Diet Companies Will Never Tell You This...

We’re already halfway through February yet the New Year’s onslaught of diet ads continues.

If feels like no matter what I watch or listen to these days—and I consume a wide variety of content—I’m bombarded with messages from diet companies claiming to have finally found the solution for successful weight loss (and hence everlasting health and happiness, of course).

It’s Not a “Diet”
In an attempt to be more appealing and acceptable to today’s consumers, especially those who feel they have “failed” with traditional diets (or watched their parents do so), most diet companies are careful to claim their offerings aren’t diets but rather “wellness plans,” “lifestyle changes” or “psychology-based programs.”

Yet, they offer pretty much the same old stuff perhaps with a few new bells and whistles thrown in.

If a program tells you what, how much and/or when you’re allowed to eat, it’s a diet.

If it includes counting calories/points/macros, categorizing food, cutting out foods, logging exercise and tracking your weight, it's a diet.


I want to scream when the dieters/actors in these ads exclaim how easy it’s been to lose X pounds in just X weeks.

The truth is, you can lose weight on almost any diet, no matter what it’s called.

What the diet companies don’t tell you, however, is there is only about a five-percent chance you will maintain your weight loss.

They also don’t tell you it’s likely you’ll regain more weight than you lost as up to two-thirds of dieters typically do.*

So much for the “life-long” or “permanent” results they often promise to deliver!

One has to wonder how they even go about tracking their “lifetime” results.

Warning: Potential Side Effects
In addition to rebound weight gain, following are some of the other potential side effects of dieting you aren’t warned about:

  • Leads to harmful food rules, disordered eating and eating disorders

  • Increases food obsession and body preoccupation

  • Triggers intense cravings and binge-like eating

  • Reduces your ability to recognize and honor your hunger and fullness cues

  • Makes you scared to eat in situations where you won’t have complete control over the food

  • Causes you to miss out on shared eating experiences with family and friends

  • Drives you to sneak food and eat in secret

  • Makes you afraid to keep certain foods in your house out of a fear of losing control with them

  • Brings about mood swings and emotional eating

  • Provokes feelings of guilt, shame, anxiety, fear and hopelessness

  • Erodes body trust, self-trust, self-esteem and confidence

  • Results in weight cycling (yo-yo dieting), which can lead to adverse health conditions

  • Slows your metabolism

  • Increases your hunger-signaling hormone while decreasing your fullness-signaling hormone

  • Raises your cortisol level because dieting is inherently stressful

  • Encourages a disordered relationship with exercise

  • Consumes most of your time, energy and headspace, while other parts of your life suffer, like your relationships, social life, career and hobbies

If you have a history of dieting, you’re likely quite familiar with many of these outcomes.

It’s also likely you’ve blamed yourself and your lack of willpower and self-discipline when a diet didn’t work.

Please understand this: You don’t fail a diet—a diet fails you!

Never Be Allowed
Imagine if diet companies, like drug manufacturers, had to include all of the potential side effects of dieting in their advertisements.

Here's what the originators of Intuitive Eating, Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch, have to say about the futility of dieting and the harm it can cause:

“If dieting programs had to stand up to the same scrutiny as medication, they would never be allowed for public consumption. Imagine, for example, taking an asthma medication, which improves your breathing for a few weeks, but in the long run, causes your lungs and breathing to worsen.”

Become Fully Informed
When you’re unhappy with your eating and your body, the success stories promoted in the diet ads can understandably tempt you to try one more diet.

I get it. I’ve been there myself.

The desire to diet and lose weight is completely understandable given our weight-stigmatizing, thin-idolizing culture, our tendency to conflate weight with health, and the illusion of control dieting provides in a world full of uncertainty.

While I am anti-diet, I completely believe in body autonomy including the right to diet.

I also believe people should be made aware of the physical and psychological harm dieting can cause so they can make a fully informed decision about what’s truly best for their overall wellbeing. It’s unethical to do otherwise.

If you’re considering participating in an intentional weight loss program, I encourage you to do your research.

Look for solid scientific data demonstrating a program leads to long-term, sustainable weight loss (i.e., multiple years versus a few months) for the majority of its participants—without causing any adverse side effects or requiring constant self-monitoring.

Don’t be surprised, however, if you discover it doesn’t exist! 

Dieting Won’t Bring You Peace and Wellbeing
If you want a healthy, peaceful relationship with food and your body, despite what the $72 billion diet industry wants you to believe, it can’t be achieved through dieting.

Rather than put all your energy toward depriving yourself for a short-term result with potentially harmful long-term consequences, what if you put it towards healing your relationship with food and your body
, reclaiming your ability to eat intuitively, and engaging in weight-neutral self-care so you can truly experience the peace, ease and wellbeing you’re longing for?

*For a deep dive into the research behind these stats, I recommend checking out Christy Harrison’s book Anti-Diet.

I Wanted to Toss All the Christmas Cookies

Over the holidays, I recalled a Christmas many years ago when I was visiting my parents at my childhood home.

Every year, my mom would attend a cookie exchange and return home with a giant platter full of a variety of holiday cookies.

I vividly remember standing alone over that red platter and quickly eating one cookie after another after another. Even though most of them didn’t taste very good to me, I kept eating them.

It felt like I was in a trance.

When I finally snapped to, I was so mad at myself for eating so many cookies. I felt crappy, out of control and powerless.

I certainly didn’t feel I could trust myself with those cookies.

I wanted to toss the entire platter into the trash to prevent myself from eating more but that wasn’t possible given they were meant to be shared among all my family members. I wasn’t sure how I would explain the missing cookies without a lot of lying, embarrassment and shame.

The only thing that helped was reassuring myself that I would get back on track with my eating as soon as the holidays were over.

The Cookies Weren’t the Problem
I haven’t had an eating episode like this one in years.

As I worked on healing my relationship with food and my body, I came to understand that my cookie experience and hundreds of others like it were not due to a lack of willpower or self-discipline. They were due to dieting.

Once I stopped all the restriction and rule-following and started eating unconditionally with guidance from my body’s cues, like hunger, fullness, desire and satisfaction, food lost its power over me.

Without the threat of future deprivation, I no longer had the urge to eat cookies or anything else as if it was my last supper.

Breaking up with diet culture and making peace with food and my body was one of the greatest gifts I’ve ever given myself.

Resolve to Make Peace Instead
Given the world we live in, the desire to diet is completely understandable.

It’s more tempting than ever this time of year as we’re bombarded by weight-loss company ads promising that their method is better than all the others and guaranteed to result in everlasting thinness, health and happiness—even though they don’t have any substantial, including long-term, research to back up their claims.

If you have a history of dieting (or whatever the food-restriction plan is called), you likely know all too well how this game eventually ends: weight regain, feeling like a failure, an even more messed up relationship with food and your body, and so many other undesired outcomes the diet companies don't warn you about.

What if this year, instead of hopping on the diet train, you resolve to make peace with food and your body?

How would doing so change your life?

The last two years have taught us many things, especially how precious life is.

How would you spend your one precious life if you were no longer wasting so much time, energy and headspace obsessing about what you’re eating and your weight?

What if you signed up for peace instead?

Did You Catch These Episodes?

I’m back with a fresh roundup of not-to-be-missed content.

This time, I’m shining the spotlight on some recent podcast episodes. Topics include fat positivity, weight stigma, weight science, Intuitive Eating and more.

Informative, insightful and engaging, these shows are bound to make your next cleaning session, road trip or flight fly by.

Ten Percent Happier: Anti-Diet Series
In this two-part series, host Dan Harris explores our often complex relationship with food and our bodies, including his own struggles, with actress and activist Jameela Jamil and anti-diet dietitian and author Christy Harrison.

Part 1: Jameela Jamil on Mental Self-Defense

Part 2: How to Embrace the Anti-Diet with Christy Harrison

I also encourage you to listen to Dan’s life-changing episode with Evelyn Tribole, one of the co-creators of Intuitive Eating.

Maintenance Phase: Is Being Fat Bad for You? [Spotify | iTunes]
Hosts Aubrey Gordon and Michael Hobbes dive deep into the research to challenge the simple and harmful narrative we’ve been fed regarding health, longevity and weight.

Burnt Toast: Healthcare for Fat People is Based on the Premise that it's Acceptable to Kill Us to Make Us Thin
Author Virginia Sole-Smith chats with activist Ragen Chastain about fighting weight stigma on behalf of our bodies.

I also highly recommend checking out Ragen’s whip-smart newsletter Weight & Healthcare.

Full Bloom: Why Should I Give Fat Positivity a Try?
Host Zoë Bisbing talks to therapist and activist Dr. Rachel Millner about what it means to be fat positive, including how to raise fat-positive children and break the cycle of intergenerational weight-related trauma.

As always, I hope this content helps support you on your journey toward a peaceful relationship with food and your body.