It’s Not Just About the Number on the Scale: The Hidden Value of So-Called “Yo-Yo Dieting”
For years, “yo-yo dieting” has been treated like the moral failure of modern health culture. The phrase itself drips with judgment. It conjures an image of someone helplessly bouncing up and down in weight, a victim of bad discipline, bad habits, or bad character. Media headlines frame it as a cautionary tale. Fitness influencers use it as the ultimate warning. Doctors sometimes mention it with a sigh. But what if the story we’ve been told is incomplete? What if the problem isn’t the people moving up and down in weight — but the way we’ve chosen to interpret that movement? Because beneath the shame, the memes, and the warnings lies a more complicated truth: fluctuation is normal. Human metabolism is adaptive. And the journey people call “yo-yo dieting” may actually represent something far more meaningful than failure. It may represent persistence. The Myth of the Straight Line Our culture loves linear stories. You set a goal. You work hard. You achieve it. End of narrative. W...