Catch yourself the next time you call a food "good" or "bad." Rename it by what it does — "keeps me full," "just for fun." That one swap is the whole evidence base turned into a habit.
Picking a diet is like picking a workout program off the internet. The "best" one on paper does nothing if you quit in three weeks. The slightly-less-optimal plan you'll actually run every week wins, because results come from the reps you do, not the program you admired.
Both camps are selling you something. Here's the honest version.
Catch yourself the next time you call a food "good" or "bad." Rename it by what it does — "keeps me full," "just for fun."
That one swap is the entire evidence base turned into a habit: food has a job, not a moral score.
Takes 5 seconds. No equipment, no prep.
Endpoint-stratified. The claims that diet culture's core is weak, that weight stigma is an independent harm, and that good practice equals pattern plus adherence all sit at moderate-to-high. That intuitive eating helps psychology is moderate. That it produces weight loss is low.
Most of the intuitive-eating evidence (89% of the largest meta-analysis) is a snapshot in time, not a before-and-after. Healthy people may simply eat more intuitively, rather than intuitive eating making them healthy. A large, long-running trial that follows people for years and measures the change would settle the direction.
A large, pre-registered, 3–5 year trial in a mixed-sex group comparing a weight-inclusive program, a flexible structured plan, and usual dieting — measuring weight, bloodwork, disordered-eating rates, and dropout together. Durable health equivalence plus lower disordered-eating rates at 5 years would move the call from "comparable on weight, better on psychology" toward "preferred default."
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