The Heroic Generation That Changed the World: Part I

Who would you be without a dream, without a quest, without a consuming desire to change the world in some small or great way, a change only you can make?

Consider this…

There is a generation of children growing up in our country. Their dreams are mere fantasies now. In time these silent urgings will take root, blossom, and mature into great life-dreams. Like all the generations before they will pursue these dreams, fulfilling the ageless miracle of rebirth born into the hearts of countless heroes. But this new generation will be different. Far different. And that difference will touch us all in ways we can barely imagine.

The newest generation was born into a mean world

This, the newest generation was born into a mean world. A very, very mean place. When you subtract the inevitable wars of their lifetime (there have always been wars), when you take away the crime, the poverty, the infectious diseases, (each in constant ebb and flow), this generation will bear the cruelest fate of all.

No other generation has been called to bear the terrible burden they alone have already been singled out to carry. No other children in the history of the world will know their terrible agony. And it has already begun.

If you will listen closely, if you will observe with eyes wide open, you will see what has never been seen before. You will hear silent cries growing in every place children inhabit. The pain of your close attention will pierce your heart, and you will cry, cry shamelessly from your depths, and you will ask, “What can be done? What can I do?” From this will a new hero arise?

Understand the special tragedy unfolding around you, the epic proportions of it all, and resolve to do something about it.

This newest generation has the cruel fate to be the first full generation to be born into a world of plenty. A world of surplus. A world of nutrient overload. A place of advertised enchantment wrapped around an abundance of food that will kill them. Is killing them. And you, and I, and the whole lot of us are unknowingly doing the poisoned feeding.

Children’s bodies can’t wait

Grasp the full power of what is happening to an entire generation of children. Comprehend the enormity of the tragedy. Then resolve to do something about it. If the world ever needed new heroes, if the world ever needed your resolve, your ardent quest, this is the time. Children’ bodies can’t wait.

Consider their plight. One out of three of today’s children, our children, will get Adult Onset (Type 2) Diabetes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). One out of three. If they are Hispanic, African American, Pacific Islander, it will be one out of two. 50%. One half. If Native American, it is already over 80%. 80%. The devastating assault has just begun. It is rapidly becoming global. Diabetes is just one of the killers.

A child born above-normal in birth-weight has an 80% chance of being dangerously overweight by time they are 3 years old. A child that is overweight at 8 has triple the risk of being an overweight teen. An overweight teen, is 3 times more likely to be obese in adulthood, even if they slim down in their late teens and early 20′s.

Obesity is not cosmetic

Obesity is not a cosmetic problem. It is a symptom of a pantheon of diseases. Diseases that kill slowly, but killers nonetheless.

Already one in eight of our children has Type 2 Diabetes or the precursors to it. (This devastating disease used to strike less than 3% of those over age 60.) Over 60% of these children also have deeply ingrained risk factors for heart disease. And if a child has even slightly elevated blood pressure at 8, they are highly likely to be hypertensive (high blood pressure) in their teens, only to see it dangerously rise in pressure as they grow older.

An obese 8 year old has the quality of life of a child undergoing chemotherapy, according to studies by child psychologists. They are remorselessly teased, pointed at, chosen last for recess games at school, and have great difficulty playing sports and games with their friends. Their difficulties have just begun.

Teen obesity follows hard on childhood obesity. Obese teens begin to show all the markers of heart disease, hypertension, and Type 2 Diabetes. The nearly irreversible damage to their bodies is already begun its pernicious work. It is deadly work that has only just begun.

Grasp the enormity of this unfolding pandemic:

• Most children with diabetes will go undiagnosed

• Children with diabetes are at high risk of permanent small blood vessel damage, leading to later stroke, kidney disease, and limb amputations if not prevented

• Obese children are 53 times more likely to have the risk factors for diabetes

• Diseases like cancer and heart disease are closely linked to improper childhood nutrition

• Rickets (soft bones), once eradicated, is making a comeback

• 7% of apparently healthy children have 3 or more risk factors for heart disease

• Overweight children have inflammatory signs which predict future heart disease and diabetes

• Between 34% and 65% of five year-old girls have ideas about dieting (5 year-olds. Dieting.)

• Dieting is the leading precursor to eating disorders and later obesity

• Irregular exercise, appetite suppressants, laxative use, vomiting, and binge eating predict excess weight gain

• Dieting girls have over three times the risk of obesity compared with non-dieters

• The psychological stress and social stigma of being overweight may be as damaging as the health effects

• The more overweight kindergarten and first grade children are, the lower their math and reading performance — the foundation for later academic underachievement

• If current trends continue, this generation of American children will grow up to be the most obese adults in U.S. history

• Long-term results of childhood obesity:

–Type 2 Diabetes

–Asthma

–Arthritis

–Liver disease

–Bowel cancer

–Sleep apnea

–Heart disease

–Lung disease

–Intestinal disorders

–Bone and joint complications

• The incidence of Type 2 Diabetes in children and adolescents has increased 500% in the past decade

The prime symptom of all these terrible outcomes is childhood obesity. Childhood obesity confronts one in six of our children. And while the number is rising rapidly — 85% of them will develop diabetes.

Adult Onset Diabetes is the fastest growing childhood disease in America.

The rest of the world is rushing to catch up. For the first time in history, more people worldwide will die of obesity, and related diseases, than hunger or malnutrition.

And it just gets worse:

• Obese adults make just 60% of the income of those with normal weight

• After 7 to 12 years of diabetes, most are on kidney dialysis (notice all the new places for this in the strip malls?)

• 80% of all limb and appendage amputations are of diabetics

• Diabetic men are much more likely to be impotent

• Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness

• Heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, and obesity dramatically shortens the lives of all those affected

For the first time in history, we are facing the first generation of parents who will see their children die of chronic diseases before they do. (CDC and World Health Organization, 2003.)

This is the tragic collapse of everything parenthood has ever stood for. As a nation, as a world, as parents and grandparents, we are losing an entire generation. Where will our world be without them? What will our nation be like without children growing to find and live out their dreams?

These children will have dreams, to be sure. They will be grand, and glorious, and beautiful dreams. But they will be stopped short. Their hopes will be shattered. As they ascend into their 20s and 30s, this generation will increasingly be called upon to manage the ravages of their diseases. They will be consumed by the drained energy, the loss of income, the incredible expense, the shrinking family resources to do anything but try to live another day with dignity.

What of their dreams? We all live vastly improved and luxurious lives because of the realized dreams of previous generations. The heroic quests of generations-past improve, enrich, and make our lives wondrous, unlike any that have ever lived on this Earth.

But, this new generation will not live many of their dreams. While they will greatly enrich us by their having been here, they will have fewer years to make our world even better for generations yet unborn. Their dreams, their hero quests, will hone closer to survival than to creating new visions for the future.

We are losing an entire generation of dreams

An entire generation of dreams, of heroic quests is being lost. We will all live diminished lives because of it, even while our hearts bleed for the continued pain of our children and grandchildren.

For those not afflicted, they will be drawn into caring for, and financing the diminished lives of so many chronic disease-stricken young adults, so few of whom will reach the ripe old age of 65.

And all of it, every bit of it, is totally preventable. Preventable. PREVENTABLE. The causes are known. The solutions are clear. It is not for want of caring that this is happening. It is not for want of knowledge that our children are suffering these undeserved calamities. It is for want of hearing, for want of seeing, for want of action that the already-devastating calamity is fully upon us. and upon them.

If you will listen closely, if you will observe with eyes wide open, you will see the terrible calamity that has never been seen before. And while you hear the silent cries growing in every place children inhabit, and while the pain of your close attention will pierce your heart, and you shamelessly cry from your depths, you will ask: “What can be done? What can I do?” From this will a new hero quest arise within you?

The difference between a dreamer and a hero is action

The solutions are known. The keys to a different future are readily in our hands. We just need a generation of champions — a generation of heroes to change the course of history.

Heroes must be informed, as to the causes, and the effective solutions. They must prepare themselves for the arduous task. They must reach out with more than compassion. They must know, understand. And act. For the difference between a dreamer and a hero is action. Concerted, knowledgeable, effective action.

This great cause, to save an entire generation, is the greatest single quest in the history of the world. The need is immediate — children’s bodies can’t wait. The stakes are enormous. The heroic effort required is infinite. We cannot wait. We cannot waiver. We cannot allow our feelings of inadequacy, our fears, our pride, or our vain ambitions to intercede.

If we succeed in this our collective quest, we will be known as the heroic generation that changed the world.

If we fail……. if we fail…….

We cannot fail. We must not fail.

Will we allow ourselves to fail? Will we pick up and carry our fallen and weakened friends upon our shoulders until they, too, are ready to join us in this our collective quest? Will we allow ourselves to doubt that we each, together, individually, can make a difference?

Who would you be without a dream, without a quest, without a consuming desire to change the world in some small or great way, a change only you can make?

There is a generation of children growing up in our country. Their dreams are mere fantasies now. In time these silent urgings will take root, blossom, and mature into great life-dreams… but only with your heroic quest.

If not you, who?

If not now, when?

The newest generation was born into a mean world.

It is the quest of our heroic generation to change that mean world into a world of celebration.

Are you part of that heroic generation?

Next week:

What we can do, what we must do, and how we will do it.

The Heroic Generation that Changed the World: Part 2

Epilogue:

No matter what you may dream, build, develop, or accomplish in this life, remember now, with a daily burning memory, that for you, for them, for the eternities, love only remains.

So chose this day what love you wish to remain. Whatever you create from this day forward will be your lasting memorial. A life-lived memorial of love.

This is the core, the true identity of the lasting hero. A real hero.

Ask yourself each day, as you close your eyes for the night: Have I been a hero today?

© 2007 Boyd L. Jentzsch

Boyd L. Jentzsch
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