Saturday, August 25, 2018

Why I Stopped Dieting

Like most women, I could tell you a lifetime of diet stories.  The first one I remember is from grade five, when I was 10 years old, and I decided that I was tired of being the biggest person in my class*, the boys having not hit their pubertal growth spurts yet.  In a moment of inspiration, I created for myself an elaborate system in which I could eat whatever I wanted, but only if I exercised first.  Every food, from a carrot to a can of Coke, was assigned some cost in terms of sit ups or distance walked.

I think the system lasted for a few hours, which isn't very surprising given that it involved doing something like 50 pushups before I could eat a single apple, and I have never successfully done a pushup in my life.  But where it failed in getting me to lose weight, it succeeding in taking a kid who had always been a good eater and turning her into someone who didn't trust herself to know how to eat.  Someone who no longer thought of food in terms of things she did and didn't like, but rather in terms of things that were "good" and "bad.

And someone who, like lots of women, would spend decades of her life on and off diets.  When on a diet, I would try to be constantly virtuous, eating only small portions of healthy foods and watching the scale more closely than I currently watch my net worth.  When off, I would allow myself to eat anything I wanted, knowing that this was my opportunity to scarf down whole tubs of Hagen Daas and make regular trips to the McDonald's drive-thru.  I never quite got to the point of binging and purging, but my whole dietary pattern was essentially a slow-motion binge-purge cycle.

The most "successful" diet I ever did, if success is measured by weight lost, was Weight Watchers.  A few of my friends lost weight by counting "points" and going to weigh-in meetings, and one offered to share a copy of the material with me.  For six months, everything to cross my lips was assigned a point value and recorded diligently in a food journal.  If I didn't have enough points for everything I wanted, I could earn more by exercising; for example, a walk to and from the ice cream shop at the bottom of the hill by the university where I worked was enough to earn me a small scoop of ice cream, as long as I didn't get it in a cone.

And it worked!  The pounds melted off, and I lost about 25% of myself.  I got to buy a whole new wardrobe, and people constantly complimented me on how good I looked.  When I see pictures from that time, I miss my almost-tiny body and the huge confidence boost that came from finally being skinny.  The only drawback?

I was utterly miserable.

I was existing on about 1200-1400 calories per day, even with the extra calories I earned from exercising, and there was no way for that to ever feel like enough.  I spent every minute of my life thinking about food - about how hungry I was, about when I would eat next, about how I could save or earn enough points to eat half a chocolate bar.  And all I could talk about was food and weight.  I became the person that people avoided in the lunch room, because they knew that I was going to talk about the number of points in their lunch or encourage them to join me like a Weight Watchers missionary.

Eventually, it broke me.  The satisfaction of being skinny didn't make up for the misery of being hungry, so I stopped.  And watched as every single one of the pounds I had lost came back, bringing a few friends with them for good measure.

Weight Watchers was the last serious diet I ever did.  I still had periods when I would be frustrated with my weight, and I would try to lose it for a week or a month or two, but after the long-term failure of Weight Watchers, I had become disillusioned.  Maybe, it occurred to me, dieting didn't actually work.

When I started medical school, I once again got hit with the dieting mentality in full force.  Lectures were filled with slides about the "growing obesity crisis" and about how we should counsel our patients to "lose 1-2 pounds a week for sustainable weight loss".  Except, now I started to push back.  I asked professors how realistic it was to expect patients to lose 1-2 pounds a week, and they had to admit that almost none of their patients were able to do it.  I started to read the scientific literature, which shows that even under optimal conditions (clinical trials with nutritional and exercise support), only a small percentage of people lose weight, and almost no one keeps it off long term.

Diets.  Don't.  Work.

So I vowed to never diet again.  In the beginning, this led to a frenzy of eating.  Everything was allowed!  In a short period of time, I made up for all the ice cream and pop and chips and candy that I had deprived myself of for years.  And it was great!  Except...I felt like shit.  And I actually started craving healthy things, like salads and blueberries.

So I did what any bookish nerd would do, and I read.  I read about the impacts of lifestyle (not weight!) on health, and about Health at Every Size, and about intuitive eating.  And I learned that being anti-diet and anti-scale doesn't mean that you have to shop exclusively in the junk food aisle.  One can fight against the oppressive capitalist system of the diet industry and still be healthy.

My focus now is on eating and exercising in a way that keeps me healthy and mentally sane, regardless of what happens to my weight.  Not in a "I'm really trying to lose weight but will pretend it's just a healthy lifestyle" way, but in a legitimate "I'm trying not to give any fucks about the scale, but it's hard because I've been conditioned to view my weight as a measure of my value as a person" kind of way.  I'm using the novel system of eating when I'm hungry and stopping when I'm not.  I'm packing my fridge full of healthy foods, but I also have three tubs of ice cream in my freezer, because ice cream is good for my mental health.  I'm walking all the time, not because it earns me more points, but because I live in a beautiful city and it is much more fun than spending my evenings cursing the right-wing assholes on Twitter.

I am simply taking care of myself.

And dammit if I haven't lost weight.  I don't know how much, because I refuse to step on the scale, but my face is a little less round and my jeans no longer leave a mark on the middle of my stomach.  In a weird way, this makes me angry, because dammit I've finally let go of the need to be skinny and of the quest to not to take up so much space.  And as I lose weight, it's hard not to listen to the old voice in my head that says that it's better to be thin.  That if I just cut my portions a bit, walk a bit longer every night, I could be thinner.  I have almost thirty years of practice with dieting and only one with self care, so it's tempting to go back to my familiar routines.

Except that I'm so much happier now.  I'm happier eating like pre-diet me, simply because I like food and it makes me feel good.  I'm happier without the diet/no diet cycles and the despair when the number on the scale won't go down.  So fuck dieting.  I'm officially done.

*Like many girls who diet, I wasn't even overweight at the time; I was simply tall.  I was in the 99th percentile for height and the 90th percentile for weight, so my diet wasn't a response to being fat but rather to feeling huge next to all the short girls and knowing, even then, that huge was bad.

15 comments:

  1. As a woman, it's so hard to divorce your value from your weight. Objectively, I know I'm not overweight. But I'm bigger than your stereotypical Asian girl. So growing up, I was always bigger than my friends. And Chinese parents are very direct with their criticism. On my most recent visit, my mom said “ I gotta talk to the people you know in X city, how are they telling you yourey not fat”. And promptly sends me an article about how a woman’s body, aka weight and posture, reflects her class/education etc etc. Not subtle in the least!
    Funnily at the same time she really tries to stuff food down my throat lol.
    All this is to say my relationship with my weight is complicated. I imagine that's the case with most eomen. I am mostly at peace with it. And I love love love food, unapologetically. So be it.

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    1. Wow...I thought my Mom was bad, but at least she doesn't try to recruit other people into telling me I'm fat.

      I think it's a really positive thing that so many women who have been raised in a culture of fat shaming are starting to push back and say that we don't have to be thing and it's okay to love food. Glorious, glorious food.

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  2. Throughout my childhood, I watched my mom yo-yo diet. It didn't look fun. Nothing ever stuck. Finally, when I was in grad school, she lost some weight and managed to maintain it. We all felt happy for her until she discovered that the weight loss was due to a potent combination of diabetes and colon cancer (she's okay now, miraculously).

    I was overweight as a kid and felt terrible about myself (because kids made fun of me and that sucked), but I was so halfhearted about every diet I tried that I eventually just gave up. And over time my body kind of evened out, finding its own equilibrium. I've never been skinny and never will be, but I've always been able to do the things I want to do with my body, and that seems good enough.

    Basically, whenever anyone insinuates that I should be worrying about my weight or that women should look a certain way, I get extremely angry. I refuse to diet, refuse to own a scale, and refuse to tie myself to a certain clothing size.

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    1. I'm so glad your Mom turned out okay. And that you've managed to resist the horrible societal pressure to be thin or at least die trying to be.

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  3. You've found a good approach to improving your health. I'm starting to do something similar. Maybe getting older and wiser isn't all bad.

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    1. I'm finding that getting older and wiser is mostly good! We're also both getting richer as we get older, which is another benefit!

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  4. Yes yes yes yes. I could have written your post! I too lost a bunch of weight on WW and Atkins but it always came back and always with extra. I stopped dieting after I started following an awesome blogger called Mama Lion Strong.

    Now I belong to an amazing group called Balance365Life and they encourage everyone to just live but in a balanced way. They focus on teaching good, sustainable habits that help us reach goals that are healthy for us individually (which may or may not lead to weight loss) and help break habits that are interfering with those goals.It’s a breath of fresh air and as a future doctor this is what I’ll be recommending to patients. They have a free FB group called Healthy Habits Happy Moms (but it’s not just for moms!), a podcast (Balance365 Life Radio) and a paid program that is available at Balance365.co - and no, I don’t work for them, it’s just that it changed me life. Worth checking out if you ever get patients asking for help.

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  5. Ugh, to Jeannie's point, the Asian culture I grew up in with so grossly focused on weight. It was mean and critical and not at all good for anyone's mental health. At the same time, they still force feed everyone and insist that there be no leftovers ever and have the most unhealthy relationship with food I've ever seen.

    It's all so wrecked but I refuse to let that legacy be passed on to JB.

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    1. This is how change happens...pissed off adults who want better for their kids.

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  6. I've struggled with eating disorders for years which started with dieting in my teens. I'm at a point where I'm healthy and my weight is finally stable, although I still have eating disordered thoughts. Dieting is just disastrous for so many people.

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    1. I'm glad that you've been able to leave some of the worst of it behind. My post doesn't even get at the truly disordered eating that can result from society's obsession with dieting.

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  7. I've been thinking about this post for a while, and it's the best advice about how to eat / be healthy that I've read in ages. Thanks for putting it out there.

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    1. Thanks! It has taken me years to get here, and it's still a struggle at times.

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    ReplyDelete