Diet and fitness FADS you’ve tried before...
RunsWithBees
Posts: 1,508 Member
When attempting to lose weight and get fit I’m sure a lot of us have tried many of the fads that are out there, most of them will eventually fail us because they are simply not sustainable. What fads have you tried before and how did it turn out?
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Years ago before understanding CICO and counting calories I tried water fasting. I did it for 3 days straight (ugh!) and felt just awful afterwards. To break the fast I ate some pineapple and it gave me a very strange mouth/throat feel, like puckered but almost painful. I am not allergic to pineapple but it kinda felt like my body was rejecting it anyways?! It took awhile to feel back to normal about eating, needless to say I will never put myself through that willingly again! I also remember at some point buying “metabolism booster” herbal pills of some type or other and a “cleansing tea”... they were absolute rubbish of course!3
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My mom enrolled herself along with me and my sister in Weight Watchers once, probably circa 2002, so that was when they just had the one "points" system for everyone. I hated the public weigh-ins and group meetings, which is funny because now I participate in multiple groups on here where I do the same things. Maybe it's because I'm choosing to do that on my own terms, and also there are other people in these groups who look like me? I was the youngest person in the WW meetings by easily 25 years (the next-youngest being my mom), so I guess I felt like I couldn't relate. Anyway, we stopped going to the meetings after they gave us a points calculator widget that has since been lost to the ages.6
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I'm old enough to have tried the grapefruit diet8
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Along with Weight Watchers, did the cabbage soup diet back in the 90's and Atkins in the 2000's. When I was a teen, my mum went to a bariatric doc who gave her (pronounced "us") a 500 calorie diet that included plain ground beef patties, green beans and Melba toast.
BTW- I think I still have my well-worn paperback copy of Barbara Kraus' Calories and Carbohydrates that I carried with me everywhere as I stuck to an 800 calorie diet through college.6 -
I've also tried Couch to 5K a few times - it seemed pretty popular in the early-mid 20-teens when I was doing it, so I'm comfortable calling it a fad. And when I finished the program (the one time I got past week 4 and kept at it), I did one of those gimmicky "color run" 5k races where you get pelted with colored cornstarch the whole time. It was a fun thing to do once, and I took the most colorful and satisfying shower of my life afterward.2
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I started with Dr. Stillman, which was all protein: eggs, meat and cottage cheese, nothing else. I got so I couldn't look at eggs or chicken breasts. Then I did all fruit and vegetables. That didn't last long. I tried very low calorie diets (900 cal. IIRC). Generally I would only last 3 or 4 days. I did a little fasting. That lasted even less time. I lost a lot of weight on Atkins, as I could sustain that longer, but had to have cheat days in order to continue, and once I lost the weight I always regained it because I wasn't willing to give up sugar and bread forever.
I have the Kraus book as well.2 -
The first diet I tried I found in a workout book of my mom's. It was very restrictive on fat - I think maybe 15g of fat per day? I think that's how I picked up my Diet Coke habit, to combat the crazy fatigue and brain fog. I was probably also really low calorie to dangerous levels (calorie counting was trashed by the author.)
I've also tried variations of low carb, South Beach, and intermittent fasting. To the extent that any of these helped, I think it was honestly just keeping track instead of doing whatever.1 -
goal06082021 wrote: »I've also tried Couch to 5K a few times - it seemed pretty popular in the early-mid 20-teens when I was doing it, so I'm comfortable calling it a fad. And when I finished the program (the one time I got past week 4 and kept at it), I did one of those gimmicky "color run" 5k races where you get pelted with colored cornstarch the whole time. It was a fun thing to do once, and I took the most colorful and satisfying shower of my life afterward.
That sounds like fun!2 -
rosebarnalice wrote: »I'm old enough to have tried the grapefruit diet
That diet cycles around again every few years, I usually see it advertised on magazines1 -
Juicing! Haha. But I did discover fresh juices are very good (along with actual food!)0
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Slimfast
Keto
Atkins
Whole 30
Does Zumba count? Seems like it was at its height of popularity back when I did it.
Edited to add: wouldn't waste my time on any of the diets again, they just aren't sustainable for me. But would do Zumba again given the opportunity!1 -
My first diet was the "crash diet" suggested in this book I got from the library at age 14: The Woman Dr.'s Diet for Teenage Girls. It was recommended to do it for only 2 weeks, but after 2 weeks I felt I could keep going. Lost a lot of weight, but became obsessive and eventually my calorie target was 500. This set me up for years and years of restrict/lose some/binge cycles. I also went to WW a few times (although I think now that's a reasonable "lifestyle change"), LA Weight Loss Center, a "medically supervised" weight loss clinic (where they basically gave me some prescription pills, had me fill out a food diary and meet with them once a week), and a number of OTC pills and supplements. I also read the "Buff Brides" book before I got married. Using that, I was able to dial in my workouts and lose some weight to get into a healthy BMI range without changing my diet too much. I've also done "The Body Reset Diet," but that was always meant to be a brief jumpstart to my more sustainable weight loss.2
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goal06082021 wrote: »I've also tried Couch to 5K a few times - it seemed pretty popular in the early-mid 20-teens when I was doing it, so I'm comfortable calling it a fad. And when I finished the program (the one time I got past week 4 and kept at it), I did one of those gimmicky "color run" 5k races where you get pelted with colored cornstarch the whole time. It was a fun thing to do once, and I took the most colorful and satisfying shower of my life afterward.
I wouldn't call c25k a fad. Its an excellent way for someone to slowly build up to running. It's not only still around, but recommended a lot by most runners for new runners for the above reason. Also its free.
Colour run is a fad, that I agree with15 -
Was it grade 9? Or 10?
Ayds to the rescue....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayds
The weight loss lasted a summer...by December it was all back with friends3 -
goal06082021 wrote: »I've also tried Couch to 5K a few times - it seemed pretty popular in the early-mid 20-teens when I was doing it, so I'm comfortable calling it a fad. And when I finished the program (the one time I got past week 4 and kept at it), I did one of those gimmicky "color run" 5k races where you get pelted with colored cornstarch the whole time. It was a fun thing to do once, and I took the most colorful and satisfying shower of my life afterward.
I wouldn't call c25k a fad. Its an excellent way for someone to slowly build up to running. It's not only still around, but recommended a lot by most runners for new runners for the above reason. Also its free.
Colour run is a fad, that I agree with
Agree, I used couch 2 5k to start running as well, I think it's a really useful programme to gradually increase your running endurance.6 -
Weightwatchers
Atkins (gave me gastritis, so had to stop)
Callanetics - anyone remember that?1 -
Before I actually researched everything, I did the "no fat" product eating which of course still had loads of calories and sugar. Also did the "ab cream" thing back in the 90's because of pseudoscience that I couldn't verify was true or not until internet became much more available.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Tried:-
BBC Diet
Weight Watchers
Cabbage Soup Diet
Atkins
Slimming World
IF
Fast 800
Think Soup & Atkins only Fad ones ?
All worked to a various degree, some more painful than others 🤣
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I did the 'eating 6 meals a day thing', popularized in the book 'Body for Life'. It worked very well, I lost 40 lbs. At the time it fit my life well and the weight training program that came with the book has given me a love for the gym that I never had before.
I have since moved on from the eating program because I understand that nothing magic happens by spacing your meals out, and at this stage of my life, eating less often just seems to be more sustainable for me.4 -
I have always been wary of fad diets, since Grandma used to drink SlimFast with her meals.
I did do South Beach when I lived in Miami, but frankly my current diet is very similar to the second stage.
We did a Whole 30ish elimination diet about a year and a half ago, but we did an even slower reintroduction phase and did indeed find two food triggers for my husband's chronic pain (and snoring!).2 -
Richard Simmons Deal a Meal. Anyone remember that? Back in the 80s. I actually lost a lot of weight on that. LOL
Also, Hydroxycut. Awful.3 -
concordancia wrote: »I have always been wary of fad diets, since Grandma used to drink SlimFast with her meals.
I did do South Beach when I lived in Miami, but frankly my current diet is very similar to the second stage.
We did a Whole 30ish elimination diet about a year and a half ago, but we did an even slower reintroduction phase and did indeed find two food triggers for my husband's chronic pain (and snoring!).
Oh I had forgotten I tried slim fast shakes! They just tasted awful and never satisfied my hunger0 -
I tried Keto.....I could not sleep or concentrate. It was not for me!2
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I'm surprised people are including weight watchers as a fad - I did it about 10 years ago and had great success in losing 37 lbs. To me it just seems like calorie counting - disguised as "points" but basically the same thing.
Fairly sure I did the cabbage soup and grapefruit diets back in my teenage years, which is ridiculous given I am 5' 10" and weighed maybe 125 lbs back then - but that's what a critical mother will do for you I guess. I remember thinking I had a "belly" - how could I have had a belly at 125 lbs? lol7 -
LifeWithPie wrote: »Richard Simmons Deal a Meal. Anyone remember that? Back in the 80s. I actually lost a lot of weight on that. LOL
Also, Hydroxycut. Awful.
You know, I used this concept to create menu cards for my diabetic grandmother (yes, the same one who drank slim fast as an appetizer). I wrote out meals on index cards so she could just choose one and know what and how much to have. When she used them, she did very well, even if she added a slim fast, since it was much more control than she had ever figured out on her own. It worked better for her than deal a meal, because I used foods she actually ate, as well as following the diabetic recommendations of the time.8 -
I'm surprised people are including weight watchers as a fad - I did it about 10 years ago and had great success in losing 37 lbs. To me it just seems like calorie counting - disguised as "points" but basically the same thing.
Fairly sure I did the cabbage soup and grapefruit diets back in my teenage years, which is ridiculous given I am 5' 10" and weighed maybe 125 lbs back then - but that's what a critical mother will do for you I guess. I remember thinking I had a "belly" - how could I have had a belly at 125 lbs? lol
Could be because they keep changing their point system/plan every few years. Some people find success with whatever the current plan is at the time and then they go and switch it and the newest version might not work for them. But I’ve never used WW so I can’t say for sure, just what I’ve heard others say their experience was.
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LifeWithPie wrote: »Richard Simmons Deal a Meal. Anyone remember that? Back in the 80s. I actually lost a lot of weight on that. LOL
Also, Hydroxycut. Awful.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Fortunately, none really. I really only had one go around with losing a significant amount of weight in my life. I tried many weird things to gain weight though as I was pretty much a beanpole until my mid 20s when I filled out a little bit (a good thing). I put on a good bit of weight in my 30s after I graduated college and started working a gazillion hours per week and traveling for work six months out of the year. It was very slow though...so much so that I really didn't notice it was going on.
I did do South Beach once for a bit with my wife when we were dating...well, kinda...I would eat SB type meals with her, but when she wasn't around I was eating pretty much normal...but I was also not trying to lose weight, only be supportive. It actually helped me be a bit more mindful about getting in my fruit and veg and I think overall, it's a very good concept and program...but it was pretty huge at one point.1 -
Adkins diet
Scarsdale diet
Carbo-Calorie diet
a powdered drink meal replacement diet... don't remember the name but it was torture (and unsuccessful)
and other extreme stuff in HS like fasting all day and eating 3or 4 steamed zucchini at night.
You know, the issue was always adherence. So why didn't I intentionally pick something easier to adhere to? SMH4 -
Ww when it was regular points, then WW when it was pro points. I call a fad because it never actually taught me how to eat well.
In NZ and I think AUS there was a company call sureslim. Cost $1000 and was very very strict. They took a blood test and "taylored" your plan to your results. My friend did it, so I did too. It was brutal. Had to leave 5hrs between meals. The list of foods was incredibly small. I had to have set portion sizes, but no real control over what I ate. It was like pick one from this pox (protein) and 2 from this box (carb/veg) but never eat this box.
I did it for 3 months lost 10kg, gave up cause way to hard and limiting.
Just googled. They are still in business! That was about 15 years ago
4 years ago I started MFP, lost 20kg in that year and kept it off. No limits, way easier.3
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