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What's Food Freedom All About?

A new year has begun, and diet culture is in full swing. I urge you to give up diets and trust your instincts rather than succumbing to the billion dollar diet business! What does that actually imply, though?

a person standing on a bathroom scale with a thought bubble above them that says diet culture on the scale

Food independence is a loaded phrase with many different meanings, from eschewing diet culture and dietary restrictions to achieving excellent health and food security by cultivating your own food.

For some, it's touted as a strategy to deal with eating problems, while for others it's a means to encourage purposeful weight reduction.

However, it's a new, innovative notion that goes against conventional conventions of dieting and the slim ideal in the health and wellness sector.

In order to create space for a better connection with food and body image, one must let go of restrictive chronic dieting, fad diets, the notion that one must be on a diet, and any other form of cultural pressures related to body weight and size. Working with a registered dietitian nutritionist who uses a non-diet, intuitive eating, and Health At Every Size approach can help you give up on diets for good, manage your health, and feel your best. This might sound unfamiliar, scary, or difficult to do in a society that profits from our insecurities.

Unsure whether you have fallen victim to diet culture? Think about the following:

  • Do you assign a clean, good, or terrible rating to foods?
  • Do your dietary decisions reflect your morals?
  • Do you engage in physical activity to make up for what you eat?
  • Do you feel guilty about enjoying certain foods?
  • Have you ever kept track of your calories or gone on a diet?

You have probably been exposed to diet culture if you selected yes to any of these questions. This article's goal is not to make you feel guilty, but rather to make you aware of how diet culture and fatphobia are presented to us in the mass media. Being on a diet or discussing diets and weight reduction has become commonplace. It's time to reject our culture's obsession with weight and repair our relationships with food and our perceptions of ourselves. Why Should We Abandon the Diet Mentality? - We are much more than just our size, weight, and appearance!

Heads-up
No matter a person's gender identity, color, age, financial background, or other identities, disordered eating and eating disorders can impact them.

They are not just brought on by exposure to diet culture; they may also be brought on by any combination of biological, social, cultural, and environmental variables.

Feel free to speak with a licensed healthcare expert if you believe that you may be too worried about your weight, obsessive about food, or feel overwhelmed when you consider keeping up a healthy, guilt-free eating habit.

You can develop eating habits that promote your physical and emotional health by working through emotions of guilt or worry with the assistance of a qualified dietitian or therapist

How Can Diet Culture Exposure Be Reduced?

The first step to permanently giving up diets is to free yourself from the messages about weight reduction and body-shaming that are being spread all around you. This may first feel overwhelming. You may move into a more weight-neutral space and love your body with greater kindness by removing external sources of diet messaging from publications, television, and even the "fitspo" (fitness-inspiration) accounts you follow on social media. Getting rid of diet culture and regaining your body's natural reaction to food is only one step closer with this. To go farther and take the next stages in repairing your relationship with food, work with a holistic non-diet dietitian.