The Role Model In You – Sonia Pressman Fuentes

Role Model

Sonia Pressman Fuentes


As part of my new web series, The Role Model In You, here is my most recent interview. The Role Model In You series discusses how individuals were influenced as a child to lead a healthy lifestyle. It discusses who influenced these people, the changes they made in life to be healthy, and the message they would like to pass along to the youth of today. I hope you enjoy it!

Today’s guest is a very special individual, who is truly inspiring. Sonia Pressman Fuentes, at 83 years young is a remarkable individual, whom we can all learn from.

1. Your name, title, and age? What do you do (or did you do) for a living?

Sonia Pressman Fuentes, MS., eighty-three. In my first career, I was an attorney with the federal government and major corporations. I was also a founder of the second wave of the women’s movement. Since I retired from law, I have been a feminist activist, writer, and public speaker. I am the author of a memoir entitled, Eat First—You Don’t Know What They’ll Give You, The Adventures of an Immigrant Family and Their Feminist Daughter.

2. What inspired you to be healthy and fit?

No one inspired me to eat healthy as a child. My mother, born in Poland, was a wonderful cook of Jewish food, which we know today–but didn’t know then–was not terribly healthy

However, since I consider myself an intelligent person, I made it my business the older I got to eat what I thought was a healthy diet, exercise regularly, and maintain a healthy weight. I ate no red meat and watched my cholesterol, sodium, and fat intake. I worked out twice a week with a trainer and attended a water exercise class twice a week, both at local Y’s. I regularly saw doctors, including a cardiologist. I had never had any trouble with my heart other than a slight murmur in recent years.

I was thus taken aback when in July of 2011, I was suddenly stricken with shortness of breath, and taken to a hospital where a cardiologist inserted four stents in the arteries of my heart, which were 80 and 90% blocked.

After that, at that cardiologist’s recommendation, I signed up for a thirty-six week Cardiac Rehab course at a local hospital. That course included exercise and lectures. One of the lecturers, Jill Edwards, advised all attendees to go on a heart-healthy diet, which she said had to consist 80% of fruits, vegetables, legumes, and nuts, with no processed or dairy foods. She also told me to stop concentrating on calories and fat and concentrate on eating the proper foods instead. Another friend recommended I see a DVD called Forks Over Knives, which I did. It reiterated the message Jill had given us.

I am now eating the diet Jill recommended. It was a tremendous change for me and very difficult in the beginning. I had to find restaurants that served vegetarian entrees and grocery stores that sell prepared cooked vegetables (since my busy schedule precludes my cooking) . Breakfast is still difficult. However, I have made the effort and find that I enjoy the variety of vegetables I now eat very much. I also lost seven pounds, to my delight, which I needed to lose.

3. What would be your main message to children today to lead healthy lifestyles?

Eat a heart-healthy diet such as I’m eating, get the proper amount of exercise, and keep your weight where it should be. Don’t smoke, of course.

4. Do you have a web site you would like to promote….web address only?

http://www.erraticimpact.com/fuentes

Helping A College Student

Writer

University Student - Future Journalist


Today, I got an email from a college student from the University of Missouri. She needed to interview someone about childhood obesity, and asked me if I could help her out. So, she sent me some questions to answer on the topic, and I figured it could not hurt to post them here if anyone finds them helpful.

1. What is the most prevalent cause(s) of obesity that you see trending in the past few years? Has this cause changed over time?

There are so many factors that have changed over the last 20 years, some environmentally, some from advancements in society. Children today have vending machines in schools with junk food, have more homework causing them more sedentary lifestyle, take buses to school, eat more fast food, have 24/7 TV stations that interest them keeping them stationary on the couch…..but, I feel the largest factor contributing to obesity is technology. Where ‘children and play’ used to be natural companions 20 years ago, ‘children and technology’ have become the new companions. All this technology available to them is fun, exciting, and keeps them connected with friends. With the exception of some devices like the Wii, most technology promotes sedentary lifestyle, and there is so much available to them. So, parents need to monitor this and limit it as best as they can.

2. Do you think that people are aware of how serious the issue is in our country?

Some people do! But the majority of people do not see it. When the American Heart Association says 25 million children are overweight or obese…..or when the CDC says the prevalence of childhood obesity has increased significantly over the last 20 years – - I listen. These organizations are not going to make up facts. They have reputations to uphold. When experts say this could be the first generation of young children whose life expectancy could be shorter than their parents, I get worried. The proof is there. Look how more children today have type 2 diabetes. Type 2 diabetes is environmental, meaning children are exposed to unhealthy lifestyle causing them to be overweight, which contributes to type 2 diabetes.

3. In relation to the above question, do you think that we are doing all we can do prevent and reduce obesity in America? What else could we be doing instead or in addition?

Education is the key. Helping children lead a healthy lifestyle is a team effort, and not one group is solely responsible. Parents, teachers, principals, friends, coaches, neighbors, and children need to all step up to the plate and work together on eating properly, exercising daily, and all around good health.

4. I’ve read in several research articles that obesity starts at home and is greatly influenced by family environments. Do you agree? Why or why not?

This is partially true. Parents are the number 1 role model for children. So, if a child sees a parent doing something unhealthy, they may mimic this action. The child sees the parent as the ‘life educator’ who is going to teach them the survival skills of life. Many adults do not understand the influence they have in children. But, as I said in the above question, it is a team effort, and not one group is to blame.