Bone broth and other reset diets? Worth it?

CeeBeeSlim
CeeBeeSlim Posts: 1,359 Member
edited November 27 in Health and Weight Loss
Hi. After a long stressful 6 months, I’d like to reset - eating better, feeling lighter, etc. Strangely, I’m the same weight I was 6 months ago — i just knew I had gained a lot of weight - but my clothes feel about the same or only just a tad tighter? I’m contributing this to the two progressive strength training programs
I was on (strong curves and thinner leaner stronger) during these 6 months and some walking. My goal was to lose about 15 pounds, I clearly did not and feel sluggish and bloated. A group of friends started this 21 day bone broth diet that seems tempting, but I’m not sure if it’s worth it. It’s the summer, my birthday is coming up, other celebrations etc. but I’m willing to sacrifice that to get back on track quickly. Have any of you tried this or any other short-term strategy just for a reset they could recommend? I guess i could eat less processed food, drink lots of water, load up on veggies, fruits, etc on my own but thought a structured something could be more successful? Thoughts? Thanks!

Replies

  • Calliope610
    Calliope610 Posts: 3,783 Member
    huhhhh?
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Nah...
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    If you want to lose weight you just need to reduce your calorie intake. If you only have 15 lbs to lose you could do a 250 calorie deficit to lose .5 lb a week. A food scale and logging everything you consume accurately might help you much more than any dietary changes.
    You do not need to do any resets, jumpstarts, cleanses, take supplements, drink special drinks, eat clean or do a particular workout plan to lose weight.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    aokoye wrote: »
    I mean if a 21 day bone broth diet means 21 days of pho I'd be ok with that. Either way it's not going to do anything special for you.

    On the rare occasions that I am sick I do a Spicy Asian Soup Diet that includes Pho. :smile:
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    CeeBeeSlim wrote: »
    Hi. After a long stressful 6 months, I’d like to reset - eating better, feeling lighter, etc. Strangely, I’m the same weight I was 6 months ago — i just knew I had gained a lot of weight - but my clothes feel about the same or only just a tad tighter? I’m contributing this to the two progressive strength training programs
    I was on (strong curves and thinner leaner stronger) during these 6 months and some walking. My goal was to lose about 15 pounds, I clearly did not and feel sluggish and bloated.

    A group of friends started this 21 day bone broth diet that seems tempting, but I’m not sure if it’s worth it. It’s the summer, my birthday is coming up, other celebrations etc. but I’m willing to sacrifice that to get back on track quickly.

    Have any of you tried this or any other short-term strategy just for a reset they could recommend?

    I guess i could eat less processed food, drink lots of water, load up on veggies, fruits, etc on my own but thought a structured something could be more successful? Thoughts? Thanks!

    Do you have a link to that "21 day bone broth diet" so we can more effectively critique it?
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    I make bone broth for my Dalmatian to encourage him to drink more as the more he drinks the less chance he has of forming stones as they are a high uric acid breed.
    I also make it for stock to make gravy and as much as I love gravy dont hink Id like to live on it

    Ya, nothing sold in a store comes close to the yumminess of home made bone stock, which I use for cooking and not for drinking or dieting.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    CeeBeeSlim wrote: »
    Hi. After a long stressful 6 months, I’d like to reset - eating better, feeling lighter, etc. Strangely, I’m the same weight I was 6 months ago — i just knew I had gained a lot of weight - but my clothes feel about the same or only just a tad tighter? I’m contributing this to the two progressive strength training programs
    I was on (strong curves and thinner leaner stronger) during these 6 months and some walking. My goal was to lose about 15 pounds, I clearly did not and feel sluggish and bloated. A group of friends started this 21 day bone broth diet that seems tempting, but I’m not sure if it’s worth it. It’s the summer, my birthday is coming up, other celebrations etc. but I’m willing to sacrifice that to get back on track quickly. Have any of you tried this or any other short-term strategy just for a reset they could recommend? I guess i could eat less processed food, drink lots of water, load up on veggies, fruits, etc on my own but thought a structured something could be more successful? Thoughts? Thanks!

    I am willing to bet it won't be as tempting when your friends are about halfway through the 21 days assuming any of them make it that far.

  • Lillymoo01
    Lillymoo01 Posts: 2,865 Member
    If bone broth is something you enjoy and it is only a part of a well balanced diet drink away. I personally couldn't think of anything worse. Reminds me too much of getting prepped for a colonoscopy.
  • Candyspun
    Candyspun Posts: 370 Member
    I enjoy bone broth as a food and that's it. 'Reset' sounds like the new buzzword for 'detox'. I don't do or believe in dietary detox.
  • VUA21
    VUA21 Posts: 2,072 Member
    Nope. We're not robot, we don't have a reset feature.
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    investit wrote: »
    If your speaking of the 21 day Bone Broth Diet then it's a great one for a cleansing healthy kick start.
    Really it just combines two mini fasting days (you drink water and 5 to 6 cups of a good bone broth) with a healthy (paleo type) diet all the other days.
    It is just combing intermittent fasting (500 calories) with Paleo
    The benefits are nicer looking skin, joints that don't hurt as much, and weight loss if you need it.

    By weight loss - you mean temporary water weight loss because you are cutting to very low calories - all of which will likely come back on when you start eating normally again?

  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    I can guarantee that bone broth does nothing for joint pain. Oh how I wish it did.
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,312 Member
    I love bone broth. With onions and some sliced meat and sprouts and noodles and hoisin and sriracha sauce! Not sure how healthy the fried egg rolls and fish sauce that seems to be attached to the broth tub really are. Also the whole thing tends to log in at a bit over 1500 Cal at local sizes and the next day weigh in is about 3lbs up due to sodium.. so I only save the bone broth diet for special occasions!

    sounds to me that dieting seems to be a bonding experience for your group as opposed to a need or personal exigency.

    Such social bonding experiences are seldom conducive to long-term results...
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    There are all kinds of body reset diets. Reset is the latest catchphrase, buzzy word for weight loss. You go off the rails and quickly need a 10 or 15 day reset. It's pairs nicely with the all or nothing dieting mentality. If you could really jumpstart your metabolism, fix your hormones, cure a 'leaky gut', obliterate autoimmune diseases, rid yourself of disordered eating with a reset...why O who would you need to depart from the reset cure in the first place. Why would you bounce in and out of a miraculous cure.

    There are monomeal diets. Bone broth is nice but a steady diet of it would get old. Elimination diets have been around for a very long time. They were used to test for allergies, along with an actual blood test. Self-diagnosing allergies and food sensitivities with a food reset can lead to false positives by the power of suggestion. Quackery.

    I'm through with diets and food hacks. Most of it is nitwittery with slick marketing. Every new miracle cure promises to heal a negative relationship with food. Old dieting terms are replaced with new buzzwords but they all lead to the same destination. Mostly they lead to eating it all back and rebound weight gain with friends. Then you must quickly reset yourself to compensate for all of your food sins. Forgive me, diet, for I have sinned. I'm not going out like that.
This discussion has been closed.