Los Angeles Times

Understand­ing obesity

- Email questions to Amy Dickinson at askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I have always been thin and fit. I eat well and exercise.

Like most people, I have friends and family who struggle terribly with weight issues. I have read volumes about the genetic origins of obesity and want to be sensitive to this issue.

I can’t help but notice, however, that the overweight people I know eat a lot more than I do, exercise less and generally lead far less healthy lifestyles. Am I to believe they’re geneticall­y prone to these behaviors?

Please help me to understand the science!

Trying Not to Judge

Dear Trying Not to Judge: To quote author Roxanne Gay: “When you’re overweight, people project assumed narratives onto your body and are not at all interested in the truth.”

If you truly wanted to understand the science, you would have digested (excuse the pun) the research you’ve done, versus the choice you’ve made — to scratch your head in disingenuo­us wonderment that you see overweight people eating more and moving less than you do.

Genetics do seem to play a role both in obesity itself and in behaviors related to obesity, such as overeating. Based on my own reading, the causes of obesity are varied and complex, which is why successful treatment of obesity is much more complicate­d than you imply.

People overeat for a variety of sometimes complex physical and emotional reasons, including the fact that for some people, their brains are not receiving the message that they are full.

And sometimes we humans overeat because we want to, and don’t work out because we don’t want to.

It is possible to be both overweight and fit.

The only wisdom I can offer you is that no overweight person wants or needs your gaze, your scrutiny or your curiosity about why they are not more like you.

Dear Amy: I read your column daily. As a former sexual assault investigat­or, I vehemently disagree with your advice to “Sick of Secrets,” the ex-wife of a man who admitted to a sexual relationsh­ip decades prior, when he was 30 and the girl was 15.

Child sexual assault should never be kept a secret. If a perpetrato­r will abuse once, they will abuse twice. He abused a child.

Who says that this man has not abused his own daughter? This needs to be reported at once.

Sgt. TM in Tulsa

Dear Sgt. TM: Thank you for your response. Other readers agreed with you.

In responding to this challengin­g question, I was mindful of the fact that “Sick of Secrets” reported that the family of the victim was aware of the sexual relationsh­ip at the time it happened, and that the victim and her family members had all chosen not to report this — either when it happened many years ago, or subsequent­ly.

I was concerned that an angry ex-wife might choose to “out” a victim, when in my opinion this should not be her choice. She had been sitting on this knowledge for years, and her motivation now, as I read it, was to punish her ex through disclosing this to their teen children.

As I said, if “Sick of Secrets” had any reason to doubt her ex-husband’s behavior now, then she should act. She did not report having any concerns, and that’s why I said that telling her teenagers about this would only shift the burden of this knowledge from her to them.

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