What’s the next diet trend?
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Please please please let it be the peeps cleanse!11
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I think the next wave will be along the lines of the Tom Brady TB12 diet; super-restrictive, centered around anti-inflamitory and/or alkaline vs. acidic properties. Probably some talk about healthy gut biome thrown in for good measure.5
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What about the liquid only diet? Not meaning the irish version where you just drink pints all day. More like all your meals need to be in juice form. Bowl of cereal?... Juice it. Steak and potato for dinner?... Juice it.1
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I wonder if restriction cycling will manage to gather steam. The basic idea is that you heavily restrict for 2 weeks and then eat maintenance for 2 weeks. What it is supposed to do is continually reset your BMR back to normal to improve weight loss efficiency. It is taking 'diet breaks' and elevating them to the next level.
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I'm voting for the incredible weight-loss powers of geophagy.2
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Breatharianism... The ultimate weight loss woe
nedia (Latin for 'fasting') or breatharianism /brɛθˈɛəriənɪzəm/ is the belief that it is possible for a person to live without consuming food, and in some cases water.1 -
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Given how fed up some people are with keto, I'm thinking an ALL carb diet. Only carbs, all the time.
Personally I want an all bread diet. I could happily live off artisan bread. Heck, when we visited Japan the overwhelming majority of my meals came from bakeries.1 -
I wonder if restriction cycling will manage to gather steam. The basic idea is that you heavily restrict for 2 weeks and then eat maintenance for 2 weeks. What it is supposed to do is continually reset your BMR back to normal to improve weight loss efficiency. It is taking 'diet breaks' and elevating them to the next level.
when will normal sensible eating catch on
when it's easy for the industry to sell... don't hold your breath.0 -
Bread, bagles, baguettes, flavoured breads, stuffed breads, pretzel bread, seed bread, mmm the list goes on...2
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I'm gonna vote for that "gut microbiome diet". I haven't the slightest idea what or how it will tell people to eat, but it will have these features at minimum:
1. It will precede enough actually being known about the microbiome to allow it to be actually guided by sounds science, but follow enough research to fuel blog footnotes that no one will actually click and read. (We're at a pretty good spot for this right now.)
2. It will have some kind of arcane, tricky rules that most regular humans can't stick with long term, allowing the converts to say it would work if people didn't cheat (weak and self-indulgent failures that we clearly are).
3. Its tricky rules will, behind the scenes, result for most people - if actually followed - in a calorie deficit, providing the opportunity for a few of the converted to argue that it works magically if followed.
4. Whoever publishes the books and puts up the websites will be selling either a subscription plan ($$$) or supplements ($$$$), for which the small print says "when following the recommended diet and exercise plan").
5. There will a guru who is a "Dr." (She/he will appear on the Dr. Oz show.)
6. It will be alleged to have other positive (and near magical) effects beyond weight management, ideally something for which there is no objective measurement. For the moment, I'd bet on immune system improvements as at least part of that secondary magic.17 -
I reckon there’s probably a “low carbon” diet on its way. Not focused on personal wellbeing / weight-loss - but with a broader conscience of the carbon footprint of eating foods out of season or which fly miles from another country or which use significant energy to produce.2
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Given how fed up some people are with keto, I'm thinking an ALL carb diet. Only carbs, all the time.
Personally I want an all bread diet. I could happily live off artisan bread. Heck, when we visited Japan the overwhelming majority of my meals came from bakeries.
Some nearly all carb (and almost no fat) diets have been around as long as Keto and have also been used to treat medical ailments.1 -
^Yes please.
I remember reading as a kid about "fruitarians" (basically vegan except you only eat the fruits of plants, thereby not killing the plant itself) and I keep thinking it's only a matter of time before that manages to be the next big thing.
Some fruitarians will eat only what falls (or would fall) naturally from a plant: that is, plant foods that can be harvested without killing or harming the plant.[2][3][4] These foods consist primarily of culinary fruits, nuts, and seeds.[5] According to author Adam Gollner, some fruitarians eat only fallen fruit.[6] Some do not eat grains, believing it is unnatural to do so,[7] and some fruitarians feel that it is improper for humans to eat seeds as they contain future plants,[6] or nuts and seeds,[8] or any foods besides juicy fruits.[9]
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I hate trends. I feel like people jump on the bandwagon expecting a quick fix when life doesn’t work that way.0
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^Yes please.
I remember reading as a kid about "fruitarians" (basically vegan except you only eat the fruits of plants, thereby not killing the plant itself) and I keep thinking it's only a matter of time before that manages to be the next big thing.
Some fruitarians will eat only what falls (or would fall) naturally from a plant: that is, plant foods that can be harvested without killing or harming the plant.[2][3][4] These foods consist primarily of culinary fruits, nuts, and seeds.[5] According to author Adam Gollner, some fruitarians eat only fallen fruit.[6] Some do not eat grains, believing it is unnatural to do so,[7] and some fruitarians feel that it is improper for humans to eat seeds as they contain future plants,[6] or nuts and seeds,[8] or any foods besides juicy fruits.[9]
Talk about a restrictive diet... lol0 -
SuzySunshine99 wrote: »
Lol! Well there would be books, coaches,tools and someone. ( maybe me) who writes a simplified way where it has more instruction... been working on this. My nutritional plan( diet) is a personalized compilation of all the madness I put myself through 😊 It is a synergistic combination of Meditteranian, pescatarian, low carb, higher fat and protein vegan adaptations1 -
If the meat lovers pizza diet doesn't catch on, perhaps there's hope for the applesauce and mayonnaise on wonder bread sandwich diet. 🙇2
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D-Plan Dieting: Slim Yourself Beautiful0
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It would be nice if it were something like the DASH or Mediterranean diet but who am I kidding!2
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GrizzledSquirrel wrote: »I reckon there’s probably a “low carbon” diet on its way. Not focused on personal wellbeing / weight-loss - but with a broader conscience of the carbon footprint of eating foods out of season or which fly miles from another country or which use significant energy to produce.
I think it would be good if that caught on, for the environment's sake. I remember reading somewhere that the best WOE for the environment was essentially not all that different from DASH/Mediterranean. Buying local fruit + veg, not a lot of red meat, mostly poultry and some fish, but largely plant-based.
I also think it's going to be a gut biome fad diet next. Maybe you eat nothing but yoghurt, sauerkraut, kombucha, and kefir.3 -
staticsplit wrote: »GrizzledSquirrel wrote: »I reckon there’s probably a “low carbon” diet on its way. Not focused on personal wellbeing / weight-loss - but with a broader conscience of the carbon footprint of eating foods out of season or which fly miles from another country or which use significant energy to produce.
I think it would be good if that caught on, for the environment's sake. I remember reading somewhere that the best WOE for the environment was essentially not all that different from DASH/Mediterranean. Buying local fruit + veg, not a lot of red meat, mostly poultry and some fish, but largely plant-based.
I also think it's going to be a gut biome fad diet next. Maybe you eat nothing but yoghurt, sauerkraut, kombucha, and kefir.
Insufficient.
Those are the bugs: Probiotics.
You also need to eat stuff the bugs like to eat: Prebiotics. Generally understood to be nondigestible fibers, oligosaccharides being the main group so far. Examples are things like chicory root, Jerusalem artichokes (a.k.a sunchokes), various Alliums (onions, garlic, etc.), jicama, some grains (barley, oats), and much more. Some probiotic foods contain some prebiotics (often inulin, from what I've seen on labels, but
You can't "woo" me anymore, but just to clarify and (I hope) reduce your wish that you could: I'm not advocating for the diet.
I'm just explaining some of what would be likely to be its features, based on current scientific understanding (as I understand it) of gut microbiota. There is not, in my understanding, definitive science about which bugs are good, which bugs eat specifically what, what benefits or harms particular bugs might bring under what circumstances, etc. IOW, we're in the perfect spot to introduce pseudoscientific madness.
It's interesting research, that's about it, right now, AFAIK.1 -
staticsplit wrote: »GrizzledSquirrel wrote: »I reckon there’s probably a “low carbon” diet on its way. Not focused on personal wellbeing / weight-loss - but with a broader conscience of the carbon footprint of eating foods out of season or which fly miles from another country or which use significant energy to produce.
I think it would be good if that caught on, for the environment's sake. I remember reading somewhere that the best WOE for the environment was essentially not all that different from DASH/Mediterranean. Buying local fruit + veg, not a lot of red meat, mostly poultry and some fish, but largely plant-based.
I also think it's going to be a gut biome fad diet next. Maybe you eat nothing but yoghurt, sauerkraut, kombucha, and kefir.
Insufficient.
Those are the bugs: Probiotics.
You also need to eat stuff the bugs like to eat: Prebiotics. Generally understood to be nondigestible fibers, oligosaccharides being the main group so far. Examples are things like chicory root, Jerusalem artichokes (a.k.a sunchokes), various Alliums (onions, garlic, etc.), jicama, some grains (barley, oats), and much more. Some probiotic foods contain some prebiotics (often inulin, from what I've seen on labels, but
You can't "woo" me anymore, but just to clarify and (I hope) reduce your wish that you could: I'm not advocating for the diet.
I'm just explaining some of what would be likely to be its features, based on current scientific understanding (as I understand it) of gut microbiota. There is not, in my understanding, definitive science about which bugs are good, which bugs eat specifically what, what benefits or harms particular bugs might bring under what circumstances, etc. IOW, we're in the perfect spot to introduce pseudoscientific madness.
It's interesting research, that's about it, right now, AFAIK.
You forgot to add that we are, as we always seem to be, also in the perfect spot for people to pre-cure themselves of diseases they may never get.
What will well fed gut bugs do for an otherwise healthy individual? My guess is very little.
I eat a variety of food including pre and pro because they fit into my normal nutritional and calorie wheelhouse. I am not sure how much any of it actually moves or sustains my health markers but I am eating for just me not for billions.
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My favorite fad diet was the Lap Band Diet! 🤣
Remember that? That was all the rage 7 years ago!
Anyone watch Real Housewives of New Jersey?
‘My rich Daddy bought me a lap band.......but, then I had the lap band loosened up a bit so that I could eat!’ -Lauren Manzo0 -
Breatharianism... The ultimate weight loss woe
nedia (Latin for 'fasting') or breatharianism /brɛθˈɛəriənɪzəm/ is the belief that it is possible for a person to live without consuming food, and in some cases water.
They just replayed an old Wife Swap episode where one of the moms was a vegan and ‘ate’ the sun....during meditation.
The little boy (new son) came down for breakfast and she took him outside to ‘eat’ the sun.
His interview was hilarious. He said. My new mom is crazy. She eats the sun! 🤣
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