First
it was at the Wal-Mart, then the Premium Outlet would follow. It would be the
same thing at the local Wendy’s or Burger King: all fat people.
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‘Where’s
all the fitness, sexiness Hollywood has made me believe is synonymous with
America?’
I
would go to Food Courts, look around for a snack: candy, frozen yoghurt, sugar
coated Danish and I would conclude America is a society that encourages obesity
among its young. A society that charges a higher premium on small soda packs
only so you are encouraged to purchase larger ones.
I
would see this first hand when with a Nigerian friend training as a doctor in
Florida at the time; I would go to the Altapointe Mall in Winterpark. Tired
from seeing ‘Elysium’ and window shopping, we would settle for a blizzard. I would
ask for a mini cone and my friend a medium, the red haired server lady would
ask:
‘a
mini?’ wearing that look sales people wear when they think you made the wrong
choice and can do better. ‘if you’d upgrade your mini to a medium, you could
get both cones for 99 cents each as opposed to the $1.30 cost of a mini or $2
medium’.
My
friend, himself a few pounds heavier now would say;
‘Take
the upgrade, whatever you have left over, I’d finish’. I would look to him and smile. Run my palm
over my now slightly bulging tummy and say, ‘I’d take the upgrade’. The lady
would smile back as though I had made the wiser choice.
She
would turn the cone up-side-down as though to show the blizzard was frozen
stiff and I would remember my friend saying to me earlier nothing is quite as
good as a blizzards frozen deliciousness.
As
we took our seats to enjoy our blizzards, I would notice a white haired lady
with her American accent bent to reach the lowest layer of a phone case booth,
her thighs about half the size of my waist and I would wonder: how in a society
with unlimited options and organic food, people still couldn’t make the simple
choice of living healthier lives.
Adejoh Momoh (momoh.adejoh@gmail.com) can be followed on twitter @adejoh