Rethinking Thin
The New Science of Weight Loss - And the Myths and Realities of Dieting
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Narrated by:
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Ellen Archer
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By:
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Gina Kolata
Rethinking Thin is at once an account of the place of diets in American society and a provocative critique of the weight-loss industry. Kolata's account of four determined dieters' progress through a study comparing the Atkins diet to a conventional low-calorie one becomes a broad tale of science and society, of social mores and social sanctions, and of politics and power.
Rethinking Thin asks whether words like willpower are really applicable when it comes to eating and body weight. It dramatizes what it feels like to spend a lifetime struggling with one's weight and fantasizing about finally getting thin. It tells the little-known story of the science of obesity and the history of diets and dieting: scientific and social phenomena that have made some people rich and thin and left others fat and miserable. And it offers commonsense answers to questions about weight, eating habits, and obesity, giving us a better understanding of the weight that is right for our bodies.
©2007 Gina Kolata (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
Critic reviews
very interesting
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The book includes a lot of history on western thinking about how to lose weight. The separation caused by time makes the silliness these ideas rather apparent. The book also includes summaries of a lot of scientific evaluation of these ideas.
So the science is clear, all the common wisdom about weight loss is wrong. Usually extremely wrong! For example, changing how much you eat (within large limits) has a truly minuscule affect on your weight. The body regulates its energy usage based on how much food you find for it in order to satisfy its own idea about how much fat it needs. From an evolutionary perspective this is as it must be. But the implication is that if you eat 20% less everyday you don’t get 20% thinner, more likely you lose 0.2% of your body weight. And if you diet to lose weight, but don’t change the body’s idea of how much fat it needs, over time you’ll gain it all back. What the body thinks it needs, it eventually figures out how to get.
So can you change the body’s idea of how much fat it needs? Yes, because people do it; these are the only people who “keep the weight off”. But no one knows how it’s done. The science shows most things that people claim have this affect, don’t work for most people (but might work for the people making the claim).
The book stops here, and left me with an intense desire to give up.
My own theory is that the body’s internal fat goal has an epigenetic control. Things you do either deliberately or as a side effect of life change your epigenetics, resulting in semi-permanent changes to your body’s fat goals. It is believed that the kinds of things that cause epigenetic changes are mostly semi-traumatic. There are two problems: 1) the kind of intervention that results in such a change may be rather dependent on the environment and 2) the necessary changes for a desired outcome may depend rather strongly on your existing epigenetics; that is, they are highly individualistic.
So the intervention that works for you is unlikely to work for someone else and vice versa.
The Book You Want Others to Read
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Not a diet book but a NON diet book
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This is a book that is surprisingly easy to listen to because of the author's style and the narrator's gift and pleasant voice.
The truth on being fat in our society.<br />
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This book has really changed the way I see my weight problem and how to fight it. In a nutshell, it gives you a real dimension of your ENEMY'S SIZE.
Life changing
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