Why can't anyone agree on a healthy diet?: Intuitive health
The unplanned almond
I spent four years weighing chicken breasts on a kitchen scale. I logged meals to the tenth of a gram. I had not eaten with friends without pre-logging in eleven months. I turned down my grandmother’s birthday cake. I woke at 3 AM because I had eaten an unplanned handful of almonds and could not stop calculating.
My cortisol was through the roof. My sleep was wrecked. My digestion needed four supplements to manage symptoms that did not exist before I started optimizing. By every metric the evidence-based and ancestral camps would measure, I was doing everything right. I was also falling apart.
The thing nobody in the nutrition debate wants to say: the relationship between a person and their food is not a biochemistry problem. It is a relationship. And like all relationships, it can be destroyed by surveillance. The frame — food is a variable to optimize, get it right and the body performs — turns every meal into a test. The physiological consequences of living inside that frame are measurable and almost completely ignored by every other camp. Thirty million Americans meet clinical criteria for an eating disorder. The diet industry: $78 billion annually. The wellness industry: $450 billion. Both depend on a single proposition: your body is a problem and we sell the solution.
We stopped optimizing. We ate when hungry, stopped when full, stopped categorizing. It took months to find the signal under years of override. The evidence-based camp says intuition fails when physiology is broken. True for some. But their solution — more rules, more tracking — is, for many people, the stress response itself. The ancestral camp is kinder but arrives at the same place: here is the correct way. Comply.
Where we concede ground: A diabetic who intuitively eats without glycemic awareness is ignoring a medical emergency, not healing a relationship.
What would change our mind: A longitudinal study showing intuitive eating produces worse cardiometabolic outcomes than structured eating after controlling for stress.
Read the full synthesis: Why can’t anyone agree on a healthy diet?