WalnutWoodLooksGood
WalnutWoodLooksGood t1_isrpplv wrote
Reply to comment by ginga_bread42 in Dieters are often the people encouraging their partners to overeat in a relationship, according to new research by MadScienceD
>Yeah but changing the way you think about and relate to food is actual work and hard.
That's mostly because people, especially older (30s+, can't say I feel old yet but still) lack the basic ability to google. Their sources of information aren't reliable or well explained but they might perceive them as such. Following a diet shouldn't be hard and one planned by an actual nutritionist with the client and with a realistic goal in mind isn't going to make you miserable either.
WalnutWoodLooksGood t1_isri70w wrote
Reply to comment by ginga_bread42 in Dieters are often the people encouraging their partners to overeat in a relationship, according to new research by MadScienceD
Yes, that's ludicrous. If one is overweight they should obviously work towards losing the weight but following a trendy diet is almost never the way to go. Diets are meant to be sustainable and your body does not care whether it's in keto or not if it's still getting calories in a surplus
WalnutWoodLooksGood t1_ison6zt wrote
Reply to Dieters are often the people encouraging their partners to overeat in a relationship, according to new research by MadScienceD
"Dieters"..? Every human being should follow a proper diet, the lack of basic understanding of how nutrition works is astonishing, even worse are the trends that get built around it and enforce very unhealthy obsessions.
WalnutWoodLooksGood t1_iss26k9 wrote
Reply to comment by ginga_bread42 in Dieters are often the people encouraging their partners to overeat in a relationship, according to new research by MadScienceD
I'm not talking about addiction, I'm talking about nutrition. If you have mental issues it's obviously not going to be fixed by a google search, if you're obese and want to lose weight on the other hand, that will.