Nav_gr_channelNav_gr_homeNav_gr_home_overNav_gr_subchannel

The Top Ten Most Ridiculous Diets

By: Brie Cadman (View Profile)

People will do almost anything to lose weight. While the most logical, sustainable means of doing so hasn’t really changed—eat less and exercise—every day it seems there are a host of new and outlandish methods to lose those love handles. Most of these ill-fated regimes will help you lose pounds, at least in the short term, but sometimes it’s at the expense of an organ or your sanity. Here are a few of my favorites:

Dr. Siegal’s® Cookie Diet™
Make no mistake, you’re not going to be eating Pepperidge Farm Milanos, or Oreos, or Mrs. Fields’ White Chocolate Macadamia Nut cookies on this diet. No, you’re going to be eating the concoctions of Dr. Siegal, a physician who specializes in hypothyroidism and obesity, and who also likes to sell weight loss books and snacks. However, his proprietary hunger-controlling cookies are a diet-deceiving indulgence; they look like bricks of fiber-coated oats sweetened with prunes. Although they may make you less hungry, the doctor also advises combining them with a restricted calorie diet, which, as we all know, is the main way you’re going to lose weight. I also like how he has trademarked the term “Let’s face it: hunger wrecks diets™.” Uh, so do cookies.

The Subway Diet
Ever since I worked in a building where the women’s restroom abutted a Subway sandwich shop, I have had an almost Pavlovian reaction to thought of eating one of their subs. It reminds me of the toilet, and makes me want to gag. So although I know many people like Subway, eating them twice a day for a year, like Jared Fogel, the guy on the Subway commercials who lost 245 pounds, seems inconceivable. And it seems like I could save a whole lot of money by just making my own sandwiches, and maybe going for a jog now and again.

The Cereal Diet
This is similar to the Subway diet in that you’re supposed to supplant two meals a day with the same thing—in this case cereal. From Special K to Raisin Bran, many cereal boxes now claim you can “lose six in two”— that is lose six pounds in two weeks. Of course, the premise is the same: when people have to measure the amount they are eating, they end up eating fewer calories, so they lose weight. And it’s not like these cereals are health food or anything. The third ingredient in Special K is sugar; it’s the second ingredient in All-Bran. And the last thing you want to be eating too much of is All-Bran—it’s not weight you’d lose, but the contents of your bowels.

Cabbage Soup Diet
Mmmm … cabbage. Good on St. Patrick’s day, not so good every day. Unless you’re trying to lose up to ten pounds in a single week, then maybe cabbage doesn’t sound so bad anymore. But being light headed, weak, and suffering from decreased concentration, as some diet participants have reported, does. Not to mention the inordinate amount of flatulence you are bound to have on a cabbage laden diet. Slim, but stinky.

28 readers liked this story.
share
bookmarks
Comments
posted: 07.02.2008
Heather Miller
Wow, everyone is very quick to bash the writer. I totally agree with her. As someone who has tried every diet known to man, fad diets are just that - fads. They do work, you do lose weight, and then put it right back on. I started working out hard core about 6 years ago and lost all the weight I put on from the birth control pill. Now I eat whatever I want (in moderatio) and don't gain weight. If you just keep everything in moderation and exercise, you really can have whatever you want.
posted: 07.02.2008
Meredith Schwartz
I've never been a dieter, but, alas, in my mid-30s, my old eating habits started to catch up. Did you all see that weird infomercially show on TLC in March called "I Can Make You Thin"? Strangely enough (because I never, ever do these things), I started folliowing his four tenants of eating and I lost 14 pounds in 2 months. Very slow, healthy weight loss and just what I needed to tune up my thirtysomething bod. Seriously. I really don't work for these people, this plan just made sense to me.
posted: 06.30.2008
K von M
Ivan is right. Get over yourself and stop bashing Atkins. You say you felt like crap, but did you get past the first week? Oh... you didn't. You couldn't have. If you had, you'd've found out that once you get past carb withdrawal, your energy skyrockets. Don't condemn that which you don't understand. Take the time to read the book and learn the chemistry behind why low-carbing works. Get over the myths and the stereotypes. And maybe you'll get yourself healthier in the process.
posted: 06.30.2008
Emma Payton
The word "diet" should be lost and tossed from the English language.
posted: 06.25.2008
Ivan Marsh
Yet another attack on the Atkins diet written by someone who has obviously NOT read The New Diet Revolution. Atkins is not a fad diet and is not designed for everyone. If you are not the type of person described in the book you should not be on the Atkins diet.