Tag Archives: health

Calorie Bazaar: Quantifying Bites and Negotiating Trades at the Dinner Table

There’s an Assyrian saying about eating in front of someone who’s not eating, “sapee khjboonelah” or “you’re counting my bites.” It’s bad manners to be at the table and be the only one eating, so I guess this is supposed to encourage others to eat too. My mom came over for dinner yesterday and pointed out how this expression literally came true in my house. And she’s right. Ever since turning, well, not in my early 20′s and graduating school to lead a sedentary, cubicle way of life, my body has paid the price. Same for my husband, who’s even more not in his early 20′s than I am. So we decided to take, what is for me, drastic measure. We decided to

COUNT CALORIES!! NOOOO!!!!

Which is insanely tedious, especially with my husband the engineer who weighs all our food. To make it less tedious we’ve been using the Lose It! app, whose interface isn’t that awesome, but it’s one of the better apps for the job that I’ve come across. The funny thing about counting calories is that you’re putting a number on something that is less than precise. You make a goal based on whether you want to lose or maintain weight, and it’ll tell you to eat 1800 calories a day or whatever. Then you go about looking up food items in the app’s database, trying to decide if you ate a medium or small banana and whether you think you had 1/2 cup of asparagus or 3/4 cup. The units of measurement aren’t always how we tend to think of food. Some items are just confusing. I looked up roasted chicken and it said one unit was 250 calories. What, like the whole chicken? Wow. See what happens. I didn’t mean to take us down this rabbit hole of detail, but that’s what happens when you count calories all day. It’s inherently obsessive if you want to do it “right.”

So you go about your day entering in what you ate, and if you do any exercise you get those calories back. (Which, don’t even get me started on the mental f*ck of trading exercise for food. Yesterday, I ran 6 miles so that I could have a beer. Sad. Lame.) ANYWAY, you’re going about your day and maybe you get to the end and you’re in the red. Literally, the total turns red. It turns red whether you’re 1 calorie over or 1,000 calories over. Well, this feels BAD. And this is what happened yesterday at dinner when my mom (who started us on the whole calorie counting thing which maybe she wouldn’t want me to say, woops – but whatever, she’s winning anyway) and my guy were comparing notes.

“You put too much for this chicken,” my guy says to my mom, looking at her calories for the day.

“Oh yeah? Fix it!” She responds, excited because maybe this means she won’t be in the red.

“I’ll give you 110 for the chicken.”

“Hmm. 90 would be better.”

“OK, OK, we’ll do 100.”

“Deal.”

“You’re counting 90 for this bulgur wheat?”

“Yeah”

“Well, I think you’re lying a little.”

This continues on for about 10 more minutes before we turn our attention to Cut the Rope. It’s exactly like being at the bazaar, negotiating every calorie, trying to stay honest while trying to get yourself the best “deal” possible. You can play with the food amounts and if that doesn’t get you there, you can massage the “exercise” calories for the day. “Hmm,” I’ll say to myself. “I probably walked for 10 minutes while I was grocery shopping earlier, what’ll that give me?”

“It’s supposed to build awareness,” my brother says watching and judging. “Then why is it red?! Why are there so many numbers!?” I exclaim. He doesn’t have to count calories, because unlike the rest of us, he actually is in his early 20′s. Just wait, on his first trip to the calorie bazaar, he’ll ask to use my mad negotiating skills to get him the calories he wants.

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Cubicles are the New Cigarettes

In twenty years we are going to look back at cubicles and shake our heads. A magazine spread promoting cubicle-esque office furniture will be today’s equivalent of finding an ad that touts the relaxing effects and medical benefits of Camels or Virginia Slims. “What were they thinking?” The youngsters will say.

I sit all day long. I sit in a grey cubicle with grey metal framing and padded grey walls. The walls are taller than I am when I stand, which you know, I don’t. The desk is mounted into a “hot” frame so that if I say, came in on a Saturday when no one else was around and tried to dismantle it, I’d probably electrocute myself. I sit in front of a computer which is mounted into the desk 8 hours a day. I sit through meetings, interviews, lectures. I sit. My muscles atrophy. My joints stiffen. I sit.

One hour a day I break the routine. I leave the cubicle environment and exercise. The problem is that one hour a day is not enough to counteract the 23 other hours that I’m sitting or lying down. There’s a ton of literature on the subject. Just google, “sitting makes you fat.” You’ll find it all: studies that discuss what sitting does to the physical body, studies that show sitting so many hours per week increases your risk of heart disease and diabetes, articles that describe alternatives such as treadmill desks, raised meeting tables, and how to form walking groups at work.

And I’m not a total hater of office furniture. I enjoy studying work places and organizational design to make day-to-day life better for workers. I can go observe office spaces, talk to the employees about their daily routines and preferences, construct design parameters within a tight budget for how to improve the space, etc. But sitting is still the norm. Cubicles persist. Change will be slow. It’s not exactly environmentally-friendly to go throw out all the cubicles and replace them with human-friendly spaces. For now, I’m working on solutions to improve my personal grey cube and trying out new ways of working.

I used to be a smoker after all. If I can stop smoking, I can give up sitting, too.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

They look fit, don’t they?

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