Thermodynamics Is Right but Insufficient
If calories in fall below calories out, you lose weight—CICO is the first law of thermodynamics and irrefutable. The trouble is it treats both variables as fixed numbers. Nutrition scientist Kevin Hall (2017) calls CICO 'physically true but behaviorally near-useless advice,' because the two sides pull on each other.
Calories out has four parts: BMR (largest, 60–70%), the thermic effect of food (TEF) (~10%), NEAT (non-exercise daily movement), and deliberate exercise. 'Eating less' shakes all of them at once—in the direction that works against us.
Metabolic Adaptation: The Body Adapts to Starvation
Adaptive thermogenesis, framed by Rosenbaum and Leibel (2010), is the core mechanism of diet failure. When weight drops, the body doesn't merely burn less 'in proportion to lost mass'—it suppresses metabolism beyond what mass predicts. At the same 80 kg, someone who dieted down from 90 kg burns hundreds of kcal/day fewer than someone always at 80 kg. The body has entered thrift mode 'to regain.'
The most dramatic evidence comes from Fothergill 2016 Obesity, tracking US reality-show contestants. 'Biggest Loser' contestants lost an average of 58 kg over 30 weeks, but six years later their resting metabolism remained suppressed by roughly 500 kcal/day below prediction. Most regained much of the weight, yet metabolism never recovered—uncomfortable but honest data showing adaptive thermogenesis can be long-lasting.
Hormones: Still Hungry a Year Later
Metabolism isn't the only adversary. As fat shrinks, the satiety hormone leptin falls, and the brain reads this as a 'famine signal,' amplifying appetite. Sumithran 2011 NEJM showed that even one year after weight loss, appetite hormones like leptin and ghrelin remained shifted toward 'eat more.' What looks like a dieter's 'weak willpower' is largely hormonally driven physiological hunger.
Speakman's (2011) set point / settling point theory frames the big picture: the body defends a weight 'range,' deploying appetite and metabolism to pull you back when you leave it. Dieting is a head-on fight with that defense.
So Which Diet Is Best? (Spoiler: barely matters)
Countless 'named diets' claim superiority, but the evidence is sober. Gardner's DIETFITS 2018 (see #nutrition-001) followed ~600 people on low-fat vs low-carb for a year; the difference in loss was statistically insignificant. Johnston 2014 JAMA meta-analysis compared Atkins, Zone, and others, concluding all gave 'similarly modest results' and that what matters is not diet type but adherence.
A heavier truth comes from Mann 2007 American Psychologist—its very title says diets are not the answer. Most diets shed 5–10% of body weight by 6 months but regain much of it by 1–2 years. This isn't a willpower failure; it's exactly what the physiology predicts.
What Maintainers Do Differently
Is it all despair? No. The US National Weight Control Registry has tracked thousands who kept off 13+ kg for over a year (Wing & Hill 2001). They share strikingly consistent traits.
| Maintenance predictor | Concrete behavior | Basis / mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Self-monitoring | Regular weighing, food logging | Early detection of drift, behavior correction |
| High physical activity | ~1 hour/day (mostly walking) | Preserves metabolism, sustains NEAT (Wing & Hill 2001) |
| Consistent eating pattern | Similar weekday/weekend diet | Blocks binge cycles, predictability |
| Catching regain early | Acting on small rebounds immediately | Stops drift before it snowballs |
| Protein intake | Adequate protein each meal | Higher satiety, lean-mass preservation (#nutrition-004) |
The key is not 'what you cut' but 'what you sustain.' The famous correlation that 78% of registry members eat breakfast daily is likely one facet of a 'consistent eating pattern' rather than causal.
A Sustainable Approach: Design, Not War
Strategies that don't fight physiology are simple but boring.
- Modest deficit: Crash starvation amplifies adaptive thermogenesis and lean-mass loss. A small deficit provokes metabolic defense less.
- High protein: Boosts satiety, prevents muscle loss during loss (#nutrition-004).
- Fiber & whole foods: More fullness per calorie—'satiety per calorie' is key.
- Resistance training: Protects lean mass and defends BMR (Stiegler 2006).
- Sleep: Sleep restriction disrupts appetite hormones and drives weight gain (Spaeth 2013)—a hidden variable.
- Environmental design: Don't rely on willpower; reshape your food environment itself.
The Shadow of Diet Culture—and New Drugs
Honestly, weight loss isn't everyone's top health priority. Tomiyama 2018 BMC Medicine notes that weight stigma itself harms health by raising cortisol and triggering binge eating and depression. The risks of repeated loss-gain cycles—yo-yo dieting / weight cycling—are also debated (Montani 2015). In this light, the Health at Every Size (HAES) movement (the anti-diet stance covered in #242) focuses on health behaviors rather than the number. Reassuringly, goals can be modest—the Look AHEAD trial (Wing 2011) showed even a 5–10% loss yields meaningful gains in blood sugar and pressure.
The drug landscape is shifting fast. GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide/Wegovy, tirzepatide) showed ~15% loss in the STEP trials (Wilding 2021 NEJM), changing the game. But caveats apply: ① cost and access, ② substantial regain on cessation, ③ long-term safety still accruing. Honestly, view them as a tool for lifelong management, not a 'magic shot.'
The Korean Picture: Cycling Fads and 'Skinny Fat'
Korea's diet market is huge, and fads cycle—one-food diets, intermittent fasting, and keto return every few years. Meanwhile, the metrics that matter get obscured. Korea's distinctive 'skinny fat' (normal BMI but high body-fat) isn't caught by the scale alone. Korean women face coexisting underweight and appearance pressure (see #184 on SNS comparison), even as the 2022 National Health and Nutrition Survey shows steadily rising male obesity. Wegovy, introduced domestically in 2024, brought a 'craze'—and worries about misuse by normal-weight people for cosmetic ends. It's an obesity treatment, not a diet accessory.
In the end, the science delivers a humble message. Diets fail not because you're lazy but because the body works exactly as designed. Rather than fighting unwinnable physiology, design sustainable behaviors—and sometimes set down the goal of a 'perfect weight' altogether. That is where the data points.