meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The F*ck It Podcast

Isn’t This Irresponsible?

The F*ck It Podcast

Caroline Dooner

Self-improvement, Education, Society & Culture

4.4636 Ratings

🗓️ 2 January 2019

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Some people assume that The F*ck It Diet is unnecessarily extreme. They assume it's a steady diet of donuts, McDonald's, and fried ice cream for the rest of our short little lives. That we're a group of lazy anarchists who are reveling in our newfound food-related health problems, and not taking any personal responsibility for our health, and who refuse to make any attempts at self-improvement. Or they think: Why can't we just be balanced? Why can't we just enjoy cake every so often but mostly try to eat a healthy, moderate diet? The answer is because: we've tried that. Also, chronic dieting is somewhere on the eating disorder spectrum, so for people who've become obsessed with dieting, trying "to be balanced" doesn't work. It doesn't heal us. And ironically, it perpetuates feeling totally out of control with food. There is nothing wrong with true balance, but for many people, "just trying to be balanced" becomes the new diet. Not to mention that after years of restriction and dieting, balance is eating a hell of a lot, for a good chunk of time. The beautiful thing I found, once I truly allowed myself to eat with total abandon, is that my body actually spoke up. After years of bingeing and restricting and bingeing again, once I stopped judging myself for eating and stopped trying to micromanage my weight, my body actually finally felt fed, and my lifelong food obsession melted away. Note: I never thought that could happen. I thought I was born a food addict, and would die a food addict. The F*ck It Diet is the (seemingly) counter-intuitive way to stop feeling insane around food. Allowance paves way for easier, nourishing health choices, and getting in tune with what your body wants and needs. It's a way to get to a place where you can easily feed yourself a varied diet, without too much overthinking, and get on with your life. However, I know it feels more complicated for some people. I understand why people still fear certain foods, especially if they don't feel well, or if certain foods make them feel sick. And some foods really do make people feel sick. I understand this first hand: wanting to heal your obsession with food and dieting, but wondering if you're actually causing your own pain and misery, and fearing that you need to be avoiding certain foods. And so here are a couple things I want to remind you about food, weight, dieting, and health that may calm you down. The biggest issue with dieting is assuming that weight is the cause of our health problems. That's like blaming coughing for causing your cold. Weight can be symptom of underlying health problems, (and it can also just be... your body). But either way, focusing on weight loss is not your best bet to improve health, not matter what. Stress from weight stigma has also been shown to cause the health problems that are blamed on the weight itself - including increased mortality. The other issue with dieting is assuming that you can't trust your hunger and your appetite, and that the less you eat the better. No. That makes no sense. That is not good for you. That is not supportive of health or a good relationship with food. It's not supportive of a strong metabolism, or good digestion, or good sleep, or anything really. The Fuck It Diet is calorie positive. Calories aren't a problem or the problem. Same with carbs, sugar, fat, and protein. Food is good for us. So... once you can step out of both of those ways of thinking (demonizing weight and demonizing hunger/food) you can eat however makes you feel good. For people who have food sensitivities or who feel better eating a certain way, you can do whatever feels good and right, as long as you have healed your relationship to food and weight. Does that make sense? And once you have healed your relationship to food, if a certain food makes you feel terrible, you can re-evaluate your relationship to it. Do you want to eat it if it makes you feel bad?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, it's Caroline and I'm here to tell you that the episode you're about to listen to was recorded a long time ago.

0:07.4

Back when I used Patreon, back when I ran lots of different workshops and programs that I do not run anymore,

0:13.8

and back before the Fuck a Diet book. So if I refer to any of these obsolete offerings while you're listening,

0:22.8

just know that even though my Patreon and other programs don't exist anymore, you can find helpful resources by going to

0:29.7

the fuckadiet.com slash more. You can also read the beginning of the fucka a diet book for free

0:36.3

from my site.

0:41.6

Lastly, this podcast is extremely messy.

0:46.5

And it was actually intentionally messy and unstructured because that was the only way I could inspire myself to start and continue this podcast.

0:49.9

I needed the lowest stakes possible.

0:53.1

And though this podcast remains very low budget

0:55.8

and has remained messy throughout the years until now,

0:59.4

if you want slightly more structured and streamlined episodes,

1:03.4

listen to the more recent episodes.

1:05.3

All right, enjoy.

1:07.5

Happy New Year!

1:09.7

It's January 2nd. This is the Fuck a Diet Radio and this is your January and also New Year's episode. My name is Caroline Duna. I am the host of this podcast, The Fucka Diet Radio. I am the creator of the fuckadia.com and the author of the fuckadaya book, which will be out in

1:29.7

almost two months. It'll be out on March 26th. Very excited. Also very stressed. And I will

1:36.1

elaborate a little bit on that over the course of this episode. But it really is all good things.

1:41.3

So I'm beginning to calm down.

1:46.7

What do I want to say?

1:48.1

We're going to do what we usually do.

1:52.1

I'm going to read the new post titled, Isn't This Irresponsible?

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Caroline Dooner, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Caroline Dooner and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.