Don’t touch that diet!

Diet Is a 4-Letter Word

Maybe it’s the influence of lessons learned when I lost 20 pounds as a “Weight Watcher” several years ago. Maybe it’s my local TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) group and their emphasis on lifetime weight maintenance. Or maybe it’s the implicit groan I hear when people talk about dieting.

Whatever the cause, I avoid the word diet. For one thing – diet used as a noun simply means “daily intake of food.” If we eat, we’re on a diet – whether it’s high-fat, low-fat, Western, Eastern, or Indian.

Second, “to diet” implies a temporary solution to an ongoing problem. When someone says they’re on a diet, they usually mean, “I’m depriving myself for a while because I need to take off some pounds. Once those pounds are off, I’ll start enjoying myself again.” This implies that to eat healthfully is to deprive oneself of the best things of life.

Is it any wonder some people are “always” dieting? If the dieter loses weight, she’s typically right back where she started – or heavier – when she starts eating “normally” again. If she doesn’t lose weight, she gives up or tries some other fad diet, always thinking that to lose weight means deprivation, which leads to depression, which inevitably leads to food obsession.

Choose to Eat Well

Eating well has nothing to do with quantity; it has everything to do with quality.

When we “eat well,” we feed our cells, not our appetites or our emotional vacuums. We eat the foods that God created to fuel our bodies – high-octane fuel, if you will.

The higher the quality of food, the better our cells react. The better our cells react, the better we feel and the less likely we are to crave low-nutrient foods.

Count Nutrients, Not Calories

Dr. Joel Fuhrman, author of Eat to Live and Eat for Health, advocates two basic premises:

  1. Our bodies are made to live;
  2. Our bodies are self-healing machines  – when we supply them with the right nutrition.
    Thanks to Dr. Fuhrman, I’ve become aware of two terms related to the food we consume: macronutrients and micronutrients.

According to the doctor, macronutrients are the “nutritional components of the diet that are required in relatively large amounts: protein, carbohydrate, fat.” When you read the nutritional labels on processed foods, these are the items listed in the larger box.

Micronutrients are “essential nutrients, such as trace minerals or vitamins, that are required by an organism in minute amounts” – such as Vitamin A, Vitamin C, calcium and iron. You’ll see these below the line on the nutrition label. Though our bodies require these nutrients in small amounts, micronutrient deficiency leads to diseases such as anemia (lack of iron), scurvy (skin disease caused by a lack of Vitamin C) and night blindness (Vitamin A deficiency). (World Health Organization)

Read the Small Print

When you read labels, pay attention not only to the fat, sugar and sodium content, but to the micro-nutritional value. Eat foods with the highest possible nutritional bang per caloric buck.

As you might guess, most of these foods come straight from nature: fruits and vegetables. And despite what you think, nutrient for nutrient, eating fruits and vegetables is less expensive than eating poorly. (See “Fruit, Glorious Fruit” for some data on this.) “Cheap” food  usually means empty calories. Nutritionally, you’re wasting your money.

I invite you to join me in a new way of talking about eating. Avoid the word diet like you avoid other offensive four-letter words.

Let’s start the campaign to stop the negative consequences of dieting, while we salivate over salad and grin for greens.

Cheryl Bryan

Talk to me: What is your reaction to the word diet? In your mind, does the word represent challenge,  failure, or something else?

8 thoughts on “Don’t touch that diet!

  1. I couldn’t agree more with what you have written. And I absolutely agree with you about the pejorative connotation to the word ‘diet’. Unless we’re fasting, we’re all on a diet! What’s ‘in’ the diet makes all the difference.
    Also, I have no scientific evidence to back any of this up, but it makes sense to me, and helped me shed some unwanted weight. I eat whenever I want. Whenever I get hungry I eat… I just don’t sit down and make a big meal. I always have fresh fruit, baby carrots and raw broccoli in the fridge, and a bag of raw almonds at my desk. When I get hungry, that’s where I go. It’s quick, easy, there’s no mess to clean up, and I eat until I feel satisfied. Repeat as necessary. At this point, I only make one meal a day, the rest is snacking.
    It helps not to buy bags of potato chips or pretzels or Good n Plenty when shopping, because if that stuffs in the house, that’s where I go first. I don’t even go down those aisles any more… don’t need the temptation!

  2. Looks like you got a wise one there, Cheryl! 😀

    wish I was as smart about keeping temptations out of the house.

    By the way, I REALLY like the separate little icons for all commentators. Makes it easy to see who has two comments…

  3. The “pejorative connotation,” Jan? That’s one of those phrases I understand in context but would never think to use. It is a great word; I’ll see if I can work it in somewhere sometime.

    And thanks for your endorsement of my thoughts. If you do it right, the best kind of eating can also be the simplest.

  4. Yvonne, I think I have several “wise” ones. Wonder how that came about?

    Re: keeping the temptations out of the house. The grocery store is certainly the first battleground. You know what they say: Stick to the outside aisles!

    Oh — the separate little icons? You can thank WordPress for that. It comes with the software. I’m certainly not clever enough to design them.

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  6. Writing this as I finish up my bowl of “oats!” I’ve not “dieted” for years! Just using the word, put me in a BINGE mood! I absolutely just don’t eat like I use to. We still have the snacks (just ask Sarah, Beth, Neale and Alyson!), but I rarely touch them after indulging in the first bite from the bag.

    And when I got on the scale this morning, something I also rarely do, I am below 140….phenomenal! Don’t know if I’m in a “healthy” state, but I do feel I am no longer “fat!”

    Have a Wonderful Wednesday. (I wonder if you are notified that I this post is here 4 months after you’ve written this blog!?)

  7. You are a great testament to the fallacy of dieting. It really is just a lifestyle change, isn’t it – eating to live rather than living to eat.

  8. Pingback: Lowering High Cholesterol | Cheryl's Desk

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