Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Live To Eat, obesity part II

We like to eat. Americans eat as a social bonding experience. Think about it. We eat at weddings, at wakes, at birthday parties and office meetings. Food is a part of how we interact with each other. First date? Dinner and a movie. Or coffee and a sweet roll. How many people meet for a jog in the park to discuss their day? Some, I'll grant you. But not most.

Our pets are part of our families, and we like to include them in our social eating. They like to be included in it, too. My dogs certainly will sit near the table in hopes of a last bite finding its way to them. We enjoy knowing our pets enjoy their meals just like we beam at the compliments our human guests give the food we prepare for them.

This leads to a couple problems- contributors to obesity issues. The gist is that our pets take in too many calories. Those little bites of people food add up quickly. A single french fry could be the caloric equivalent of a Big Mac for small dogs or cats. I'm not saying you cannot ever give a small treat, but we all need to be very aware of what we are putting in our pets' mouths.

What's that you say? Your pets never get table food. Awesome. They certainly will not miss out on needed nutrients. The pet foods of today are, generally speaking, nutritionally complete in and of themselves. This is a good thing. Like those funny square things people ate on the original Star Trek series, the brown kibble in the bowl has everything a cat or dog needs, neatly packaged and very appealing to their senses. Well, maybe too appealing.
Who buys the pet food? (Insert eye roll here) This is actually a pertinent question. It leads to the deeper question- to whom do pet food companies market their product? You and I, of course. And what makes us want to but a particular brand. If it is "nutritionally complete and tastes OK" are we going to run out and get it? How about a commercial that shows a dog run to two bowls, sniff them over, then choose the "one on the right?" Yep, that'll do it. Just like the Coke vs Pepsi blind taste test commercials. We want to be complimented on our choice of dinner. We see the compliment in the way our dogs wolf down the food and look for more. It's like dinner guests getting seconds.

So why am I bringing this up as a contributor to obesity? Here's an analogy: Say I'm hungry. Put a salad in front of me. A nice salad, maybe romaine and spinach, tomato, cucumber, a little cheese, yummy vinaigrette dressing. I will eat it until I am full.

Tossed Salad Clipart

 Now put brownies in front of me. With chocolate chips. I will eat until I am sick.  This is the issue with highly palatable pet foods. The ideal pet food would be just yummy enough that out pets would eat what calories they need for the day. Our newer generation of foods, while still nutritionally sound, tend to be delicious like brownies. So our pets will eat themselves sick, or obese, given the opportunity.

We tend to live to eat, rather than eat to live. This is a societal problem. And fortunately, the cure for our pets is pretty straightforward- feed them less. They are not driving through McD's on a whim. We control their calories. If your dog is getting a bit "fluffy," cut back the calories in and maybe work on increasing the calories out.

Enjoy your pets!

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