Feeling Wholesome and Smug all at the Same Time
Off to a bit of a late start today [cough]. Spent the mid-day at paint and DIY stores and the afternoon sanding off the crap spray-on wall texture so popular during the 80s. But between the DIY and the sanding, we went to Uwajimaya (which I’ve been looking forward to all week) and stocked up on Japanese groceries. And then I come home to finally check my news and:
The flabbiest argument I ever heard, by Giles Coren
I HAVE HEARD some hilarious excuses from fat people in my time, but the one rolled out in the last item of yesterday’s Today programme managed to flabbergast even me. Indeed, I dare say that obese people all over Britain were so delighted by this new chance to blame their condition on something other than their own moral turpitude that many of them choked on their cornflakes. Except that by 8.53am they had probably already wolfed down their cornflakes and were well onto their third plate of scrambled eggs and bacon with pancakes and maple syrup.
Heh.
While making a documentary about the obesity crisis for More4 this year, I went to great trouble to show how such excuses as “I’ve got a slow metabolism”, “it’s genetic”, “I can’t afford healthy food” and “I’ve got an underactive thyroid” were in most cases as meaningless and self-deluding as “I’ve got heavy bones” and “like Superman, I have infinite mass”.
Heheh.
I little dreamt, however, that the health editor of The Ecologist, Pat Thomas, would soon be attempting to persuade us, by way of a report in her magazine and a debate on Radio 4, that the critical rise in obesity in the past 20 years has been caused by . . . pollution.
She’s obviously never been in a US Denny’s (they’re not big in Manhattan).
…one’s sympathy for fat people is severely mitigated by their consumption of more food and energy than those who sustain a more traditional mass and volume (creating more packaging waste and requiring more fuel to heat and cool and transport them) and thus create more pollution. Pollution doesn’t make you fat; being fat causes pollution.
And getting fat (driving everywhere, including across parking lots, and having your house heated to precisely body temperature thereby negating the need for a metabolism at all) causes pollution.
And another thing: I spent the first four days of this week in Tokyo, and if pollution makes you fat then why, in a city so polluted that a good proportion of the workforce feels compelled to walk the streets in face masks, did I not see a single person even as chubby as me? I went, in a bound, from being the thinnest man in London to the fattest man in Tokyo.
Indeed, after a couple of days among these beautifully dressed, impeccably polite and helpful, slim and well-groomed people, I had almost forgotten what a race of fat, feckless scruffs my own compatriots have become — until I caught sight, on the third morning, of a vast-arsed European male in shorts and trainers galumphing wheezily up the street towards me, looking for all the world like a giant toddler.
In Japan, only schoolchildren wear short trousers. Once past 10 they dress, as we used to in Britain, like adults, in well-fitting, modest clothes and lace-up shoes. Why did the flabby tourist not have the decency to identify the cultural inaptness of his appearance and modify it with more suitable clothing, or stay at home?
An even heftier reminder of the crisis in Britain came at Tokyo airport when I was checking in, where three Englishmen of 18 stone each or more stood in front of me, their feet wide apart in that stability-maintaining stance to which the morbidly obese resort, wearing the first tracksuits I had seen since I arrived (for I had attended no athletics meetings) and clutching vast Starbucks tubs of warm frothy milk drinks, just like mother used to express. This tubby triumvirate looked not like toddlers, but bona fide babies.
Did we start dressing as infants because we got too fat to be comfortable in grown-up clothes, or did we eat ourselves into the shape of babies because once we were dressing like them we thought we might as well look like them? I’d say it was a chicken and egg question, except that two thirds of you (according to statistics) don’t need to be reminded that it’s ten minutes since you last ate something.
We had a bimbim bap for lunch at a Korean barbecue, and daikon and tofu miso, steamed rice, stir-fried veggies, and teriyaki salmon for dinner. I’m feelin’ good.
October 29th, 2006 at 4:16 am
Here’s a tip for foreign fatties visiting Japan: Instead of those awful tracky dacks, kit yourself out in a traditional Sumo outfit. Sumo wrestlers are afforded great respect in Japan. Gear!
October 29th, 2006 at 8:49 am
Hey it’s a good idea. But is there a sumo junior league? Or women’s league? Or a senior tour?
October 29th, 2006 at 11:45 am
Dang it, please don’t make fun of me compatriots. I’m still fat (Ima got huge bones) inside.
I walk everywhere, people think I’m homeless when I’m only just eccentric.
October 29th, 2006 at 7:21 pm
I know how you feel Half. I have walked around a bit in LA. Definitely an odd feeling.
October 29th, 2006 at 9:49 pm
I wouldn’t walk around LA too much. Probably just come down with a bad case of emphysema. Or lung cancer.
There was a big international sumo tournament at home back when I was in high school one year, and somehow they all ended up playing golf at my grandparents’ club, and it was quite a sight to behold, all of them in their little golf carts.