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Anti-Diet
Anti-Diet: Reclaim Your Time, Money, Well-Being, and Happiness Through Intuitive Eating | Christy Harrison
5 posts | 6 read | 4 to read
Reclaim your time, money, health, and happiness from our toxic diet culture with groundbreaking strategies from a registered dietitian, journalist, and host of the "Food Psych" podcast. 68 percent of Americans have dieted at some point in their lives. But upwards of 90% of people who intentionally lose weight gain it back within five years. And as many as 66% of people who embark on weight-loss efforts end up gaining more weight than they lost. If dieting is so clearly ineffective, why are we so obsessed with it? The culprit is diet culture, a system of beliefs that equates thinness to health and moral virtue, promotes weight loss as a means of attaining higher status, and demonizes certain ways of eating while elevating others. It's sexist, racist, and classist, yet this way of thinking about food and bodies is so embedded in the fabric of our society that it can be hard to recognize. It masquerades as health, wellness, and fitness, and for some, it is all-consuming. In Anti-Diet, Christy Harrison takes on diet culture and the multi-billion-dollar industries that profit from it, exposing all the ways it robs people of their time, money, health, and happiness. It will turn what you think you know about health and wellness upside down, as Harrison explores the history of diet culture, how it's infiltrated the health and wellness world, how to recognize it in all its sneaky forms, and how letting go of efforts to lose weight or eat "perfectly" actually helps to improve people's health -- no matter their size. Drawing on scientific research, personal experience, and stories from patients and colleagues, Anti-Diet provides a radical alternative to diet culture, and helps readers reclaim their bodies, minds, and lives so they can focus on the things that truly matter.
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dariazeoli
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From the chapter “How Diet Culture Steals Your Well-Being.” This is my nightmare fear.

slategreyskies This is my nightmare too. I‘ve never admitted it to anyone before. 7mo
Tamra Oh god, that‘s horrible! 7mo
Sace I saw this yesterday and “liked” it but I couldn‘t stop thinking about it. It‘s really terrifying. The go to diagnosis should never be “it‘s your weight”. 7mo
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Clare-Dragonfly
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Very thought-provoking! I sort of knew that dieting didn‘t “work” but the way it is presented here is very comprehensive. There were a few things that didn‘t convince me, but I‘ll definitely be looking more into intuitive eating, and I‘ll probably check out her podcast.

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Clare-Dragonfly
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“…telling people they ‘should‘ be eating ‘whole, minimally processed‘ foods didn‘t differ much from telling them they ‘should‘ be eating low-fat, low-carb, or low-calorie foods. It was all part of the larger system of policing what people are under the guise of improving their health—and it was harming all of us.”

This book is definitely thought-provoking!

Amandajoy I used to listen to her podcast, it‘s great for an intuitive eating and anti-diet perspective. 3y
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BookInMyHands
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I‘ve struggled with disordered eating in one form or another since I was probably 10. In the last few years I‘ve been working to make peace with my body, especially because I don‘t want to pass on any disordered eating ideas to my kids.

I appreciated reading this science-based approach about all the reasons diets don‘t work and how the diet culture/wellness culture is harmful mentally and physically. Worth a read if you too are sick from it.

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GothDad
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Carry this book in your purse. Any time a friend, stranger, family member, or bus driver makes an unsolicited comment about body size or diet, hand them a copy. This is THE definitive anti-diet book for the general public. In broad but decisive strokes, the author dismantles every possible argument for sizeism and diet culture with rock solid, scientifically backed arguments. After all this, she leaves us on a positive note: body liberation.