10 Mistakes Dieters Make


Eat healthy foods and exercise.”

You’ve already heard the many variations on this advice. As a dieter, you know what you’re supposed to do to succeed. But what about the things you’re not supposed to do?

Did you know, for example, that drinking diet soda can make you fat? And so can eating low-carb protein bars and eliminating fruit! Here, for a refreshing change of pace, are the top 10 things you shouldn’t do if you want to lose weight and keep it off long term:

1. Eat too little or infrequently. Keep moods and energy up, hunger satisfied, and metabolism in high gear by eating three meals and two to three snacks a day. Don’t skip breakfast!

2. Eliminate all fruits. Extremely low-carb diets that forbid fruit are punishing and invite cheating. Stay on track with moderate portions of fiber- and nutrient-rich strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, kiwi, grapefruit, or peaches.

3. Eliminate fats. Several studies at Harvard and elsewhere prove that low-fat diets result in weight gain. To lose weight, you need to increase your consumption of good fats (monounsaturated or polyunsaturated fats).

4. Get snacks out of your kitchen. Snacking helps with weight loss. Make sure you replace commercial baked goods, candy, chips, crackers, cookies, and pretzels with healthy snacks such as hard-boiled eggs, cheese, celery, nuts, sugar-free gum, homemade “slow-carb” bars and muffins, protein shakes, cucumbers, yogurt, and sugar-free JELL-O.

5. Splurge away from home. Your healthy eating program is a way of life. Try to stick to your new behaviors and habits everywhere you eat–at restaurants, friends’ homes, and while traveling.

6. Consume lots of artificially sweetened foods and beverages. Artificial sweeteners trigger cravings for additional sweets in some people. Others gain “false fat” or bloating caused by the body’s inability to digest sugar substitutes.

7. Count calories. Hormone (insulin) levels, not calories, are what determine your metabolism — the rate at which you burn fat. Eat balanced meals to keep your insulin levels steady and your metabolism working efficiently.

8. Eat lots of commercial low-carb products. Many companies have jumped on the “low-carb” bandwagon with high-calorie, low-nutrition snack foods that will not help you change your eating habits or lose weight.

9. Adopt a rigorous exercise routine. Exercise is important, but daily activity that you enjoy and can sustain over a lifetime is more important than killer workouts that are hard to stick with. The name of the weight-loss game is adopting habits that become second nature.

10. Load up on protein, eliminate carbs. Protein-loading has serious health risks, and few people can stay on radical high protein, low-carb diets long term. Switch to a balanced diet that features healthy amounts of protein balanced with lots of high-quality “slow carbs” — carbohydrates that convert slowly into blood sugar.

The husband and wife physician-chef team of Harv and Patricia Haakonson recently released Slow Carb for Life: The Ultimate Practical Guide to Low-Carb Living (ECW Press) and All New Easy Low-Carb Cooking: Over 300 Delicious Recipes Including Breads, Muffins, Cookies, and Desserts (ECW Press). Find out more about them at www.slowcarbforlife.com. 





  • Grandma2009

    Reading about giving up smoking and losing weight. Gave up smoking years ago-glad I did, believe me-the weight thing will be ongoing all my life, I was a FAT teen. I find that if I eat the food God made, and do not eat the artificial things in packages and leave out the diet sodas, my weight seems to stabilize and I do not get very hungry. And YES, I do snack all the time.

  • Anonymous

    Your comment about it being OK to eat sugar free jello in point #4 is contradictory to your comment in #6 where you oppose eating foods with artificial sweetners. If you read the ingredients on sugar-free jello, you will see that it contains artificial sweetner.
    BM

  • Anonymous

    Many low sugar/low carb products contain the dangerous sweetener acesulfame potassium. Many times it is combined with Splenda because it is cheaper. Make sure you check the labels. Also contact food manufacturers and tell them you want them to stop using this carcinogenic sweetener.

  • Anonymous

    I was reading all the comments and it is crazy that there is really no set program that works fot everyone. The teen that thinks that's healthy should rethink the dieting, starts you on a path that is not healthy physically or mentally, balanced diet, moderation on junk food and good amount of exercise. Don't be so extreme. You are still growing! I am 42 tried everything and still not where I want to be, I have decided the most important thing is to just be healthy, and I am struggling on exactly what is best to do to be as healthy as I can be. I just quit smoking a month ago, feeling much better that way, so far have done OK with the weight, had gained 7.5 now back down 5.5 but i am having a hard time getting motivated to get off my butt and quit being lazy. I wonder what happened to the active me, somewhere it went out the door. I need it back to keep up with my very active 4 year old.

  • beth

    Some of these “diet mistakes” are your opinion, not necessarily verified by science. Quite frankly, telling someone who is obese not to monitor calories is setting them up not to reach a healthy weight. It's work to monitor calories, but necessary for consistent weight loss success.

  • Natalie

    I agree with the comment that counting calories is a diet mistake….as a registered dietitian I can verify that it is extremely important to monitor calorie intake to a degree and make wise low-calorie nutrient dense choices in order to be successful.

  • Sherry

    Speaking of science, there is a lot of scientific evidence in the book, “The China Study”, “Eat More, Weigh Less” that teach people more about healthy eating than counting calories! The problem with counting calories, dieters began to skip breakfast and think they are ahead of the calorie game, now skip lunch too, now they go to that birthday party and skip dinner to have the cake! I have seen many a dieter try to play this game, rather than just learn how to fuel your body for energy and prevention of disease!

  • Beatrnick

    I've only been on the “Diet for Life” one week and I like the idea of frequent meals. When I get hungry, I eat!

  • Epitomedegoddesssss

    I have to say this article was pretty informative. Although I did start off with “calorie counting” by keeping a food journal to help me realize when I ate, how much and what. However, at the same time I was finding substitutes for high calorie items. As an example if I want a chocolate bar, instead I eat a packet of cocoa powder. I know it sounds crazy and people look at me crazy when I do it, but the cocoa has antioxidants and way less calories than a chocolate bar while satisfying my chocolate need. Also, I look to my fitness magazines (Fitness RX and Oxygen) for reciepes without having to count calories. Overall I have lost 15 pounds since February and I snack in between meals as well as eat full meals. Its all in finding your balance with food and I got the best advice from a nutritionist. Good Luck to everyone out there with achieving YOUR ideal body :) Stay positive and motivated and overtime you will get it, the real work is keeping it.

  • Eileen Snyder

    I recently spent 5 weeks in Paris with a broken ankle, my family in France have no weight issues unlike the folks in the USA. I kept a journal of what I ate and took notice of what the French family did at mealtime, here are my observations,
    1. No second helpings, we ate dinner normally between 9:30 and 10pm, dinners were hearty, but one serving is the norm.
    2. French fries are baked in the oven, and eaten frequently, even with breakfast
    3. Cake is for weekends and special occasions, my relatives have three children and after dinner they eat yogurt
    4. Cereal bowls, are very small, which limits the amount of sugary cereal that they eat, this is one thing that they indulge in but the serving bowl is about 4-6 ounces
    5. The French eat nothing fake, they eat real butter, real milk, real yogurt, real salad dressing, while I was there I lost 25 pounds eatting real food.

  • pequitos

    Your are wright! French eat a little of everything and no second serves. I had a broken ankle too seven months ago! I went to Paris for two weeks and lost 10 pounds! I ate everything but in small portions because I was afraid to gain weight because my lack of excercise due to my ankle. I realize then that what makes you loose weight is not the excercise but to eat small portions.

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Disclaimer: The information provided is intended for your knowledge only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. Please talk with your healthcare provider regarding any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition.