Children
find themselves amidst a complex society that is undergoing breathtaking
changes. Concepts, relationships, lifestyles are metamorphisised to accommodate
the new jet-setting age. Food is no exception. Healthy nutritious foods have
been replaced by the new food mantra - JUNK FOOD! Junk food comprises of
anything that is quick, tasty, convenient and fashionable. It seems to have
engulfed every age; every race and the newest entrants are children. Wafers,
colas, pizzas and burgers are suddenly the most important thing. The commonest
scenario is a child who returns from school and plonks himself in front of the
television, faithfully accompanied by a bowl of wafers and a can of cola.
Children suddenly seem to have stepped into a world of fast foods and vending
machines, totally unaware of the havoc they are creating for themselves.
The
years between 6-12 are a time of steady growth; good nutrition is a high
priority. Children must know that what they eat affects how they grow, feel and
behave. Changes in our society have intensified the need for food skills, to
the extent that they need to become a part of the child's basic education for
good health and survival. The vast majority of working mothers with school age
children are laboured with exhausting commutes, upswings in the households, and
stress, leading to a situation where parents get to spend limited time with
their children. Traditional food skills are not passed on automatically from
parent to child. Most people have forgotten that the primary reason for eating
is nourishment. In the not so distant past, food was treated with reverence
because of its life sustaining quality. Enjoying a meal was sharing experience
with the others. Today family dinners are rare. In many ways, our culture is
structured to foster poor eating habits. Television commercials and
supermarkets are propagating a wide variety of enticing junk foods,
attractively packaged and often tagged with a tempting sop. We should be
constructing an environment that protects our children. Instead we have a
highly seductive environment that undermines eating habits.
For
children who have less vision of the heart disease, cancer, high blood pressure
or diabetes that might befall them decades later, the tentacles of a junk food
environment are virtually inescapable. Studies reveal that as early as
the age of 30, arteries could beginning clogging and lay the groundwork for
future heart attacks. What children eat from puberty affects their risks of
prostate and breast cancer. Osteoporosis and hypertension are other
diseases that appear to have their earliest roots in childhood when lifelong
eating habits are being formed. Children are especially vulnerable. Poor diets
can slow growth, decay new teeth, promote obesity and sow the seeds of
infirmity and debilitating disease that ultimately lead to incurable disease
and death or worse make life insufferable.
Most
of the times these junk foods contain colors that are laced with colors, those
are often inedible, carcinogenic and harmful to the body. These foods and their
colors can affect digestive systems, the effects of it emerging after many
years. Studies have found that food coloring can cause hyperactivity and lapses
of concentration in children. Children suffering from Learning Disabilities are
often advised against eating food with artificial coloring. Chocolates, colas,
flavored drinks and snack tit bits are full of artificial coloring.
Not
surprisingly, junk food not only has physiological repercussions, but also
psychological ones - far reaching ones that affect the child's intellect and
personalities. Coping intelligently with their dietary needs increases their
self-esteem, and encourages further discovery. School days are full of
educational challenges that require long attention spans and stamina. Poor
nutritional habits can undermine these pre-requisites of learning, as well as
sap the strength that children need for making friends, interacting with
family, participating in sports and games or simply feeling god about
themselves.
Junk
foods are often eaten in instead of regular food, an essential Indian diet that
consists of wholesome chapatis and vegetables or snacks like upmas and idlis.
Not surprisingly eating junk food leads to a sense of starvation both
physically and mentally, as the feeling of satiation and contentment that comes
after a wholesome meal is absent. There is simply no substitute for the feeling
that descends, when you wake up and find that you are ready to take on the
world and this primarily stems from GOOD HEALTH! There is no better time than
now to build a supportive environment for nurturing our children and endowing
them with a legacy of good health.
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