karens-cares

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Please consider supporting my cousin, Christine, when she participates in the 2007 Crohn's & Colitis Heel & Wheel-a-Thon.

The Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of Canada (CCFC) believes that a cure will be found for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. To realize this goal, the CCFC is committed, first and foremost, to raise increasing funds for medical research.

The site includes a chart and a blog of Christine's fundraising progress. She is also looking for ideas as to how she might reach her fundraising goal. This is Christine's fourth year participating in this event. Her husband, Daniel, has colitis, so this cause is a personal one for them both.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The other day, on the way home from work, I was listening to my 2007 Grammy Nominees CD. Track #8 is "Jesus, Take the Wheel" by Carrie Underwood:

She was drivin' last Friday on her way to Cinncinnati
On a snow white Christmas Eve
Goin' home to see her Momma and her Daddy
With her baby in a back seat
Fifty miles to go and she was runnin' low
On faith and gasoline
It'd been a long, hard year

She had a lot on her mind and she didn't pay attention
She was goin' way too fast
Before she knew it she was spinnin' on thin black sheet of glass
She saw both their lives flash before her eyes
She didn't even have time to cry
She was so scared, she threw her hands up in the air

"Jesus take the wheel!
Take it from my hands!
'Cause I can't do this on my own!
I'm letting go!
Give me one more chance!
Save me from this road I'm on!
Jesus take the wheel ..."
According to SGI, a better name for this song would have been, "Jesus, Steer Into The Skid and Don't Lock Your Brakes" ... but what sort of a metaphor for life would that be?

With all our freezing and thawing lately, and despite Carrie's words of caution playing in the car, I ended up doing a 180 degree turn as I came to the stop light. I know I should have been driving with more due care and attention, but what can I say? I had a lot on my mind and I didn't pay attention. Also, I was going way too fast. It's been a long, hard year!

I have to confess that, as my car was spinning on a "thing black sheet of glass", an entirely different song came to mind:

Isn't it ironic? Don't you think?

Speaking of "Jesus take the Wheel" ...

This picture is from the website of Larry Van Pelt of Niceville, Florida. Larry draws pictures of Jesus shadowing people on the job, such as:

  • an insurance agent
  • a French horn player
  • a welder
  • a bodybuilder
  • a dental assistant

However, from the look on the trucker's face and the way Jesus in maniacally gripping him by the shoulders, I think a better name for this picture would be, "Take this truck to Jerusalem!".

Why is it that, if I am going to the gym to get exercise ...

  • I always try to get a parking spot as close to the door as possible?

  • I always ride the elevator up to the weight and cardio area instead of taking the stairs?

  • I drive there to go on the cross-trainer for 30 minutes, then rush home to be in time to drive to Bible study at my church ... which would be about a 30 minute walk from my house?

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

I've been very strictly trying to eat healthy and exercise daily during Lent. Since my church was talking about caring for God's creation, I decided to focus on taking care of my own physical and mental health, since I seem to be able to do anything church-related. Thus far, I have been very successful ... not to mention very hungry.

My Lenten vow reminds me of the recent news story about a Baptist preacher named Steven Reynolds. He lost 70 pounds and is now promoting having a "Bod for God". I first heard mention of this pastor on The Daily Show, where they quipped, "Pastor Reynolds would have lost even more weight, but every time he went jogging at the beach, Jesus carried him".



PASTOR TELLS MEMBERS TO HAVE A "BOD 4 GOD"
Religions find diet inspiration through text


By Jacqueline L. Salmon
THE WASHINGTON POST
Saturday, February 03, 2007

Saving souls is serious business for Annandale, Va., pastor Steve Reynolds. So is losing weight.

Which is why he stepped out from behind the lectern during a service one recent weekend to deliver a blunt message to those crowded into the pews below.

The Rev. Steve Reynolds lost 70 pounds by following the message of Matthew 16: 'If any man wishes to come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.'

"About 40 percent of you need to lose weight," he told his congregation at Capital Baptist Church. "When you love potluck more than God, it's serious."

And with that, the preacher, who has lost 70 pounds by relying on God and low carbs, launched a mission to lead his followers into the burgeoning world of religious dieting. "Our body was given to us by God and for God," he said. "He is the owner. We need to take care of what he's given us."

Reynolds, the pastor of Capital, is joining a movement that got its start in Christianity but has picked up steam and spread to other religions. Faith-based diet clubs, books and advice programs are prospering. Books advise Buddhists to practice "transformational nourishment"; Hindus are told to eat low-fat vegetarian fare.

A recent book for Jewish dieters advises avoiding high-fat holiday and bar mitzvah foods. Some Muslim doctors offer advice on how to use the traditional month-long Ramadan fast for losing weight.

Many faiths condemn overeating and gluttony. "Be not among winebibbers; among riotous eaters of flesh: For the drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty," reads one Old Testament verse. "Eat and drink and be not extravagant; surely He does not love the extravagant," the Quran advises.

But no faith has seized on the religious approach to weight loss as emphatically as Christianity. Best-selling books such as "The Maker's Diet" (more than 2 million copies sold), weight-loss plans with names such as "What Would Jesus Eat?" and the Web site FatFree4Jesus.org (which this year is expanding into church-based workshops in six states) have attracted millions by using Christian imagery and theology to promote weight loss.

"It's about turning to God to fill up this yearning instead of the refrigerator," said Gwen Shamblin, founder of Weigh Down Workshops, which enrolled several hundred thousand people nationwide last year in a diet program that encourages participants to transfer their focus from diets and calories to Jesus Christ.

Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson has developed a $15 weight-loss shake that is marketed nationally through Vitamin Shoppe. More than 1.3 million people have ordered a free diet program he launched in 2004.

Despite all the praying, recent studies have questioned whether faith-based diets work. One 2004 University of Texas study found few links between Christian programs that promote weight reduction and actual weight loss, according to the study's co-author, Mark DeHaven, an associate professor at the University of Texas's Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

Several recent studies have found that Christians are fatter than those of other faiths.

Baptists have the highest rates of obesity — 30 percent, according to a Purdue University study using information from a national survey that gathers data on lifestyle issues. That compares with 17 percent of Catholics and 1 percent or less for non-Christians — Jews, Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists.

The study's co-author, Purdue sociology professor Kenneth Ferraro, said the reasons for the higher incidence of obesity among Baptists aren't clear. But he speculates that many Baptists' traditional eschewal of alcohol and tobacco might translate into higher food consumption than in other denominations.

Or, as his article says: "Baptists may find food one of the few available sources of earthly pleasure."

For Reynolds, 49, the pastor of Capital Baptist, the study's results ring true. "I can see that," he said. He wonders whether high-fat church suppers among many close-knit Baptist religious communities and the Southern food beloved by many Baptists also contribute to the problem.

Whatever the issue, Reynolds said, "it's not talked about."

He is determined to change that in his church. And he started with himself.

Fourteen months ago, he faced the fact that, after a lifetime of worshipping at the altar of greasy Southern cooking, he was morbidly obese — 100 pounds overweight — and diabetic.

"My belly was god," he recalled.

Reynolds said he asked the Lord for help. He answered, Reynolds said, by bringing him to a passage in Matthew 16: "If any man wishes to come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me."

"God just burned that into my heart," Reynolds told worshipers on a recent Sunday in the drawl of his native Lynchburg, Va.

He started denying himself — forgoing his favorite treats, such as Southern cooking and late-night bowls of ice cream — and started walking on a treadmill and lifting weights. God responded: After losing 70 pounds, Reynolds hopes to shake off an additional 30.

And he is leading a 22-week blitz to help others achieve a "Bod for God."

The church sent out 25,000 fliers advertising the program to Fairfax County residents and advertised on five local radio stations. Reynolds designed a four-week sermon series and is organizing program participants into groups of 12 (like Jesus's disciples) to meet weekly to support one another.

On the stage at Capital Baptist's auditorium on a recent Sunday, a "Bod4GOD" poster hung over the baptismal pool. As worshipers entered, video screens flashed ads for Christian-themed exercise classes called Body & Soul.

A chef was scheduled to take the stage for a low-fat cooking demonstration, between the hymns and the sermon.

Among the more than 200 who jammed the church's gym for an introductory luncheon after the worship services earlier this month was Sylviana Nica, 28, a Falls Church office worker. It was her first visit to Capital Baptist, and she came after hearing radio ads for Bod4God. She has struggled for years to lose weight and live healthier and, as a Christian, she said, the religious slant of the program appealed to her.

"I've been praying for this," she said.

Mary Knisley drove 85 miles from her home in Cross Junction, Va., where she works for a missionary organization, to sign up.

"For me, the Bible is in first place in my life," said Knisley, 58, who, like Reynolds, wants to lose 100 pounds. "Because of that, this is a natural thing for me to use the word of God."

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

I saw a cute sign outside of Gayle's Weight Loss Centre yesterday. I know they were urging people not to wait to start their program, but I had to laugh at the way it came across on the sign:

DON'T COVER UP THIS SUMMER
START TODAY