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“Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow.”
-Fleetwood Mac
“Don’t Stop”
was the theme song of Arkansas Governor
Bill Clinton when he ran for president. Now another Arkansas Governor is
running for president, Republican Mike Huckabee.
Huckabee and Clinton have different ideologies, but thinking
about tomorrow is their common message.
President Clinton, Governor Huckabee and myself have all
fought obesity. Clinton solved his weight problem after
emergency bypass heart surgery.
Not a great strategy.
Huckabee did it by losing 100 pounds in a medically-supervised
weight loss program. He kept it off and has
since become a national model for how to battle obesity.
I’m starting a medically-supervised plan this week. I need
to lose as much as Governor Huckabee did.
I lost 90 pounds in 1989 but did not keep it off. After recently reading Huckabee’s book, Quit Digging Your Grave With a Knife and
Fork, I saw where I screwed up.
When I lost the weight, I thought I was cured. I thought I would never be fat again.
I was wrong.
I quit going to the support
group and fell back into old eating patterns. I gained about a pound a week.
If you gain a pound a week for two years, you gain 104
pounds.
And that’s exactly what happened to me.
Huckabee made a subtle but important point: obesity is
treatable, not curable. Like people
addicted to alcohol or drugs, food addicts need to always be in a stage of
recovery.
I don’t think everyone gets that. Unlike alcohol or drugs, food is not
something you swear off completely.
The key is to replace bad habits with good habits. Driving to fast food restaurants has to
be replaced with healthy eating and exercise.
Huckabee’s personal wake-up
call was a diagnosis of diabetes. He did not set out to lose any specific
poundage goal; he just wanted to get his blood pressure, cholesterol and blood
sugar to back normal levels.
His motivation was to add years to his life.
I know I can lose
weight but have the habit of hitting
a goal and gaining the weight back.
Huckabee made me realize that battling obesity is a
journey that has no end.
The alternative is an early grave.
Insurance companies offer something called “rated-age”
annuities.
To get people to understand them, I explain that these
annuities ratings are the mirror opposite of life insurance. People have to pay more for their life
insurance if they smoke, skydive or do things that reduce how long they might
live.
Rated-age annuities work the other way. Insurance companies invest a lump sum and send a person money for the
rest of their lives. They will give an
unhealthy person more each month than a
healthy one. They don’t plan on the unhealthy person being
around as long.
I recently gathered my medical records and applied to
several companies for a rated-age annuity.
The consensus was that I would die at age 68. Unless I end my obesity, I will die about 9
years sooner than other men my age.
That was a serious wake-up call. The insurance company actuaries and medical
underwriters have billions of dollars riding on their research, and they are
usually accurate.
The only way I can prove them wrong is to lose weight and
change my lifestyle.
I went back to the medically-supervised program that helped
me lose 90 pounds.
This time I am going to get it off and keep it off.
My ace in the hole is Don’s Get-Fit Guys group.
I started the Fit
Guys group three years ago and encouraged men in Richmond
to join me. We first called it Don’s Fat
Guys but changed the name to suit our goal.
Three years later we are going strong.
We don’t push a particular diet or plan, but everyone in the group has
lost weight on their own by focusing on healthy habits.
We will fight to keep those habits for the rest of our
lives.
My politics are probably closer to Clinton, but Huckabee seems like my kind of
guy. He is a recovering fat guy and
likes rock and roll. He can’t be all
bad.
Having battled and treated his obesity, he will not stop
thinking about tomorrow.
Don McNay is Chairman of McNay Settlement Group, where we want everyone
to think about tomorrow. You can write
to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other
things he has written at www.donmcnay.com. His award-winning column is syndicated on the
CNHI News Service.
Don’s Get Fit Guys meet every Tuesday at 5 p.m. at 122 North Second Street in Richmond.
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