were on their way to Franklin Athletic "I've been dieting my whole life, and Club in Southfield. I've never been this successful," she says. The show was on, and this was their "I wanted to stay married. Todd was life —as the show's producers wanted not a happy person, and a lot of it had to viewers to see it, of course. do with him not liking the way he looked They found us at the right time — it or felt. It was really intense." was beshert," says Todd, a partner in a When Michaels and crew returned six company called Plaintiff Investment weeks after the taping for the "reveal" Firm LLC in Royal Oak. "I was a walk- — the results show — Todd flaunted a ing stroke. I was defiant; I was a dick at physique that was 30 pounds lighter. the beginning; I was mean. As the show Amy had lost 15 pounds. A crew did her progressed, you could see me softening, hair and makeup. and I realized I had more value [than I'd Needing a backdrop for the reveal, the thought]." crew made up a new birth date for Lily "That's when I was giving him ulti- and set up a carnival to celebrate the matums," says Amy. With the cameras faux birthday. She was able to invite 100 rolling, she let her feelings spill over. friends. "Todd thought everything was swell. Then the crew left, sprinkling fairy He was heavy and unhappy and wasn't dust on its way out: NBC fattened feeling confident. I was beaten down the daughters' college funds, paid for emotionally. So many things have Amy's classes to become a certified yoga changed with him. He had a horrible teacher and paid for a personal trainer temper; we were walking around on for Todd for a month. eggshells. We all stopped enabling The cycle from wretched to blessed Todd," says Amy, who was suffering the was complete. It was a wrap. Not bad for loss of her business, a children's clothing a week of looking "fat and ugly," as Amy store. puts it. In the "intervention" scene around the Todd, who is active with Jewish Fam- dining-room table, Todd's mom, Edee ily Service of Metropolitan Detroit, is 90 Franklin, Amy and a few friends tell pounds lighter than he was before the Todd they love him, don't want to bug show was taped. He's become a devo- him about his weight anymore, that he tee of healthy eating and exercise. He's has to want to change himself, etc. stopped berating himself. Tears fell. Amy is teaching yoga and thinking In another scene, filmed in a boxing about starting a new store. She dumped ring, Lily and Chloe take turns telling bad eating habits for better ones. She their parents how much they love them buys organic mac 'n' cheese and other and want them to get healthy. Todd healthy snacks her kids like. And, she tells them how much he loves them and returned to plain view the candy jar that wants to be around for them. disappeared during the taping of the No punches were thrown, but more show. It's there, but nobody's tempted. tears were shed. Todd has found that if he gives him- The week was emotionally wrenching self permission to eat a cookie, he ends and physically demanding. Plus, Todd up not really wanting it. He gets antsy and Amy were ordered to live in sweats sitting on the couch so he rides his bike and avoid looking good. more and shoots hoops with the girls. "When they were here filming us, we "I got my life back," he says. "I agree each had our own producer," Todd says. with [Jiilian's] belief about lifestyle. I "I was at a boxing place trying not to don't diet. It was about changing my throw up, or I'm at Subway filming a life." commercial. Amy's having coffee with Todd says he and Amy are closer now, Jillian," and the kids were in the hands they put less pressure on their children, of producers or friends. and he's more confident in his work. At the end of each day, Amy says, she "It made us more positive. [The show] and Todd would get into bed and stare was the catalyst, but it was up to us to at the ceiling, wrung out from working hold it. We chose the better way. We out and moving around and sharing decided to stay the course and hopefully feelings. live together healthily for a long time," "There was a lot of crying," Todd says. he says. "It was bad stuff that had been built up in your body for a long time. It was WHAT THE FAMILY LEARNED a terribly fatiguing workout that was Don't diet. Alter the way you approach wringing it out of you." food, but it's not realistic to eat 1,200 Amy found Michaels' advice about calories and work out every day. parenting a bit difficult to take, given Get to a gym. Do yoga. that Michaels isn't a mother. Although Don't set unattainable goals. the host developed a good relation- Don't weigh yourself. ship with Lily and Chloe, she and Amy Get a pair of "goal pants" you want to clashed. fit into. "We had conflicting personalities; Don't deprive yourself. If you want a she's a tough Jewish woman, and I'm a candy bar, cut it in half and put the rest tough Jewish woman," says Amy. in the freezer for another day. Yet, she acknowledges that the timing Eat less. for such an adventure was right. When Talk to your children about what her business fell apart, she regained they're eating instead of telling them some of the 100 pounds she had lost they've had enough to eat. after gastric-bypass surgery. Michaels Feed your children dinner when they gave her the tools to take off and keep come home from school so they don't off the weight. Amy now eats five small subsist on empty calories that keep them meals a day. grazing until the evening. ET Since their appearance on Losing It With Lillian, Amy and Todd Franklin have lost a combined 120 lbs. www.redthreadmagazine.com FJORM or PLENTY FROM PAGE 19 They are there ready to work with the cost of treating obesity in the U.S. anybody who wants to put some sweat will be $345 billion a year. We've simply equity into growing their own food. got to find ways to feed ourselves more "Another thing is a program that we sustainably." are helping to get implemented in De- Surprisingly, Hesterman has seen troit and across Michigan called Double little in the way of direct criticism from Up Food Bucks. With that, anybody big business and politicians who could who comes to a participating farmers stand to lose money if Hesterman has market across the state of Michigan, his way. But then, Hesterman isn't including Detroit, with their Michigan against big agriculture. Bridge Card, for every $20 they spend "I've been in this field for a long, long off of their food stamp card, they will get time," he says. "This is my first book, an additional $20 of spending power but I've spoken a lot, I've written a lot of to spend on Michigan-grown fruits and articles, and I was a university professor vegetables. Spend $20 and you get $40 [at Michigan State University] for a long worth of produce. It's a way for families time. I worked at the Kellogg Founda- on federal assistance to bring those tion [co-leading the Integrated Farming dollars to a place where they can both Systems and Food and Society Programs, get healthy food for their family and during which time the foundation seeded support the local food economy at the the local food systems movement with same time." more than $200 million]. The program operates in 46 Michi- "Not everybody agrees with me. There gan markets, with support from private are some people who believe that the foundations and donors, with additional only way for us to sustain ourselves help from the Michigan Department of going forward is to intensify agriculture Human Services, USDA Rural Devel- — to use more chemicals, more pesti- opment and the Michigan Nutrition cides, genetically modified plants, and Network. that's the only way to do it. I simply do Amanda Segar, food assistance part- not agree. I see the symptoms of that nership coordinator at the Michigan system, the consequences, and they are Farmers Market Association, believes getting worse and worse. Double Up Food Bucks is a great step "I'm not against big agriculture. I'm forward. an agronomist. I was trained in this "First of all, there's a huge myth that as a scientist. I believe there's a role farmers markets are more expensive for large-scale agriculture in feeding than grocery stores," Segar says. "I don't ourselves, absolutely. I just believe that know where it came from, this belief we have reached a point where the pen- that farmers markets are for elite clien- dulum has swung so far to the side of tele. They are very economical, especial- intensification, specialization, concen- ly when buying produce that is in sea- tration, that we are in peril." son. They are competitively priced with In Fair Food, Hesterman details many grocery stores. That said, the Double Up small- and large-scale projects that are Food Bucks program is a great initia- working to improve the food system tive. It helps the public, and it helps the around the United States. He hopes farmers markets. Everyone should have that, in 10 years, we'll start seeing the access to locally produced healthy food. fruit of that labor. But more than that, farmers markets "I just think about the dozens, maybe promote community awareness. There hundreds, of small-scale projects hap- are a lot of people who haven't been able pening around the country pointing the to incorporate fresh fruit and vegetables way to a food system that is more sus- into their diet before because they don't tainable and more equitable," he says. know how to prepare and store it. At the "My vision, my dream, is in 10 years' farmers market, they can actually talk to time we would see those current sys- the growers. Who better to learn from?" tems, rather than only comprising about Everything Hesterman is proposing 2 percent of the current food system, we sounds fantastic, and it all makes sense. would have 10 or 20 percent. I believe But how realistic is it to think that these if we put our minds to it, it's possible. changes are going to be made in a world It's happening all around us on a small where so much money is changing scale, and these ideas can be scaled up. hands in a food system dominated by "I really encourage people to think big business? about both what they can do in their "I would turn that around," Hester- own kitchen to make a difference, but man says. "How realistic is it to think especially all the opportunity beyond that we can continue polluting our their refrigerator and beyond their waterways, losing our precious topsoil, kitchen of how they can participate and having diet-related illness and obesity change this, which is so important for spin way out of control, among oth- our future," Hesterman says. "The time ers, and think that can sustain us in is now We're at a moment right now the future? We are living with a system where people can make a difference." that cannot sustain us into the future. Hesterman will speak at JCC Jew- I was in an audience listening to the ish book fairs in Ann Arbor and Metro executive vice president of the largest Detroit in November. In Ann Arbor, his health insurance company in the U.S. talk will include a "fair food" dinner. a few months ago, and he said, 'In our company, we've looked at the trends, — Ken Guten Cohen and Gail Zimmerman done our numbers, done our research, contributed reporting to this article. and our research shows that by 2018 RD THREAD August 2011 21 O