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The perfect diet - does it exist?



If you are on a quest to change your body composition or boost your health, you may find yourself overwhelmed by all the different dietary approaches. 

Traditionally, the word "diet" describes how you eat. However, over time it has evolved to mean "restriction" or "elimination" - often in attempt to lose weight. 

To help you out, I want you know that the perfect diet doesn't exist. There is no one "best" diet that works for every person around the world. Every human being is different - different genes, lifestyle habits, nutritional needs, emotions, activity regimes.....and so much more. 

While there are several universal nutrition principles that have consistently shown to improve health, reduce risk for disease, maximize longevity and to help with weight maintenance, I'd like to offer a different way of thinking about food. In other words, if you are on a quest to improve your health or change your body composition, there's much more to the diet formula than searching for the pieces of a perfect diet. 
  • Your diet should not only keep you alive, but it should help you thrive. 
  • Consume the highest-quality (nutrient density) of food that you can afford within your budget. Consider it an investment in your health. 
  • Your diet should supply your body with a wide variety of nutrients to support all body processes. 
  • Your diet should be financially feasible. 
  • Your diet is consistently evolving. Work on a good, better, best system. 
  • Prioritize food that comes naturally from the Mother Earth. 
  • Your diet should be sustainable, flexible and enjoyable. 
  • Your diet should have a positive environmental impact. 
  • Eat for your activity level. 
  • Your diet should leave you satisfied. 
  • Your diet should not be socially isolating. 
  • Changing your diet won't fix body image issues. 
  • Achieving a specific look, number on the scale or size of clothing from your dietary choices will not ensure long-time happiness. 
Diet rules, lists and labels are used to control your eating. They tell you exactly what you should and shouldn’t eat in order to lose weight, improve health or change body composition. The diet rules make you believe that if you follow the “good” food list and avoid the “off-limit” foods, you will achieve certain results. (This doesn’t apply to medical, ethical and religious reasons for avoiding certain foods or food groups).

Extremes and absolutes are never healthy. Strict and restrictive eating can run and ruin your life, health and emotional well-being. Often times, it can create disordered eating patterns.

If you don’t diet, you can never cheat, break, mess up, feel guilty, fall off the wagon or have a bad day of eating.

Your eating choices belong to you. If you choose to reduce, minimize or avoid certain foods for ethical, medical, religious, health or personal reasons, your diet should remain simple, flexible, varied and nourishing. 

Your personalized style of eating is constantly evolving. 

Keep it practical, enjoyable and sustainable. 

It’s not a fad, it doesn’t require meticulous calculations, there are no strict rules, and it should never cause guilt, stress or worry.