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A Deep Dive into Diet Culture with author and therapist Judith Matz on the Psychology of Diets

Just a quick content warning: on this episode and in this post, we’re going to be discussing eating disorders and diets. If that’s not a topic you’re ready to listen to, skip this one and come back. We get it.

We’re in our second week of our deep dive into diet culture on our podcast, #WeGotGoals. And this week, we’re speaking to Judith Matz, LCSW, ACSW. In terms of our deep dive, think of this episode as an intro to what diet culture is and a 101 on how to get out of it.

Judith Matz is a therapist and nationally recognized speaker on the topics of diet culture, binge eating, emotional eating, body image, and weight stigma. She has her own journey with dieting and she shares on the episode how she inevitably broke up with her scale and made a professional choice to dedicate her professional life to undoing what diets have done to human beings.

Matz is the co-author of the books The Diet Survivor’s Handbook and Beyond a Shadow of a Diet. She also co-created two card decks that are meant to make an anti-diet and body positive lifestyle more accessible – The Making Peace with Food card deck and the Body Positivity card deck. 

We looked to her for her expertise in diets and diet culture for us. Read that as, I asked the stupid questions so you don’t have to.

You’ll hear her define a diet as “Any time you make a change in how you eat for the purpose of weight loss.” I’ve been reading anti-diet books in public this month as I prepare for these interviews, and I’ve heard from a lot of people about their systems that aren’t diets – they’re more like do’s and don’ts. According to Matz, your system is a diet if you’re doing it to lose weight.

And you’ll also hear her define diet culture, which might as well be, “well, it’s in the air you breathe,” but for the purpose of this conversation, it’s “a belief that thinness is a moral virtue and thinness is health. Therefore, it’s worth doing anything to achieve that status and when you get to that status, you’ll be happier and healthier.”

So, as we dive deeper, I’m convinced that diet culture is basically the matrix – our minds are so occupied with the illusion in front of us that if we just lose weight, we’ll have the life of our dreams. We’re so occupied, in fact, that we’re willing to ignore the fact that you’ll hear from several experts this month on diets and diet culture. Diets simply do not work.

As Matz puts it, there’s only a 3-5% chance that a diet will work – and there isn’t a single program or plan that has the research to support sustained weight loss over 2-5 years. 

Resources:

Past episodes in this month’s deep dive:

Here are some of the frequently asked questions I’ve heard since talking about this project as well as some resources (you’ll also hear other experts speak to these this month):

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