WHY WE EAT (too much)
asz8777
Posts: 8 Member
Hi there,
My first post here & first question: have any of you read this book (see the title)? I found it massively helpful, full of knowledge & amazing advice. Highly recommended!
My first post here & first question: have any of you read this book (see the title)? I found it massively helpful, full of knowledge & amazing advice. Highly recommended!
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Replies
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Sounds really interested, thanks for the tip!1
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Hi there,
My first post here & first question: have any of you read this book (see the title)? I found it massively helpful, full of knowledge & amazing advice. Highly recommended!
Interesting book, I would also suggest "the hungry brain" by Stephan Guyenet and "an end to overeating" by Dr. Kessler.4 -
psychod787 wrote: »Hi there,
My first post here & first question: have any of you read this book (see the title)? I found it massively helpful, full of knowledge & amazing advice. Highly recommended!
Interesting book, I would also suggest "the hungry brain" by Stephan Guyenet and "an end to overeating" by Dr. Kessler.
Thanks Will have a look, sounds interesting!1 -
I would highly recommend The Dorito Effect. It was SO good and has changed my view on some foods and what I eat. (I still eat Doritos sometimes 🤷🏻♀️). It’s also really easy to read and quite humours.
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I'm speaking only in general here. While the why, why, whys are good, we can have the answers to absolutely everything and still not be able to do anything. I had a library of dieting books with corresponding cookbooks. I threw everyone of them out. I went on a Dieting Book Cleanse
I was a card carrying member of the WW and I blew that popstand, too. I joined MFP and have gleaned more from the members than from all of those books. Connection is everything. Of course, I still care about the whys but action means more than anything else to me. What we allow is what will continue.
Pain is the precursor to change. Make lasting changes for the rest of your life.16 -
@asz8777 oh interesting! What was the called or where can I find it? I’d be interested in listening!
I've watched this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ITaIedaFhs0 -
Diatonic12 wrote: »I'm speaking only in general here. While the why, why, whys are good, we can have the answers to absolutely everything and still not be able to do anything. I had a library of dieting books with corresponding cookbooks. I threw everyone of them out. I went on a Dieting Book Cleanse
I was a card carrying member of the WW and I blew that popstand, too. I joined MFP and have gleaned more from the members than from all of those books. Connection is everything. Of course, I still care about the whys but action means more than anything else to me. What we allow is what will continue.
Pain is the precursor to change. Make lasting changes for the rest of your life.
Completely agree @Diatonic12 Fortunately book I've mentioned is not a diet book1 -
Diatonic12 wrote: »I'm speaking only in general here. While the why, why, whys are good, we can have the answers to absolutely everything and still not be able to do anything. I had a library of dieting books with corresponding cookbooks. I threw everyone of them out. I went on a Dieting Book Cleanse
I was a card carrying member of the WW and I blew that popstand, too. I joined MFP and have gleaned more from the members than from all of those books. Connection is everything. Of course, I still care about the whys but action means more than anything else to me. What we allow is what will continue.
Pain is the precursor to change. Make lasting changes for the rest of your life.
Completely agree @Diatonic12 Fortunately book I've mentioned is not a diet book
Ditto! Dorito Effect is not a diet book in the “diet as a way to lose weight” sense. 🙂 It’s really a look at the food industry, the workforce and economy, and the effects on the consumer.
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Alrighty then but I didn't just fall off the sweet potato truck. I kinda surmised at post 1 that you were here to promote this book.
"For over two decades, weight loss surgeon Dr Andrew Jenkinson has treated thousands of people who have become trapped in the endless cycle of dieting. Why We Eat (Too Much), combines case studies from his practice and the new science of metabolism to illuminate how our appetite really works."3 -
You see, I already know how the appetite control center which is located in the brain works. It's not located in the stomach and removing most of a stomach won't fix it. It's not the stomach that needs removing or fixing but the brain. Now we can't remove those parts of the brain that cause all of the havoc or we'll end UP in a much bigger mess. WLS doesn't really fix any of this.4
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Diatonic12 wrote: »Alrighty then but I didn't just fall off the sweet potato truck. I kinda surmised at post 1 that you were here to promote this book.
"For over two decades, weight loss surgeon Dr Andrew Jenkinson has treated thousands of people who have become trapped in the endless cycle of dieting. Why We Eat (Too Much), combines case studies from his practice and the new science of metabolism to illuminate how our appetite really works."
I didn’t write this post to ‘promote’ the book. I wrote it hoping I’ll have a constructive conversation with people who read it.4 -
Diatonic12 wrote: »You see, I already know how the appetite control center which is located in the brain works. It's not located in the stomach and removing most of a stomach won't fix it. It's not the stomach that needs removing or fixing but the brain. Now we can't remove those parts of the brain that cause all of the havoc or we'll end UP in a much bigger mess. WLS doesn't really fix any of this.
Your respond here is completely missing the point of the whole book & my post. It’s not about having an operation nor just about how our appetite works. It’s a much bigger picture.
I hope to chat about it with someone WHO ACTUALLY READ it & is following advice from it let’s support each other!5 -
Ditto! Dorito Effect is not a diet book in the “diet as a way to lose weight” sense. 🙂 It’s really a look at the food industry, the workforce and economy, and the effects on the consumer.
Sounds interesting and no doubt a bit of an eye opener
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There is a lengthy (longest I’ve ever seen!) description of the book on Amazon that goes into extensive detail. That alone was worth the read.1
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I've just finished reading this book - it's extremely interesting, and I am definitely going to have a little go at slightly changing what I eat (I am planning a little reverse dieting as I want to eat a bit more). The main problem I have personally is that a diet heavy in animal products is very environmentally destructive.3
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I read it and found it very interesting. Toyed with the idea of implementing some of the ideas but to be honest I'm happy with my current diet, health, weight and recomp programme, so it was not worth the bother.0
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