Lyle McDonald recently wrote a great article about this on his main site. To credit him, it was originally found here:
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The Full Diet Break
Over the weekend I did a podcast for site and one of the topics came up had to do with flexible dieting and the full diet break. This is something that I wrote about in both and but it occurred to me that there really wasn’t any information about it on the main site.
So that’s the topic of today’s article:: The Full Diet Break. What it is and why and how (to a limited degree), to do it.
What is a Full Diet Break?
Whenever I bring up this topic, I tend to get sort of confused looks from people; what do you mean I’m supposed to take a break from my diet? As I opined on the podcast, I have no idea if this is just an idea endemic to America (where we suffer from a long-history of a Puritan work ethic) or is just common to dieters but most people who are trying to lose weight or fat seem to feel that the key to success is to be as miserable as possible for as long as possible. While this certainly isn’t the only reason diets fail, I don’t think it helps.
This was actually a big part of the reason that I originally wrote as there is a good bit of research (comparing rigid and flexible dieters) showing that people who are more flexible in their eating patterns are more successful in the long-term, showing less binge eating habits and weighing less.
And while that idea might seem contradictory given the other book I mentioned , I’d only note that that book incorporates many of the flexible dieting principles anyhow. But I’m getting off topic.
The idea of a full diet break, in short, is that it’s a period, typically 10-14 days where explicit dieting is stopped. Calories should be raised to roughly maintenance (I often recommend adjusting estimated maintenance down by about 10% to account for metabolic slowdown and such; here’s ) with carbohydrates in the 100-150 gram/day range as a minimum. I’ll explain some of the rationale behind these recommendations in a second.
I’d note that I’m not the first to suggest this idea by any stretch. The first formal suggestion I remember of this came from an early mentor of mine, Dan Duchaine. He routinely recommended 2 week periods at maintenance between periods of active contest dieting for a variety of reasons. I’m sure others did as well.
I’d note that I really formalized the idea of the full diet break after reading a fascinating little paper I came across. Since it’ll be faster, I’m just going to excerpt from :
Before I continue, I want to tell you about one of the coolest studies I’ve seen in a while. I say cool mainly because of the fact that the scientists failed so miserably in their goal, while making an absolutely wonderful discovery. For anybody who wants to look it up, the full reference is “Wing RR and RW Jeffrey. Prescribed ‘Breaks’ as a means to disrupt weight control efforts. Obes Res (2003) 11: 287-291.”
The study was set up to find out why people go off the dieting bandwagon. That is, the researchers wanted to determine what behavioral things happen when people go off of their diet for some period, and why they have trouble going back on.
So the subjects were first put on a typical diet meant to cause weight loss. Then the subjects were told to go off the diet for either 2 weeks or 6 weeks so that the researchers could see what happened when people fell off their diet but hard and started regaining weight. Here’s what happened: not only did the subjects not regain very much weight, but they had almost no trouble going right back onto their diet when the 2 (or 6) weeks was over. So the scientists completely and utterly failed to reach their goal of studying what they wanted to study.
Basically, they made an almost accidental discovery which raised another set of questions:why didn’t the subjects regain a ton of weight and why did they have little problem returning to their diet? That is, knowing that most people who go off of a diet for even a short period will balloon up, regaining weight rapidly, and fall off their diet, what made this study (or these subjects) different?
The basic issue seemed to come down to that of control. To understand this, let’s consider two different situations. First let’s say that you’re the typical rigid dieter hammering away on your perfect diet, no lapses, no mistakes. Suddenly something comes up that is out of your control. A stressful period of life, the aforementioned vacation, whatever. Feeling out of control, you figure your diet is blown and the binge begins. Does this sound familiar at all?
But consider what happened in this study, the subjects were told by the researchers to go off their diet; in essence, the break was part of the diet. And they didn’t blow up, didn’t gain a ton of weight, and had no problem going right back onto the diet.
I suspect that that was the key difference and why the study failed so miserably: control. Psychologically, feeling like the break is now under your control, or that it’s part of your overall plan, makes it far easier to not feel like the diet is completely blown and get back on the diet when things settle down.
Understand what I’m getting at? Tangentially, and this is discussed in the book, while many seem to flexibly diet sort of intuitively, many don’t seem able to do this. For them I recommend what I confusingly call structured flexible dieting. Basically, planning the timing of the strategies described in the book. Basically, it puts the dieter in control of the diet, rather than the diet controlling the dieter. Which is what I think a big part of the study described above was about.
So that’s what a full diet break is, the next topic to address is what the purpose is.
There are actually a number of good reasons to take a full diet break, both behavioral and physiological. I want to look at both.
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