Walking in the right direction
The news in the past months has featured some disturbing health
trends.
Among them, an ABC News/Time Magazine poll of 1,200 U.S. adults
found, is that 42% of parents of children ages 6 to 17 said their
children do not get enough exercise.
The Journal of the American Medical Assn. reported that poor diet
and exercise habits are edging near tobacco as the leading
preventable cause of death in America. And the National Institutes of
Health say that about two-thirds of Americans are overweight.
If the news wasn’t so worrisome, it could be called weighty,
indeed.
So it was with a full sense of relief to see that Eastbluff
Elementary is bucking the unhealthy trend. Students there plan to
walk 15 minutes every day next year as part of an “Eastbluff Walk to
Washington” program. That represents a quarter of the government’s
recommended hour of daily exercise.
As everyone knows, good habits start early. The students at
Eastbluff who will be lucky enough to be involved will have a step up
on other children, who may get into the junk food/watching TV/playing
video games routine. More immediately, they will find they have added
energy, better health and more stamina. (Whether their parents find
all this extra bounce a boon might be debatable.)
Also, as everyone knows, “everything in moderation.” Fifteen
minutes, or an hour even, of exercise a day is a smart addition to
anyone’s routine. But trying to live a healthy lifestyle is far
different from dieting to get thinner than everyone else -- including
models on TV and magazines covers.
It was nearly five years ago, for instance, that the Daily Pilot
published a special report, “Starving for perfection,” that
highlighted how some girls at Corona del Mar High were taking the
drug Ritalin as a way to stay thin. Amid all the focus on the dangers
of being overweight, we should not forget that the opposite can be
every bit as harmful.
Judging from the Eastbluff program’s initial focus on good eating
and good exercise, neither extreme should be a worry.
We look forward to seeing how far the kids walk.
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