Diets Are Not The Permanent Answer To Long Term Weight Loss
Friday, October 10th, 2008
Diets fail to succeed for many reasons, lack of effort, motivation and lack of exercise. Radio, television and even the internet are inundated with reasons for our failure. We see commercials for the quick and easy meal that the family will love. Chicken on the go grab a bucket today to make your family happy for dinner. There are so many reasons for diet failure. In the spirit of losing weight, we give up everything that we feel is "bad". We switch everything to low fat, no fat, no sugar, fake sugar, diet everything but we fail to integrate exercise. WE fail to ditch the fast food. WE FAIL TO CHANGE OUR LIFESTYLE. The food industry doesn't like this solution. The food executives spend millions of dollars to pump their addictive, misleading foods into your home.
We are addicted to sugars, to the fat, to sodium. When we purchase the quick fix foods for ourselves or our family, it serves the purpose of feeding the kids after work and alleviating the distress that we feel after long day of work, PTA, soccer and the daily activities that take place. They market the product in an appealing manner "Low Fat", "Low Carbs", "Fat Free", packaged in attractive eye and stomach appealing manner … YOU WANT TO BUY IT. But what are we really purchasing? The ad execs and food and diet industry are counting on individuals to not read that label, because while the easy fix dinner in a bag may be low in fat it might be high in sugar, and vice versa. We see the packaging and it says diet and automatically think that it's acceptable. The food industry takes for granted that most people do not take the time to actually read the label and if we did we wouldn't understand half the things that are printed on said label anyway. Many of the ingredients are long, complicated scientific names for sugar and fat, designed to trick us into continuing to eat their addictive, sugar and fat filled product. Furthermore, several items are low in calories if we stick to the portion indicated. But the portion is so miniscule that a mouse would still be hungry.

