Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Miracle Diet Number XXVXIIII

A new diet plan idea that involves stocking your pantry with Ding Dongs and Tollhouse cookie dough. Or whatever. Hypothetically.

"Hawks calls his plan 'intuitive eating' and thinks the rest of the country would be better off if people stopped counting calories, started paying attention to hunger pangs and ate whatever they wanted. As part of intuitive eating, Hawks surrounds himself with unhealthy foods he especially craves. He says having an overabundance of what's taboo helps him lose his desire to gorge."

The trick is stopping eating when you're full, something that the Weight Watchers Core Plan also attempts to teach you. I call it dieting without the training wheels.

Thanks to Shannon for the heads up, and for pointing out that this new miracle diet has a sample size of two.

14 Comments:

Blogger Jennette Fulda said...

I've seen this diet mentioned a couple places now and the biggest problem I have with it is that it completely ignores health issues. Hypothetically, I could eat a stick of butter a day on this diet and lose weight. But should I really act surprised when I have a heart attack a couple years later when my arteries are clogged full of margerine or my hair has fallen out due to malnutrition?

1:19 PM  
Blogger Christi Nielsen said...

I saw this on the news the other night and just laughed out loud. Just eat until your 80% full or something like that. And he thinks he is enlightening us all with this never-before-heard-of way of thinking.

1:31 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Actually, this "diet" is NOT a diet. It is 'intuitive eating' - eating what your body is craving and stopping when you have had enough. We are all born innately knowing how to do this (just like we "know" how to go the bathroom) but our eating disordered society wreaks havoc with our internal hunger/satiety cues. See Suzie Orbach, Geneen Roth or Munter&Hirschmann for more info

2:08 PM  
Blogger Shannon said...

It turns out that on closer reading, the article does mention a small study of BYU students that showed "those who were intuitive eaters typically weighed less and had a lower risk of cardiovascular disease than other students." (That is what I get for sending you links at 6 a.m. or whatever.) Still, it's not a very long study, and I'm not sure that college students are much at risk for cardivascular disease anyway. (Dr. Wade can probably speak more to that, though. I am not a scientst.)

Still, his approach does seem to blithely skip over the step where you can start eating intuitively and stop eating when you're full. He's covered the easy, "duh" part but skipped over the most difficult thing, for some people.

6:21 PM  
Blogger Shannon said...

It turns out that on closer reading, the article does mention a small study of BYU students that showed "those who were intuitive eaters typically weighed less and had a lower risk of cardiovascular disease than other students." (That is what I get for sending you links at 6 a.m. or whatever.) Still, it's not a very long study, and I'm not sure that college students are much at risk for cardivascular disease anyway. (Dr. Wade can probably speak more to that, though. I am not a scientst.)

Still, his approach does seem to blithely skip over the step where you can start eating intuitively and stop eating when you're full. He's covered the easy, "duh" part but skipped over the most difficult thing, for some people.

6:22 PM  
Blogger mo pie said...

I think the Weight Watchers Core plan really does a good job of incorporating this. Because the idea is to eat until you're full and all, but not unrestricted, only the "core" foods. So you can kind of test out this method on foods that aren't going to put three hundred pounds on you.

That said, to Anonymous: if we all knew how to "innately" listen to our bodies and stop eating when we were full and all of that, none of us would have weight problems! That's why Weight Watchers tries to teach that, I think.

6:37 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Margaret Cho wrote about this a couple of years ago, about how she could have one piece of cake instead of the whole cake because she didn't have to sneak it or hide it or eat it before anyone took it away from her. She was not going to let it rule her life, and she found that she lost weight by truly not even trying.

11:33 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Here t'is -- She calls it the Fuck It Diet.

http://www.margaretcho.com/blog/fuckitdiet.htm

11:35 PM  
Blogger Regina Rodriguez-Martin said...

Jen, you ask who has time to only eat when they're hungry? I think that's a startling comment on how messed up we are as a culture. It shouldn't (and really doesn't) take extra time to follow your body's natural hunger cues. I often grab a snack or a meal that travels well (I either prepare the food myself or buy it) so I can eat exactly when I'm hungry. What's so difficult about that?

7:37 AM  
Blogger Amy K. said...

I can do this now, because I have a desk job w/ snacks at my desk and ready access to a fridge. But if I'm in meetings all day? Or back when I was a bank teller? Or worked in retail? Oh heck no, it's definitely "Eat now while you have the chance!"

Also, if I'm stressed/under a deadline and have food at my desk (e.g. this week) it's gone in 30 seconds and immediately forgotten.

Good in theory, hard to practice.

I liked Helen Cho's post, good stuff.

9:52 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Geneen Roth (geneenroth.com, Feeding the Hungry Heart) espoused this ages ago. She also addresses the reasons why we eat more than we need to (i.e., not only "allowing" the forbidden foods, but also examining the underlying reasons behind emotional eating).

10:05 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yeah...like everyone is saying, this is *not* a new idea, and while I think it's actually a very good intermediary step in learning to deal with your food issues, I really don't think anyone can expect to lose weight doing it, and will probably gain. My major problem food (like Margaret Cho's) was cake - so I kept myself supplied with unlimited cake for a month in order to "break the taboo." I ate a LOT of cake, and I never got tired of it. At the end of the month, I was still going strong, eating a cake every couple of days. It was so festive! I think I gained about 30 lbs that month.

I've since lost 120, but that didn't happen until I was finally able to let go of needing to have absolute 'freedom' to eat whatever I wanted. I was violently resistant to the idea of restricting my food, and it was totally an emotional thing - -- had nothing to do with what my body intuitively craved, etc. etc. bla de bla. I was obsessed with maintaining my freedom to eat too much, and often ate rich stuff I wasn't craving at all just because, damn it, I was free to do so.

I lost the weight through calorie counting, and the one thing I took away from the whole "intuitive eating" experiment was the conviction that within my caloric limit, I could in fact eat whatever I wanted; and if that meant 2000 calories worth of cake and gravy, so be it. That was what made it possible for me to lose the weight, so I guess I have the intuitive eating experiment to thank for that. It did help. But I spent three years at over 300 lbs working through issues after that month of cake eating - - - - so it's not a quick fix, that's for sure.

Thanks for your fab blog!

11:29 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This approach can work, but it is not new. It is just common sense. It is diets and weight obsession that are the real problems. Of course, with this approach, skinny should not be the goal, finding one's natural weight should be! We were meant to be different shapes and sizes. I did lose some weight when I made the decision to accept myself and listen to my body. I hate to admit that because I would never voluntarily dimininsh myself, and I certainly never want to be a person who rants on and on about weight loss. But at least it is a step in the right direction against dieting! - Fat and VERY happy!

1:27 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I love the Core plan... I'm able to easily tell when I'm satisfied and I have trained myself to stop there. Unless I splurge and use one of my wpa on something full of sugar (like what this professor is packing in his pantry). Sugar is a trigger to keep eating and eating and eating. I understand the concept of his "diet" but it seriously wouldn't work for those of us with sugar triggers. But, only if it did! "I lost 50 pounds eating raw cookie dough and doritos."

Now THAT'S a diet I could succeed on.

10:24 PM  

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