Diet Comparisons
Probably the most important things people want to
know when they think the time has come (again) to
cut
some of the daily food intake is which diet is the
best. Although we are all different beings, we all share the
same goal: a diet that can make us thin in no time at all.
Some sort of miracle pill or eating plan that makes fat go
away and never ever return. That's actually the second part of
the big wish: how to make sure that all the weight lost
through dieting stays lost through the years.

The
more diets published in magazines and on the Internet, the
more people are confused about what dieting really means and
about the right way of bringing your body back in shape. The
growing number of overweight people has turned weight
loss into an industry like never before and the
market is growing every year. It seems that nowadays all one
needs is a fashionable idea and a flair for marketing in order
to make a lot of money or garner a lot of popularity by
proposing some sort of weird diet, despite the lack of
professional expertise in this field.
And there is a LOT of diets out there. We're going to go
here only through the best-known diets, since a review of all
the diets floating around the industry would be beyond the
scope of this article.
So let's start with one of the latest fads of the dieting
world: the Atkins diet. Pretty much
everybody's head of the Atkins diet, largely due to the flood
of articles praising the extraordinary results, not to mention
the loads of good mail from satisfied customers. The biggest
thing in favor of this diet is that it lets you eat
high fat dairy products like cheese and butter.
However, the Atkins diet has fallen from its lofty perch over
suspicions of increasing the risk of heart diseases, not to
mention the proved fact that bigger number of followers
complain of diarrhea, weakness, muscle cramps and rashes. The
debate over the scientific fundamentals of this diet is still
raging.
Next comes the Zone diet; another
well-known eating plan. This diet is the brainchild of
Barry Sears and it's all about eating the right mix
of foods in order to reach the proper hormonal balance. This
state of balance, which is called the "Zone", lets the body
take in calories and use them through the day without putting
anything aside as fat. Unfortunately, this diet does some
serious discrimination among foods without any scientific
basis. Starchy vegetables, whole grains and beans are
banned, although these foods are not in conflict with
the principles of the diet. The American Heart Association
says the Zone diet lacks essential nutrients while
promoting high-protein foods.
The Jenny Craig diet is next on the list.
One of the longest running diets, Jenny Craig started this
business in the early 1980s and it's still
around. The basic idea of this diet is a trade off: you don't
have to choose recipes, do the shopping and the cooking, but
you have to buy the Jenny Craig prepackaged food.
And that runs to some $100 per week. Plus the membership
costs. Plus the vegetables and fruits which are not included
in the prepackaged food. If you can afford it and if you can
stick to it, the diet is pretty good. However, similar
low-calorie foods can be bought at the grocery store and you
don't have to discuss this with a Jenny Craig expert that
insists on your eating the prepackaged food because he gets a
percentage of the sale price.
From sunny Florida comes the South Beach diet.
This one has the right idea and wrong approach combination
down pat. Don't get me wrong, a lot of people have managed to
lose weight with this diet and it actually works. But the
question is: can you really stick to it? The first phase of
the diet will eliminate most foods containing
carbohydrates from your daily consumption.
Fortunately, this phase lasts two weeks. Unfortunately, second
phase focuses on a half-hearted return of whole grains and
fruits and lasts as long as necessary. If reaching the
desired weight takes you one year, then that's exactly how
long this phase is going to last. And if you don't like the
foods allowed by this diet then you're out of luck. There are
no alternatives.
And yet another veteran dieting program around is
Weight Watchers. This is actually one of the best
diets around because it puts all the management tools in the
hands of the user. If you are really committed to losing
weight, you have all the information you need to do it. And a
lot of people who are going through the same thing are going
to be there to help you. If having company during difficult
times helps your willpower, then you are probably going to
lose all that extra weight. If, on the other hand, you don't
like the idea of being constantly under peer pressure, then
this diet is not for you.
As you can see from this short review, there are a lot of
diets out there, dozens more than we've been able to cover
here. The best thing to do when choosing a diet is to do as
much research about it as possible. See what people who tried
it have to say. Then see what doctors and dietitians have to
say about it. Between those singing praises and those trying
to prove the diet wrong you can probably get the truth
yourself. Still, pay special attention to what the doctors
have to say. If they tell you a certain diet will put your
body to risk then think twice before trying it.