Here's Why You Should Stop Trying To Lose Weight
Actively trying to control weight may be an effective tactic for some people, but for others, it can be downright destructive.
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As someone who has suffered from and eventually escaped the diet roller coaster, and who has professionally been on a mission to help others get off it, too, I follow anti-diet voices on social media, many of whom are nutrition experts. I am usually all nods when scrolling through their posts, but a recent trend of messages unsettled me. At first glance, they seemed to go beyond anti-diet and verge on anti-healthy. One post proclaimed that any attempt to lose weight is a diet. Think about that for a second. If we treat "diet" as a four-letter word, then the message is that trying to lose weight at all -- even in a healthy way -- is something to be condemned.
It got me wondering whether the anti-diet movement has gone too far. Should people really be discouraged from pursuing weight loss, even on a sound lifestyle plan, when it could lead to better health -- less knee pain, getting off blood sugar medications, reducing the risk of a heart attack and so on? To dig deeper, I spoke with several thought leaders on the issue and came to the conclusion that the post was onto something: Although weight matters when it comes to health, the true path to wellness may be to not try to lose weight at all.
"Overweight and obesity are serious threats to health," says Walter Willett, professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. "If we really care about someone, we want them to be as close to a healthy weight as possible; there is absolutely no question." But the number on the scale is only one indicator of wellness. "No matter what your weight is, you can improve your health by being physically active, eating a healthy diet and not smoking," Willett says.
Actively trying to control weight may be an effective tactic for some people, but for others, it can be downright destructive. A 2005 study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition noted that about 20 percent of overweight people are successful at long-term weight loss. But what about all of the people who try but fail to lose weight at all or put it right back on? Many in that group (and possibly some "successful" weight losers, too) wind up perpetually struggling, constantly anxious about food and dissatisfied with their bodies. Some develop eating disorders. Many heal and become the anti-diet voices on my Instagram feed. Tied into the personal struggle is the pressure from our profoundly weight-biased society, where size discrimination is the norm.
It's no wonder so many people are pushing back and essentially flipping the bird at our diet- and weight-obsessed culture. But although that stance may be necessary, a downside is that for some it has meant the rejection of any conversation about health, weight-related or not.
"It's almost like there is a wall where you can't talk about healthy eating at all in fat-positivity communities," says Jessamyn Stanley, author of "Every Body Yoga." "It's like you are creating an unsafe environment by talking about healthy eating." She sees a solution to breaking down those walls in acceptance and self-care. "When you love yourself you want to fuel yourself well; you want to take that care for you."
Rebecca Scritchfield, a dietitian who wrote "Body Kindness," agrees: "If we broaden the view of health beyond weight or appearance, we will all be free to pursue health in our own individual way."
With that in mind, abandoning weight loss as a goal -- taking it off the table completely -- and refocusing on personally meaningful, healthy behaviors seems like our best shot at true wellness. Sandra Aamodt, neuroscientist and author of "Why Diets Make Us Fat," says that many health problems we associate with obesity are actually a consequence of not getting enough exercise.
"It's crazy that as a society we have chosen to focus on weight loss rather than improving fitness and nutrition, which are easier and more important," she says. She suggests making concrete, positive fitness goals: "Sit down and make a list of the things you'd like to be able to do that you can't do now -- whether it is to walk a few blocks without running out of breath, give a kid a piggyback ride or run a 5K. Have something you are pulling toward."
Stanley suggests doing some research online, or asking friends, to find a fitness community that welcomes people of all sizes so you know you are walking into a positive, nonjudgmental environment. "The fitness industry has profited for a long time on people believing they are not satisfactory," she says. "You are already awesome when you walk into the space. The reason to go should be to have fun."
It was yoga that got Stanley to pay attention to how food affects her body. She was more comfortable doing inversions and felt more energized after yoga when she ate well. It is that kind of internal, personal motivation that can really stick, as opposed to being motivated -- or tortured -- by the number on the scale.
"People make all these behavioral changes, then quit because they didn't lose weight," Aamodt says. "When you define health in terms of weight, that is the risk you take."
Instead, Scritchfield suggests, make changes that matter to you for reasons that go beyond weight, such as better digestion, more energy, better sleeping patterns or having a better attitude toward food.
"The key factor is to make choices that fit you best, that make you feel good, and trust that you will be at a weight that is healthy for you," she says. You don't need a scale for that.
- Krieger is a registered dietitian, nutritionist and author who hosts public television's "Ellie's Real Good Food." She blogs and offers a weekly newsletter atelliekrieger.com. She also writes weekly Nourish recipes in The Washington Post's Food section.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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