Hidden Childhood Obesity Factors

When your child is born, your probably never think that you’ll face obesity issues.  Yet, here you are looking up information on teen weight loss camp and how to help your child lose weight.  What happened?  What went wrong?

It’s a blanket order to say that childhood obesity is because of all the junk food in our society and the sedentary lifestyles that our children lead.  True, but not informative enough.  There are some hidden factors behind this epidemic.

For one, the world is not as safe.  When we were children, we often had the run of the neighborhood.   Past learning to look both ways before crossing the street and adopting safe biking rules, our parents really let us out in the morning, expected us back by lunch and then out again until dinner.  Our kids don’t have that luxury.  Is it any wonder why they have so much "screen" time?  What else are they supposed to do?

Secondly, super-sized, junk food advertising is a huge enemy to us and our children.  The bigger, the better, right?  The next time your child is watching something on television, sit down and write down the types of commercials you view along with your child.  Any commercials for fruit and veggies?  Did the ice cream commercial show a child with a normal sized cone or a huge dripping mass of ice cream larger than the child’s face?

So, what do you do?  We need to find creative ways of offering up that physical activity.  Team sports are great, but let’s face it, they are seasonal and usually take place only a few hours a week.  Arrange "watch" time with other parents in the neighborhood.  Maybe each of you could take a day to oversee the kids playing outside.  Set up safety cones to slow down traffic.

Get your child into a fitness camp where they can play actively all day long, safely with other kids.  Find activities in the house that involve more than sitting:  Dancing, indoor obstacles courses, Wii Fit, active games like Hullabaloo.

As far as the advertising goes, remember that though you can’t control the media, you are still in charge of what your child eats.  Down-size, don’t super-size!  Take them to the produce section and let them pick something new to try each week.  Let them know that fruit doesn’t come from a "fruit-roll ups" box.  Try to eat dinner together as a family at least four times a week.  Children learn what they live more than anything else!  And above all, find creative ways of getting them away from that suggestive television!

Returning from Weight Loss Camp: Training your Tasters

So….you’ve just completed a successful session of summer weight loss camp.  Now you’re back at home and all those wonderful, enticing, unheathly foods are begging for you to eat them.  You know they taste good, but you also know that there are much heathier alternatives.  Unfortunately, those healthier alternatives don’t seem to taste as good. 

Have you ever wished that broccoli tasted like chocolate and  bran cereal tasted like Cocoa Puffs?  There’s a reason why foods that are "good for us" never seem to taste as good as foods that are "bad for us."  Even adults have difficulty convincing themselves to eat their veggies over something like a bag of potato chips; however, parents can’t very well eat a bowl of ice cream while they make their kids eat their greens!

Unfortunately, if you want to be healthy and lose weight, it’s very important that you eat your veggies.  Veggies are low in calories, yet they are packed full of wonderful things like vitamins, minerals and fiber that your body needs to be healthy and strong.

So, how do you convince your tongue that broccoli tastes good?  Retrain your tastebuds!  Your tastebuds have gotten used to the high flavor of artificially flavored foods.  They have also grown quite fond of fat which is flavorful, but not very good for us at all.  In fact, most of our diets are so high in artifical flavors and fat that natural foods like veggies and whole grains seem quite tasteless.  Many parents send their children to a weight loss camp for kids so that their children can learn about the benefits of eating natural foods. 

Once you start eating the good stuff and stop eating the bad stuff, you’ll begin to realize the wonderful flavors that Mother Nature has already provided for us.  Over time, you won’t even miss the bad stuff because not only will your tongue begin to enjoy those flavors, but you’ll start to realize how great you FEEL when you eat the good stuff like veggies and whole grains.

Also, ask your parents if you can help out in the kitchen a little bit when it comes to preparing those veggies.  A lot of the flavors that make those flavored potato chips taste so good are readily available in natural forms.  When you use onions, pepper sauces, vinegars and garlic to flavor your veggies, it’s kind of like coming up with your own blend of "good for you" seasoning.  If you like the "flamin’ hot" varieties of Cheetos and other snack chips, you’ll find that spicing up your veggies with pepper sauces will taste pretty good to that tongue of yours!

Give it a shot!  Hey, you might even convince your parents to enjoy their veggies!

Weight Loss Camp at Home: Fun Ways to Exercise

Are you looking for a FUN way to exercise?  At weight loss camp, you learn that exercise can be fun and enjoyable.  Here, I’d like to show you that you can have the same fun exercising at home

Ask your parents if you can set up your very own obstacle course!  If the weather is nice, the backyard will do, but you can do this indoors as well, you just have to be creative.

What you’ll need:

A stack of large index cards
Marker
Timer (stopwatch) 
Any sort of equipment that you can find:  Jump rope, stability ball, gallon jugs filled with water, balls, rope, cones, bean bags…anything that you can find and be creative with.

Now, take the index cards and write certain activities for each station that you’ll set up.  You can write things like:

Jump rope 40 jumps
Jog in place for one minute
Jumping Jacks (50)
Sit-ups (10)
Push-ups (10)
Lift Weights (the gallon jugs with water)

Any type of exercise that you’ve learned in gym class or at a fitness camp will do.

In between the stations, set up an obstacle.  Be creative here.  Use ropes that you have to jump over or bean bags that you have to step on to cross over the pretend Amazon River (filled with piranha… watch out!)  In the house, maybe you have to climb a mountain (the stairs) or hop around a tree (chair).

If you have brothers and sisters that can join you, make it a competition.  If not, compete against yourself to see how quickly you can get through the course five or ten times (depending on how long your course is).

Exercise doesn’t have to be boring or seem like work.  Make it fun, make it your own… just do it!  Just make sure you clean up your obstacle course when you’re finished so your parents will let you do this again!