The research shows most dieters end up heavier or less happy.
Post published by Charlotte N. Markey Ph.D. on Mar 16, 2015 in Smart People Don’t Diet
I recently published the book, Smart People Don’t Diet: How the Latest Science Can Help You Lose Weight Permanently
(Da Capo-Lifelong books). As I've spoken with TV, radio, and podcast
hosts, and others in the process of promoting the book, I’ve often been
asked if I have ever been on a diet. I can’t lie—I have been, and I say
so. I know I’m not alone; my research suggests that most men and women
have at some point gone on a diet (1). We do it because we’re tempted by
the promises: Lose a pound a day. Get a flat belly. Increase your metabolism. Be “thinspirational.”
What’s not to like? How about this?: These diets don’t work! When you look at the data (and, I'll bet, reflect on your own experiences), it becomes painfully obvious. Smart people just don’t diet, and here are 6 of the best reasons they don't:
What’s not to like? How about this?: These diets don’t work! When you look at the data (and, I'll bet, reflect on your own experiences), it becomes painfully obvious. Smart people just don’t diet, and here are 6 of the best reasons they don't:
- Dieting can make you gain weight. Here’s a little-known fact: Not only do people sometimes not lose weight when they diet; they often gain
weight. In one study that tracked dieters for two years, the average
person weighed more at the end of the period than at the start (2).
That’s a lot of work for no reward.
- Dieting uses valuable brainpower. When people diet,
they typically keep records of what they eat, or spend energy
“counting” calories or sugar or fat grams. It turns out that this can be
exhausting. In fact, dieting researchers who have examined the mental
energy (often referred to as “bandwidth”) available to dieters versus
nondieters have consistently found that people who diet are distracted
by their diets and have a more difficult time learning new information,
don’t problem-solve as well, and have lower self-control (3, 4). Ironic, isn't it? In other words, dieting reduces your mental capacity to do other, potentially more important, things.
- Dieting leads to ironic processing. This is probably best explained through an example. Try this exercise: What
I want you to do is try not to think about chocolate at all. Don’t
think about anything chocolate. OK, put all thoughts of chocolate out of
your mind for the next 10 seconds—clear your mind and count to 10.
How did that go? Well, if you had a hard time doing that little
exercise, that means you are pretty normal. It’s ironic that when we try
not to think about something we tend to think about it that much more. This is why it is so hard to not eat something we are trying not to eat.
- Dieting keeps you from eating “bad foods” (but some bad foods are good). Evidence suggests that if we try to eliminate all “bad foods” from our diet we are likely to end up overeating
them. It's better to just allow ourselves some regular, moderate
indulgences. In fact, in one study, when people were allowed to eat a
little something sweet each day, they were more likely to lose weight
and keep it off, than a comparison group that abstained from sweets altogether (5).
- Dieting leads to binging. Researchers actually
refer to this as the “What the Hell?" phenomenon (6). It turns out that
when we go on a diet—and inevitably pledge to avoid certain foods such
as carbs, sweets, or fat—we typically slip and tend to think, "What the
Hell?" Then, instead of eating just one dessert, we have three. And
instead of eating one doughnut, we take four. After all, we think, we’ll
just start our diet again on Monday. But the interim binging is likely
to contribute to weight gain, guilt, and even disgust with ourselves.
It’d be better for our psyche—and our waistlines—to just take one
dessert from the start.
- Every time you fail on a diet you make someone else money. One thing that scientists who study weight management know without question is that the diet industry is delighted when we fail on our diets—because we’re likely to try again and that just makes them more money! Imagine if the first diet you tried worked: The multibillion-dollar industry would disappear.
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