NEW YORK - From the cradle to the grave and most points between, obesity has found its niche in American marketing. Make that a wide berth. Baby seats, doorways and caskets are but a few examples from a long list of life's accouterments that are getting much bigger to accommodate much bigger people. There are also vacation resorts for those embarrassed to be seen in a bathing suit.

At Freedom Paradise on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, the chairs are wider and without arms, to prevent getting stuck; the beds are king-sized and reinforced, to prevent collapsing; and the beach is private and secluded, to prevent gawking and staring.

"You should not be embarrassed by how big you are," said William Fabrey, whose online business "Amplestuff" offers larger versions of everyday things from umbrellas to footstools. "You can't just yell at someone and tell them to lose weight. You're already dealing with people who think they have no worth.

"They still have to sit down on a chair that doesn't collapse," he said.

Like others in this small but growing group of businesses, Fabrey started his company after discussions with an overweight friend. "She was a big woman, and she said, 'There's got to be an easier way to get through the day.' "

To make living large a little easier, Fabrey sells lotion applicators and sponges attached to handles — enabling the user to reach all parts of the body; handbooks on hygiene with tips on dealing with odor problems, chafing and irritations caused by skin folds. His business also provides links to physicians and medical services.

"We don't take any position on whether someone should lose weight," Fabrey said. "That's up to the person."

Seemingly every day, another study appears that shows the United States is becoming a country of fat people. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 71 percent of men weigh too much, along with about 61 percent of women and 33 percent of children.

As Americans grow in weight, their life expectancy becomes shorter — by as much as five years, according to the latest national statistics — more than the impacts of heart disease and cancer. Obesity is fast approaching tobacco as the No. 1 cause of preventable death.

The price tag to taxpayers, according to the CDC, is a whopping $117 billion a year, a figure that some health experts dispute, claiming the government numbers are based on faulty data. Not disputed, according to obesity specialists, is the amount Americans spend trying to get thinner — $33 billion a year.

U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona sounded a dire warning last month, telling university students in South Carolina "obesity is the terror within," and that unless people start getting thinner, "the magnitude of the dilemma will dwarf 9-11 or any other terrorist attempt."

Such pronouncements help fuel criticism that catering to bigger people really means throwing wide the door to death by overeating.

But for those who are overweight, who know full well how it feels to be sneered at, laughed at, pitied and scorned, having a simple tool such as a sponge on a stick, or a sturdy footstool that can bear up to 500 pounds, makes one feel a little more human. And a little less demonized.

Joan Borgos weighed 350 pounds for 28 years, until she had gastric bypass surgery and lost 200 pounds. She began putting out LargeDirectory.com because there was nothing available "that didn't look like a muu muu from Lane Bryant's," she said.

From her home in Massachusetts, she lists clothing catalogs, bridal shops (for gowns up to size 32), plus-size dating services, counseling services, seat belt extenders and lingerie. She recently added listings for teens, after desperate mothers told her they couldn't find stylish clothes for their overweight adolescents.

Even toddlers have joined the overweight ranks, with car seat manufacturers offering the "Husky," which is 10 pounds heavier and four inches wider than the standard size.

"There are all kinds of theories that abound about why people are getting heavier," said Borgos. "People are more sedentary, people eat more junk food and get less exercise. I don't know what it is.

"But it's a constant level of stress to live as an overweight person. You're always scoping out the environment, looking if you're going to be able to fit. "

Kelly Bliss, a self-described "chubby chick" in suburban Philadelphia offers "plus-size fitness and lifestyle coaching."

Which means, she says, encouraging overweight clients to exercise as best they can, to eat healthily and to not focus on losing pounds.

"People cannot just stop being fat," she says. "It's prejudice when you say a fat person does not need things to make them comfortable," she says. "People crumble when you given them even more pressure on top of a life that's already not working."

To make caring for the overweight ill easier, and to make patients more comfortable, there also are specialized medical products for an ever-growing clientele.

Treating the obese is called bariatric care, from Greek root meaning weight. Providing it means hospitals are paying for wider beds, wider wheelchairs, wider doorways, longer needles and bigger CT scan machines. As well as larger gowns and extra-sized slippers.

And for the end of life's road, coffin makers have introduced new lines with higher-gauge steel and widths of up to 28 inches, from the standard 24.

In Indiana, the Batesville Casket Co. calls it "a little extra room for life's final journey."

news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060...g_obesity_6
posted by:
My Body is a Temple
San Diego
  • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

    Thu, April 20, 2006 - 11:10 AM
    >> "She was a big woman, and she said, 'There's got to be an easier way to get through the day.' " <<

    There are two: 1) never get that way in the first place, and 2) upon recognising the issue of obesity is revelant to one's life, address it immediately by engaging the assistance of physicians and family & friends, and incresing caloic burn while decreasing caloric intake.
  • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

    Thu, April 20, 2006 - 11:23 AM
    • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

      Thu, April 20, 2006 - 12:32 PM
      I guess it's a growth industry (tee hee)
      • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

        Thu, April 20, 2006 - 6:51 PM
        Is anyone in this tribe interested in exploring why people get fat in the first place, or is this a tribe to judge fat people? Am I being mislead by the tribe's intent? I would honestly like to know. I've gained 50 pounds since I got sober and I'm interested in exploring the truth of it, why it happened, and how I can naturally lose the pounds without depriving myself or killing myself by working out in the hated gym environment. I'm not interested in making excuses or justifications, but I also don't want to hear judgements and namecalling. So, what's up? What are you all about here?
        • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

          Thu, April 20, 2006 - 7:09 PM
          Also, it doesn't say anything in the description of this tribe that it is a fat bashing forum. If it is, I can respect that and I will leave the tribe. However, My Body, when you advertised in the bro sis tribe about this tribe, you didn't say anything about that. If that is what this tribe is for, you should mention that in the tribes you advertised in. I know in the bro sis tribe, there are alot of overweight people who might try to join here. When you say it is a tribe to discuss weight/beauty issues, I figure there are many viewpoints being expressed, not just one.

          I would also like to know why you are so offended by fat people? You are thin and pretty. Why is it a problem for you?

          One/six more things.....if so many people in this country are fat and dying from it, what's the problem? Why do people who hate fat people care if they live or die? Why shame or judge them? Let em die if that's what they want to do. Why do you care so much? How does it affect you? And why create a tribe for it if the intent isn't to help or change it somehow?

          Just my 2cents
          • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

            Thu, April 20, 2006 - 8:00 PM
            I'm not here to judge. Obesity is an important issue. I do think that we should feel good about our bodies whether we are slender or robust but obesity is not the same as being just full figured. Obesity is a serious health issue and not just something we should accept. We can love people of any size but we should be real about the fact that obesity is a serious health issue.
          • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

            Fri, April 21, 2006 - 7:22 AM
            "When you say it is a tribe to discuss weight/beauty issues, I figure there are many viewpoints being expressed, not just one. "

            So express them. I didn't say you cannot disagree with me, or offer an alternative viewpoint. I'd be interested in discussing the connection between dieting and eating disorders, for example, but have not been inspired to start that thread yet.

            "I would also like to know why you are so offended by fat people? You are thin and pretty. Why is it a problem for you? "

            It's not a problem for me, personally, than it is for the entire society that lives with this. I'm not offended by fat people. I'm worried about the long term implications of this. And as for letting them die... and how it effects me... spiraling health care costs effect me pretty directly. Actually, my living in part comes from obesity, so if I was truly a bad person I would want everyone to get fatter so I can stay employed.

            And I feel badly for people who are fat and trapped and don't know how to get out. Obesity is linked with poverty and lack of education. I think we have a serious problem and it is not getting addressed.
        • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

          Fri, April 21, 2006 - 3:59 AM
          I moved to the US 3 years ago and have promptly gained 10 lbs. 3 years down the line, I am still battling them. Here's what I see as the reasons for so many people in this country succumbing to obesity:

          1) The sheer amount and variety of tempting junk on the supermarket shelves. Knowing full well how bad things were, I still could not resist temptation to try things out. Cookies the size of my face. Ice cream in containers the size of paint buckets. The stuff seemed to bypass me entirely and go straight to my butt and thighs.
          2) Regular products, like ham and bread, with a high content of sugar. Also, a whole bunch of others, containing cornstarch. So that my yoghurt can magically stand up when scooped out of the tub.
          3) Colourings and preservatives in most things. I still cringe at the sight of cupcakes laced with neon-coloured lard. I'm not sure how to explain this in a sentence, but these things have a tendency to screw up your metabolism in ways you would have never imagined.
          4) Hormone-laden meats. I gave up the category entirely.
          5) Larger size portions wherever you go. I never took my dinner home in a plastic container before coming over, a) because I never seemed to be buying 2 portions for the price of one; and b) pure embarassment.
          6) The absence of pedestrian-friendly human settlements combined with an ever-increasing public appetite for bigger, better, more kitted out homes on wheels (oops, I meant cars).
          7) Plain greed. I once sat in a breakfast establishment and watched in disbelief how much butter this woman poured on her stack of pancakes. And if her own butter scoop was not large enough, she also grabbed her husband's. A sight that brought my own breakfast experience come to an abrupt halt. I've seen encores of this many times since.

          And sorry, Genetics does not fit in here. "It's not your fault, it's your bad genes" does not quite cut it. This problem did not seem to exist 50 years or so ago.... Plus American generic material is not that different from elsewhere.

          We just need to watch out what we buy and what we ingurgitate. Exercise more portion control. Leave the car at home and walk. And if that is not possible (because sadly, there are many places where we simply cannot get up and go), find the nearest gym.
          • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

            Fri, April 21, 2006 - 7:25 AM
            I totally agree with you, Raluca.

            I'd add ignorance to the list. There are people who don't know about the things that you listed and make poor choices because of it. We have a huge education or knowledge gap, and it seems to be poor people who don't know these things and get fat.
        • Re: Obesity Finds Niche in American Marketing

          Fri, April 21, 2006 - 7:16 AM
          I am interested in why people get fat. I'm also interested in the long term societal impact of obesity. Sometimes I find humor in it (like my "it's a growth industry" comment). But I didn't hear any name calling. Judgement, probably.

          But daisy - do you not judge? To think is to judge.

          And there are some facts at play here.

          Fat is not healthy. Americans are getting fatter. We have a serious problem.

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