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D.I.E.T- The Myths vs The Facts

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DIET, the word itself says DIE

 

How many of you have ever tried implementing a diet in the last 10 years? I will admit, the diet companies and corporations make the diet lifestyle look so promising. They show pictures and videos of all these happy “fit” people talking about how much weight they lost. But have you ever really looked at those before and after photos? I implore you to investigate with your own eyes the person whose testimony is given.

The “BEFORE” photo typically is seen without makeup, gut out and grungy clothes. It may not be a combination of all this, but they do use one of these tactics to get your attention.

The “AFTER” photo typically captures more than just a slimmer person. They include a better dressed, often refreshed and sometimes more toned/ tanned person. They want you wishing you were them.

The reason why dietitians and nutritionists dislike the word DIET, is because it gives false hopes to so many people who expect their results to be given to them. However, nothing in life is given to us, instead the work we put into our health should be felt internally and radiate outwards. Diets can make us feel good about ourselves, even powerful to some. In most cases it means giving up your comfort food for a week, month, year etc. It gives you a sense of pride and self control that you can accomplish this strenuous self motivated task.

But what happens when you reach your goal and the diet is over?

Typically, the person is exasperated of dieting by the end of the given time period and the previous lifestyle & food choices slowly creep back in. The body is starved and wants to recuperate with carbs & sugars AKA the comfort food you were trying NOT to eat. This is when the body begins to store more energy than it uses because you have trained it to expect a diminished amount of calories it was allotted in the past.  Storing energy causes fat cells to expand and causes you more stress to lose the weight the second time around.

 


 

The Definition of “D.I.E.T.”

D-deceptive

Diets are just that, they are deceptive in everything they claim. Most fad diets on the market are not science based, and have no research and or poorly controlled studies to back up their claims. They use testimonies by paid actors that tug at your hearts emotional side, drawing you closer because you start thinking, “If it worked for them, it will work for me.” This is deception. The next time you see a fad diet on the market, look up it’s statistics and evidence based research for the mechanism of weight loss.

I-innovative

If diets had ONE word to describe them, this would be it. Innovative. Fad diet companies take diet crazes from the past and resurface them with new additions. A new name, a new calorie count, new testimonies and BAM! you got yourself a new fad diet that looks oh so promising. However, what your body knows before your mind does, you have already been there and done that.

E-expiration

Every diet has one. This is the amount of time you are supposed to heed full force into the diet’s rules and regulations. This could be a week, a month, a year etc but as long as you follow the rules and eat what the fad diet tells you for as long as it specifies, you should have a wonderful new bikini body to show off come spring time. But what comes after spring time? As I mentioned before, our bodies have adaptive characteristics that learn our routines. Spending a certain amount of time eating only 1,000 calories a day, the body will adapt to live on that. After the diet however, eating the normal 2,000 calories will convert the extra 1,000 calories to storage in fat cells. This causes you to gain weight rapidly after the dieting session is over.

T-terminate

After trial and error on so many diets alike, we often find ourselves expired and terminating the diet. This is what we should have done in the beginning, terminate the idea that short term diets are for you. In the long run, it doesn’t make you any healthier. True health comes when we adapt a lifestyle change that morphs into our everyday diet. Diet, one word, two meanings. I challenge you to terminate your fad diet and commit to a healthier lifestyle everyday.

 

 


MYTHS vs FACTS

What Research Says About DIETING

 

 

 

 

 

 

Create a healthy lifestyle that works for you, don’t get caught up in the fad diets happening around us! Choose a healthier alternative and make a small step everyday to becoming the best you can be. Nutrition needs to have an individualized approach. What works for me may not work for you, but this shouldn’t be a reason to give up! Your lifestyle diet should be incorporated everyday, not once a year or even once a week. Make the change for yourself, because nobody else will do it for you. 

 

-Stephanie

 


 

All photos used in this article were taken by Stephanie Rackley for and by The Healthy Chew

-all rights reserved

 

References:

American Dietetic Association: Complete Food & Nutrition Guide. 4th edition, 2012

 

 

 

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