Imagine If All Diets Were As Weird As This


by Jackie Owens

1. Vinegar Diet. It's an old story that it was the British writer Byron who came up with, and popularized, the Vinegar diet. This diet was fundamentally uncomplicated mainly because people from those days would simply stir three tablespoons of vinegar into drinking water. They would drink the solution before each and every meal since they believed that this was effective in losing weight. Right up until today, this regime is still followed by many individuals. However, it is unclear whether there are any properties in vinegar that actually help in losing weight.

2. Blood Type Diet - There is a theory that there is a specific diet which best suits a person's blood type. This could be reasonable mainly because it indicates that you can lose weight by eating a diet that matches your unique biology. An interesting idea, and, to an extent, one that is still out there.

3. Cigarette Diet - Before tobacco advertising restrictions arrived and it became harder to advertise tobacco, many cigarette firms came up with and promoted appetite suppressing products to the general public. One unforgettable ad for Lucky Strikes recommended that smokers "Reach for a Lucky" as a substitute to eating a sweet. They also promoted a health message in general ("Cigarettes are Great For Your Fitness") mainly because they wanted to get the medics and other medical professionals to prescribe their products.

4. The Alcohol Diet - William the Conqueror from England tried to consume only alcohol just to diet. Evidently, this diet didn't work for him - at the end he was way too bulky to fit in his own coffin. Drinking only alcohol does not seriously help in losing weight: in fact, it just causes health issues.

5. The Sleeping Beauty Diet - Unsurprisingly, substantial numbers of dieters in the past were none too satisfied with the thought of the exhausting process of plenty of exercise and eating less. The rather attractive idea of losing weight while you sleep (ie while you are seriously sedated) for a couple of days) has drawn a lot of people over time. Apparently Elvis Presley tried out this one, but when he was woken up he found that he had put on an unwelcome ten pounds. Not quite the result he was looking for! (Uh huh huh!)

6. Chewing Diet - It has also been believed that chewing food for as much as you can before swallowing helps lose weight. Chewing could break food down physically before it enters the gut. It also successfully slows down the sheer amount of food you consume. They also say that when you chew your food slowly, you feel more full.

7. Cotton Ball Diet - This is all about eating cotton balls dry, or after they have been soaked in gelatin so that they could be consumed more easily. Folks imagined that by half filling their bellies with cotton balls this would help them drop some weight. The idea was that cottonballs are high in fiber, but sadly it's not any kind of fiber that can help people out. Of course the other glitch in this plan is that cotton balls are definitely not very appetizing, plus they could truly cause a gigantic pain in the belly!

8. The Tapeworm Diet - This diet idea has to be one of the most bizarre - and even insane - diet ideas. The concept was that right after folks swallowed the diet pill (the egg of a tapeworm!) then the worm would hatch and begin to feed off the person's meal in their belly. Fast weightloss! The problem was that keeping a long parasite in your intestines is clearly wrong, due to the fact there is minimal evidence that they help you diet, but lots of evidence that this would cause the carrier health difficulties and problems.

9. The Vision Diet - This fad diet is based on the idea that when a food looks unappealing it will help you suppress your hunger. People thought that blue is an appetite suppressant; therefore, they would wear blue sunglasses that made the food look unappetizing. A Japanese firm has actually produced a line of blue glasses for persons who wanted to lose weight in this way.

10. The Breatharian Diet - This diet is based on the Inedia, which is a branch of Hinduism. The adherents thought that they did not need food to survive. They believed that just fresh air and sunlight was all they needed in order to survive. This regime has been connected with several deaths of followers due to dehydration and hypothermia.

About the Author

Glorious! Pretty glad we don't have to endure that these days. (Er. We don't, do we?!) This is a nice site with a state of the art. If you want some reasonable dieting advice: http://www.bestbellyfatdiet.org

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