Dr. Lara May

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Top 5 Reasons Diets Are Doomed To Fail

Does this sound familiar? You hear about this wonderful diet that will "guarantee" weight-loss, so you try it, only to gain even more weight once you're off it?

Don’t feel bad. You are not alone. Just because a diet works for one person, does not mean that it will work for you. Diets are destined to fail, and it should come as no surprise. After all, the word “die” is within the word “diet”. That should be your first sign. You want to live your life.

Here are the top 5 reasons that diets are doomed to fail:

1. People choose to use a diet to achieve a short-term goal.

That goal is usually to lose weight before an upcoming event. Diets are perceived from the onset as a temporary action used to obtain an immediate result. Once that result is achieved, the diet is stopped and old eating habits return. From the beginning, lasting results are not built into the mindset/approach. 

2. The yo-yo diet or weight cycling.

As mentioned, many people go on diets, lose weight, and then gain weight, often more than they lost initially. And, for some reason, the cycle is repeated. To quote Albert Einstein: “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” This repeated failure can have negative effects on a person’s mental health, could result in an eating disorder, or could damage the bodies metabolism making it harder to maintain a healthy weight in the future.

3. Many diets are based on the premise of counting calories using a formula meant for the general population as opposed to the individual.

Everybody processes calories differently. This formula supports the theory that caloric expenditure exceeds caloric intake and will, therefore, promote weight loss. It has become clear that this premise is no longer true. Every calorie is not created equal. Calories consumed from spinach or sweet potatoes are much more nutrient-dense than calories consumed from a processed, low-fat muffin or bagel.

In addition, if you were to consume too few calories, your body goes into survival mode, slowing down the metabolism. You run the risk of your metabolism remaining sluggish once you start consuming more calories.

4. Before even starting a diet, people believe that they will be depriving themselves of foods they love.

Entering into a program with this mindset clearly does not support success. This constant experience of deprivation will bring on food cravings that will be difficult to ignore and overcome.

This brings me to the last reason why diets do not work.

5. They do not address food cravings and how to handle them.

Everyone has cravings. Having the tools to help navigate through those cravings and reach for healthy food alternatives will help to eliminate them.

Unfortunately for many individuals, diets only offer a quick fix to a larger problem. Learning which foods nourish the body and which don’t is the best approach to eating in order to obtain lasting weight-loss and optimal health.