develop unhealthy cravings. It makes me feel good when I eat something I know to be nutritious and lowers my mood when I eat dead food.
Now to change the subject away from myself, I have to mention this programme I ended up watching this week about big babies. I'm sorry I'm afraid it's now going to turn this respectably short post into a whopper.
I was misled, I thought it was going to be a light programme about bonnie babies, but instead turned out to be a fascinating and worrying documentary about the increasing numbers of big babies currently being born, and the relationship of this phenomena with obesity and junk food. Now we really are talking BIG babies here!! Babies over 12 lb (although in the UK they're classified big at > 9 lb). The largest baby was from Russia at 17 lb and the largest baby in Britain was 15.8 lb. Disturbingly the documentary discussed how increasing numbers of big babies are suffering broken limbs, collar bones, neck injuries and even fatality, whilst their mothers are also at high risk of mortality. From the programme 50% who die from childbirth do so because of obesity. Historically they said that having a big baby used to indicate health but these days 'signals a problem in society'; large babies tend to stay large, also become junk food addicted and, as we know, the weight problem tend to stay with them into adulthood. One surgeon speaking on the programme said that undiagnosed diabetic women are 4 more times more likely to have a stillbirth!
Several years ago I used to work as a PA to a Consultant Endocrinologist (conincidentaly around the same time as I found myself also to be suffering endocrine problems), and I was intrigued by the fact that he dictated a noteable factor in a patient's history being about big babies (macrosomia). Noting whether the patient had been a big baby, or indeed had produced one or more big babies. Now I'd always equated the notion of having a larger baby with health and eventually curious I asked Dr M what a history of having big babies had to do with diabetes:
Simply, if you have a sugar disturbance or eat a diet weighted in junk food. Note you don't need to be diabetic, then that glucose is going to be passed onto the developing baby, the babies are certainly going to get bigger and may possibly even be a contributory factor as to whether they develop diabetes in the future.
It's of consequence to me because my mother has told me in the past that when she was expecting me she had a craving for ice-cream, whereas for my sister she had a craving for oranges. You get the gist of my problems but my sister on the other hand has always been slender with curves in the right places. I wonder?
The following day looking for the link to the programme I googled it and found forum discussions about the programme. Mainly it was by women who had found had been offended by he notion that because their baby had been large it implied they had an obesity/junk food problem. I don't understand why offense should be taken, it's afterall simply a clinical sign of a possible problem and surely you'd want to know if you or your child were at risk of developing diabetes.
*contemplating* Perhaps in reality even though they believed they were eating a healthy balanced diet as prescribed, from a paleo diet perspective it could be argued that the so called balanced modern diet, inclusive of grains and dairy, is only balanced in terms of the prescribed food triangle but not a realistic 'natural' diet. Hence the diabetes.
Anyway to close, having a big baby isn't necessary a sign of good health and can be quite a strong indicator of a potential problem. Since I was probably one of the few people in the UK to be watching it (the rest of the country watching the final of The Apprentice) I thought that I'd mention this in by blog since it could be of interest to anyone considering starting a family who might be unaware of this. We're led to believe that gestational diabetes is something that affects the occasional woman indiscrimately during pregnancy. This unfortunately would not appear to be the case and you are more likely to suffer gestational diabetes if you have a bad diet. Indeed, anyone who's considering planning a family surely wants them to have the best start in life and this knowledge could be a useful motivational diet tool.
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