View Full Version : This is just wrong...
Veronica
02-14-2007, 04:56 AM
http://www.specialk.com/
Chocolatey Special K.
It's no wonder we're such a fat society. Indulge your nighttime need for chocolate. Special K says it's okay. :rolleyes:
V.
Crankin
02-14-2007, 05:28 AM
Glad my kids are grown up. This would have been another thing I wouldn't have allowed them to eat!
Robyn
Blueberry
02-14-2007, 06:09 AM
Yep. I saw that too. GRRRR.....
Commercials are suggesting it's OK to eat it while watching TV late at night. I don't care *what* you eat - it's going to stick to your (insert location where you put on weight). Just because it's cereal doesn't make it healthy!
HappyAnika
02-14-2007, 04:11 PM
Kind of like Lucky Charms advertising that it's an excellent source of whole grain. Really, it's an excellent source of sugar. :mad:
snapdragen
02-14-2007, 04:23 PM
And Cheerios helps lower your cholesteral
(providing you eat 6 cups a day...)
aggiecorgi
02-16-2007, 11:06 AM
Looks good too me.....But I eat Kashi go lean Crunch with sugarfree chocolate syrup and strawberries.
SalsaMTB
02-16-2007, 11:46 AM
Looks good too me.....But I eat Kashi go lean Crunch with sugarfree chocolate syrup and strawberries.
That sounds delicious!!
OMG I gotta try that!!! MMMMM chocolate and strawberries!!! I love Kashi anyway.
Veronica, you are so RIGHT!!!
I work with a lower socio-economic population who really do not have the sophistication necessary to decipher obtuse complicated nutritional information panels. They honestly don't even know what the words mean. I am endlessly trying to give basic healthy nutritional information. But I am undermined every day, a million times over, by very successful marketing. I take care of children whose entire diets are juice and pudding. I swear I'm not making this up. Children whose entire diets were milk, juice, and crackers. That one was severely anemic and fat. At 18 months. (I hope my really long discussion with parents had an effect, but I have my doubts)
Chocolate is not breakfast. Chocolate is not a healthy snack. Chocolate is a treat. I love love love chocolate. But I don't call it food. I eat dark chocolate every day.
Just because poptarts are in the cereal aisle, does not make them food. They are a candy bar with a few injected vitamins. They are disgustingly yummy and I never, ever, eat them because they are a sugar/fat/white flour fest with no redeeming qualities. Plus they are like potato chips to me. Eat one, gotta eat another. But at least I understand the choice I am making. Most people do not.
My personal dream: The supermarket divides the items they sell by whether the item is "food" (my definition, after all, it's my dream) or mostly sugar, mostly fat or essentially white flour. Then there would be umpteen aisles labeled "treat" (or worse) and the produce, dairy, and meat aisles. I'm sure there wouldn't be more than 2 aisles with healthful whole grain items. The remaining 20 aisles can and should be skipped. At least it would be honest. Anyone going down those aisles can buy whatever they like, they should just be honestly told it is unhealthful and to be consumed in modest amounts.
Haudlady
02-20-2007, 09:25 AM
My personal dream: The supermarket divides the items they sell by whether the item is "food" (my definition, after all, it's my dream) or mostly sugar, mostly fat or essentially white flour. Then there would be umpteen aisles labeled "treat" (or worse) and the produce, dairy, and meat aisles. I'm sure there wouldn't be more than 2 aisles with healthful whole grain items. The remaining 20 aisles can and should be skipped. At least it would be honest. Anyone going down those aisles can buy whatever they like, they should just be honestly told it is unhealthful and to be consumed in modest amounts.
I like this, Doc. Can I share your dream with you? :D
Bikingmomof3
02-20-2007, 09:31 AM
My personal dream: The supermarket divides the items they sell by whether the item is "food" (my definition, after all, it's my dream) or mostly sugar, mostly fat or essentially white flour. Then there would be umpteen aisles labeled "treat" (or worse) and the produce, dairy, and meat aisles. I'm sure there wouldn't be more than 2 aisles with healthful whole grain items. The remaining 20 aisles can and should be skipped. At least it would be honest. Anyone going down those aisles can buy whatever they like, they should just be honestly told it is unhealthful and to be consumed in modest amounts.
My husband and I were discussing this topic yesterday and had determined there are about 2 aisles of healthy food, the rest is filler. :( We both share your dream as well.
I welcome everyone to share my dream!
BookGnome
02-21-2007, 11:36 AM
My husband and I were discussing this topic yesterday and had determined there are about 2 aisles of healthy food, the rest is filler. :( We both share your dream as well.
Maybe, just maybe, this will catch on....
http://www.hannaford.com/Contents/Healthy_Living/Guiding_Stars/index.shtml
mimitabby
02-21-2007, 11:40 AM
Doc, I married into a family where there is "children's food" and adult food.
the kids don't eat fresh fruits, drink tons of juice (not necessarily really fruit juice either) and all kinds of fried batter coated things.
When I am around these people I start getting crazy because they are so confident that this is the way it should be. All the adults are obese now, and it is a matter of time when the kids are too.
When they come to my house all they will eat is dessert. #$%#$%@^@#^!!!!!
Doc, I married into a family where there is "children's food" and adult food.
the kids don't eat fresh fruits, drink tons of juice (not necessarily really fruit juice either) and all kinds of fried batter coated things.
When I am around these people I start getting crazy because they are so confident that this is the way it should be. All the adults are obese now, and it is a matter of time when the kids are too.
When they come to my house all they will eat is dessert. #$%#$%@^@#^!!!!!
Hee hee, Mimi, this makes me think of when Xander comes to visit at my house and starts clamoring for "crap" to eat -- and I remind him that I'm the mean gramma who makes him have something "real" first, then he can have some of the "crap." Funny thing is, he never objects to something like meat/cheese & crackers with fruit instead of candy!
Karen in Boise
mimitabby
02-21-2007, 02:22 PM
Xander is lucky to have you for a grandmother. I'm not a grandmother yet... just a crazy aunt.
Xander is lucky to have you for a grandmother. I'm not a grandmother yet... just a crazy aunt.
I'm lucky -- he's a great kid! They lived with us for a while, and the grandma who lets him have all that stuff he starts in on when he gets here used to have him days. I knew better than to "sugar him up" and still can't believe that she and her hubby didn't learn!
As my younger daughter says, he can be overwhelming sometimes anyway. Our little guys don't need added sugar!
Karen in Boise
Tuckervill
02-21-2007, 07:17 PM
My personal dream: The supermarket divides the items they sell by whether the item is "food" (my definition, after all, it's my dream) or mostly sugar, mostly fat or essentially white flour. Then there would be umpteen aisles labeled "treat" (or worse) and the produce, dairy, and meat aisles. I'm sure there wouldn't be more than 2 aisles with healthful whole grain items. The remaining 20 aisles can and should be skipped. At least it would be honest. Anyone going down those aisles can buy whatever they like, they should just be honestly told it is unhealthful and to be consumed in modest amounts.
They already do that--everything on the walls is real food, and everything down the middle is not. Produce, meat, dairy and bread...all on the walls. Frozen, boxed, canned, sugary, in all the aisles.
I work hard never to go in any of the aisles. Sometimes I have to, of course. Who can live without tea, beans and rice? But I only do that about once a month. Weekly trips are once around the walls for fresh food only.
Karen
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