If a stage magician promised to help you lose weight while you sleep, or lose weight while eating anything you want, would you believe him? Surely not. However, every time a new fad diet comes out promising 10 pounds lost in seven days or a magical fat burning food, we fall for it, hook, line and sinker.
There抯 a reason why fad diets are just that ?fads. While they may start off great, promoting rapid weight loss and melting the fat off, they are completely ineffective in the long run. In fact, many who jump on the fad diet bandwagon end up not only gaining back the weight they lost, but a few extra pounds in the bargain.
Unfortunately, the United States is a prime market for the diet industry. With skyrocketing obesity levels and widespread weight-related illness, many people are desperate to shed the pounds. Folks are grasping at straws, so when a miracle cure comes along, they抮e ready to try it ?even with little to no scientific data to back up its claims.
So what抯 the deal with fad diets? Let抯 take a look at some of the common (yet untrue) claims of fad diets, as well as some of the worst diets out there.
Don抰 Believe the HypeYou抳e likely seen the claims. Perhaps you抳e even been suckered in by them. Unfortunately, they抮e generally either misleading or completely untrue. Here are a few popular ones:
Steer clear of any diets that promise weight loss of more than two to three pounds per week. Rapid weight loss is (more often than not) simply water weight. You抮e not losing fat, which is what really matters, and that抯 why this claim is a big red flag.
While it would be dandy if eating a certain food would magically melt the fat away, the body simply doesn抰 work that way. While certain foods do aid the metabolism, there is no magic food ?soup or otherwise ?that will help you lose weight on its own merit.
Really? Again, any diet that requires eating or drinking one magic food is a bad idea. For starters, how long can your body possibly maintain itself on a diet like that? And what happens when you switch back to a normal diet?
If that were the case, we抎 all look like Olympic athletes. This is simply a case of too good to be true, and if something is too good to be true, it抯 generally not true. Weight loss very often requires cutting out certain unhealthy elements of the diet, so a diet that promises that you can keep eating cookies, chips and cake every day should send you running the other way.
Oh, if only this were true. But it抯 not. Sure, good sleep habits contribute to weight loss, but the simple fact is, weight loss requires exercise.
There are hundreds of fad diets out there, ranging from the reasonable to the ridiculous. Some are simply silly, others are downright dangerous. There are a few, however, that have hung on despite being ineffective. Like bad pennies, these diets keep cropping up every few years ?often due to one celebrity or another jumping on the bandwagon.
Adherents of this diet follow a strict plan involving a lunch
and dinner of lean meat and vegetables, supplemented with grapefruit.
Grapefruit is great, and it does contain enzymes that aid weight loss;
however, a diet based on 800 calories per day based largely around
grapefruit is neither healthy nor effective. In fact, such a large
quantity of grapefruit has been known to react badly with certain
medications.
Mirelle Guiliano, author of the best-seller French
Women Don抰 Get Fat, set off a trend of cleansing the system
by eating only cooked leeks and leek broth for a full weekend. Since
leeks are a mild diuretic, adherents of the leek diet do lose excess
water weight. Unfortunately, they don抰 lose much else, so the Leek Diet
is essentially a weekend of deprivation for no reason.?
Here抯 one that is as silly as its name, yet it has claimed such celebrity fans as Guy Ritchie and Snooki. The diet was developed by Dr. Sanford Siegel, which suckered loads of people into thinking it was a valid rapid weight loss solution. While the cookies do contain hunger-suppressing ingredients like bran, oats, and whole wheat flour, they really don抰 provide sufficient daily nutrition. Even the one daily meal that is allowed consists of no more than six ounces of seafood, chicken or turkey and one cup of vegetables. Because the diet is so nutrient-poor, dieters often end up low on energy.
This concept, which was made popular by designer Hedi Slimane,
has garnered quite a celebrity following, including Jennifer Aniston and
Reese Witherspoon. The idea is that one or two baby-sized portions of
puree per day, helps to slim down the waist line. Sure, little pots of
nutrient-dense food provide more nutrition than some other diets;
however, the portions are meant to sustain babies and are insufficient
for fully grown adults.
Jaime Pressly and Sarah Michelle Gellar may swear by this diet,
but its side effects of this bleak diet range from sugar cravings to
mood swings and low energy levels. And no wonder! Adherents are allowed
only veggies, fruit, skim milk, low fat yogurt, tea, and coffee for
seven days straight ?along with cabbage soup, of course. Bananas can be
added on the fourth day, as well as brown rice and lean meat on the
sixth; however, this extremely low-calorie diet is all but ineffective
in the long-run.
Also known as the Master Cleanse, this diet has celebrities coming back again and again. The lemonade diet is a purely liquid diet, based on a mixture of water, lemon juice, cayenne pepper, and maple syrup. Sure, you might drop the pounds quickly, but the lack of nutrients means seriously neglecting your health. As Beyonce ?one time adherent of the Master Cleanse ?noted, it might just make you evil as well, as folks on this diet often end up extremely irritable.
You may be trying to trim down for bikini season, but stay away from fad diets. Doctors suggest that instead of following a fad, stick to losing weight the old fashioned way: healthy eating, plenty of water, and increased physical activity.
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