SOUTHERN EXPERT PUTS LATEST HEALTH SURVEY IN PERSPECTIVE
Imagine
my surprise to read recent news reports that Georgia is among the least
healthy states in the nation because of, among other things, our “poor
diet.” Obviously, the experts who put the report together have never
heard of sweet tea, Vidalia onions, barbecue sandwiches or grits with
butter. That doesn’t sound like a poor diet to me.
Of
course, we were joined at the bottom of the survey by the usual
suspects: Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, and South Carolina. Oklahoma
was also down there with us. I’m not quite sure why but I am glad to
have the company.
The
survey is done annually by the American Public Health Association and
Partnership for Prevention. This year Vermont is cited as the nation’s
healthiest state.
I called
my friends at Round or Square Polls, Inc, a subsidiary of The Yarbrough
Multinational Media and Pest Control Company, and one of the nation’s
leading opinion research firms located in a pool hall in Greater
Garfield, Ga., to see what they knew about the survey.
“As far as we have been able to tell,” Junior E.
Lee informed me, “it was done by a bunch of Yankees.
Otherwise, why would Vermont be the
healthiest state in the union? Our polls show there’s nothing in Vermont
but syrup and loony politicians.”
Junior, a
nationally-recognized expert on the Southern way of life, wasn’t
impressed that places like Maine, Massachusetts and New Hampshire were
at the top of the list and the Southeastern states were at the bottom.
“If you have ever been to any of those states you know they don’t have
anything worth eating. They wouldn’t recognize fried okra if it rained
on them. Also, those folks are frozen in ice for ten months a year so it
preserves their organs.”
I asked
Junior about the survey showing that the nation has an obesity problem
and Georgia is the 33rd fattest state. The good news is that
last year we were 40th. Does that mean we are doing something right?
Junior scoffed. “All that says is that a bunch of Yankees have moved to
Atlanta to thaw out their organs and they are eating at sushi bars. That
crowd has never seen a lard bucket, let alone know what to do with it.
My mama used to fry everything in lard, even jelly sandwiches. And salt.
She put salt on all our food. That was to preserve our organs so that we
didn’t have to go sit in the snow for ten months.”
When I
inquired why Georgia is 47th out of 50 states in terms of air pollution,
I could tell Junior was getting impatient with me. “Listen, I just told
you that everything we eat is cooked in lard. If you don’t understand
how that causes air pollution, I’m not about to explain it to you in a
family newspaper.”
One of
the bright spots in the survey was that Georgia is rated 15th in
physical activity, even ahead of California. “That doesn’t surprise me,”
he said. “We get our exercise moving around to get away from the air
pollution caused by folks eating fried catfish and pinto beans. In
California, people don’t eat fried catfish and pinto beans so they can
sit and drink chardonnay all day. Chardonnay doesn’t cause air
pollution, but it can give you a bad case of the hiccups. Did the survey
tell you how Georgia did in hiccups?”
I told
Junior that I could not find a category on hiccups but we would probably
score low there, too.
Why does
Georgia rank 42nd in high blood pressure, I wondered.
“That is
because we worry too dang much about what other people think of us,”
Junior opined. “People in Vermont don’t care about that stuff. They just
sit in the snow and suck syrup all day.”
I am glad
I called Junior E. Lee. He put the survey in perspective for me. I no
longer feel guilty about scarfing down a plate of mashed potatoes and
redeye gravy. It may not be healthy fare, but at least my organs aren’t
frozen. And I don’t have the hiccups.
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