Life Is One Damn Diet After Another
A common expression is that we’re “going on a diet.” The phrase
suggests that, like a vacation trip, there is a beginning and an end.
We dream of the day we will reach our weight goal and how wonderful it
will be when we don’t have to lead a life of painful deprivation.
In the back of our minds, there is a comforting little tape playing,
promising us that when our weight loss campaign is over, we’ll be able
to stop counting calories, carbohydrates, or fats. We long for the day
when we no longer have to clench our teeth as we refuse a favorite dish
that always causes us to salivate in our sleep. We reach for the carrot
and celery sticks without anticipation or enthusiasm while torturing
ourselves with visions of the special treats we’ll enjoy when the diet
is over.
Uh, hello?
Allowing ourselves to think of a diet as a delineated, restricted
period within our total life span is a sure avenue back to tent city
(that refers to what we wear, not where we live). To have any hope of
attaining permanent weight control, we must approach it as a lifelong
effort, watching our intake day after day, week after week, year after
year.
You feel your heart sinking in your chest. You think “If I have to live
like this all the time, it’s just not worth it!” That little voice
promises you that you are different. You can relax because now you know
how to lose weight, you can do it anytime you want. Gain five pounds
and you’ll go back on your diet and be back to goal in no time at all.
But you won’t! Think back over your chequered weight history. We all
believe that once our weight is down, it will be so easy to go on a
short diet if we gain back a few pounds. It doesn’t work that way,
though, does it? We start gaining a pound here and a pound there, but
then there are some special events coming up and a diet would be so
inconvenient. We don’t go back “on” our diet until we’ve gained enough
weight to develop the self-disgust that warrants a new period of
serious deprivation. We have become a full-fledged member of the yo-yo
club, that vast majority of dieters who cannot keep the weight off for
more than a few weeks.
The reasons we go “on” and “off” diets are numerous: they are boring,
depressing, and very uncomfortable. They set us apart from friends,
family, and coworkers who continue to snack, to feast, and to
celebrate. We resent how diets make us feel and how they impact our
daily lives.
Let’s look at the whole picture from a different perspective for a
minute.
Instead of “a diet” envision a way of eating that involves living on a
diet for the rest of your life. While the prospect may appall you,
don’t say you can’t do it just yet.
First, consider another wide-spread concept many of us accept. To lose
substantial weight in a relatively short time, we need to select the
diet that seems to fit us and then stay with it, religiously, until
we’ve reached our goal.
Let’s now take these two concepts, squish them together, and then turn
them upside down.
We are not “going on a diet.” We are starting our diet-for-life. We
then pick a diet, any diet at all, and make the commitment to stick
with that diet for one week, and one week only. At the end of the week,
we are going to pick an entirely different diet to which again we only
commit for a one week period. This continues for virtually the rest of
our lives with selected diets changing on a weekly basis.
What does this accomplish? A whole bunch of things:
1.
By selecting a different diet each week, it removes those common
misgivings that maybe we should have gone in a different direction. We
worry that we’re not getting the right nutrients or that we’re going to
get sick or develop a rare disease. We read the diet ratings and panic
at the warnings posted for all the popular programs. With our new
approach, you don’t have to fret about if you made a good or bad choice
because you’ll be making a new choice in a week.
2.
If there are particularly painful “No-Nos” in this week’s diet, resolve
to try something next week that allows a currently forbidden fruit. For
example, a primarily protein regimen has been found successful for many
participants who often lose five or ten pounds in a week. However, they
miss the vegetables and salad they enjoy. The next week could then be a
vegetables and salad only routine, also successful for rapid weight
loss but a bit lean on the protein you body needs for self-repair.
You may then find yourself craving some good bread so you switch to the
Subway diet for a week until your craving is satisfied. Move on to
something completely different – the cabbage soup diet or liquid
shakes. Since there are literally thousands of diets, a few are bound
to include the food you crave.
You are never more than a week away from having what you feel you
absolutely must have in order to keep going. You can include spartan
fad diets that move fat quickly and you can include calorie counting or
Weight Watcher diets that allow almost anything so long as you adjust
your intake to stay within the totals specified.
3.
The frequent changes in your eating patterns keep your body
off-balance. Give the body enough time and advance notice and it will
adapt to anything, turning protein into carbohydrates and storing even
low calorie carbohydrates as little pockets of fat. By totally changing
what you eat on a regular basis, the body gives up trying to figure out
how to thwart you and spends its time efficiently processing what you
give it. You are effectively using your smart little mind to
outmaneuver your smart not-so-little body.
4.
The constant changes force you to buy food in smaller packages. It’s
pointless and wasteful to buy those family packs of anything. That will
help you with overall portion reduction, a must for any serious dieter.
Your shopping goal is only to purchase items that you can consume
within a week. If you see something that you particularly want but is
not on your allowed list, make a mental note to find a diet for next
week that can accommodate it.
5.
The need for a new diet each week requires that you read and research a
lot of diets. The reading acts as reinforcement for your goals and will
assure your continuing education on nutrition and fitness. When you see
something that intrigues you or just makes a lot of sense, try it out.
Perhaps one week will involve barely restricted eating but require a
lot of exercise. Go for it – it’s only a week.
6.
You are in the happy position of having wide choices available but also
the needed structure of an organized plan to follow. The regimented
eating is within each week’s diet; the power of choice is operative
when you decide what the next week’s program will be.
7.
Can you stay on a diet permanently? Yes, you can, because you’re not
restricting yourself from anything for life, just for a week at a time.
Should you stay on a diet for the rest of your life? Yes, you probably
should as long as you are getting a balance of foods from an
intelligent mixing of alternative diet plans. If you like one diet more
than another, or if one particular program works exceptionally well for
you, by all means cycle that diet into your routine on a regular basis.
Just make sure you don’t use the same plan more than once a month or
your body is going to be ready for it and Zap! you find it no longer
works so well.
8.
Can you over-diet? We have all seen (although they seem to be harder to
find these days) overly thin, cadaverous dieters with sunken cheeks and
loose skin. That can be avoided by making your selected diets very
diverse so you are never without needed nutrients for very long. For
example, many retirement homes and assisted living co-ops produce thin
seniors with pallid skin and protruding abdomens. Replace their mushy,
high starch meals with any of the myriad high protein and
vegetable-fruit diets and their color will improve, their energy
increase, and their tummies fade.
9.
Can you ever be too thin? Visit an eating disorder facility and you
will see the results of anorexia nervosa, not a pretty sight and highly
dangerous from a medical standpoint. If you have a history of
overweight, you may tell yourself that being too thin will never be in
the cards for you. However, there are not infrequent cases of the
perennial heavy who becomes anorexic through dieting too much with
resulting anxiety about gaining back even an ounce of the flesh so
painfully discarded. If you have a distorted body image, and reliable
friends are concerned about your being too thin, get professional help.
10.
It all comes down to using your brain intelligently. When you are at
your heaviest, with the most to lose, the logical choice is a rather
spartan program that will get the fat moving quickly. As you lose, more
moderate programs can be interspersed so that your skin and cheeks have
a chance to adjust and fill in as your weight stores become
redistributed. If a particular part of your body is resistant to
reduction, exercise may become a more important part of your plan than
simply a dietary approach. Once you are hovering at your ideal weight,
simple calorie counting or support group involvement may be all you
need.
The secret is to be rational about it all and use that wonderful mind
of yours to set the program for your not-so-intelligent body with its
insatiable appetite and poundage conservation cravings. Don’t try to
cheat unless you want to cheat yourself and then be honest and admit
that, for whatever reason there is, you want to avoid further weight
loss. When you want and need to lose fifty pounds, an ice cream and
chocolate diet is not rational. When you are at ideal weight or below,
a stringent fad diet makes no sense.
Will all this mixing of diets result in consistent weight loss? There
is never consistency in weight loss because there are just too many
factors involved: water retention, digestive inefficiencies, the amount
of energy expended, and individual body quirks. Over time, you will
lose steadily but there will always be some ups and downs along the way.
Once the concept of “going on a diet” has been discarded, a lifelong
eating plan can be embraced, guaranteed to leave you in control of your
weight for the rest of your long slender life.