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From ‘low-carb’ to ‘bad food’: four phrases that make dietitians cringe and distort ideas about eating

  • Many of the popular phrases used around food and diets are misleading and set us up for unhealthy eating habits
  • Food experts and dietitians reveal their most hated phrases and why they need to be changed

Reading Time:4 minutes
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From “guilty pleasure” to “bad eating”, dietitians share their most hated phrases used around dieting and eating. Photo: Alamy

Ellie Krieger, The Washington Post

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The words we use matter. Our choice of language not only mirrors our current way of thinking, it also has the power to shape our attitudes and behaviours over time. That’s why so many food and nutrition professionals cringe at much of the conversation around food and health today.

Seemingly innocuous words and phrases that are regularly tossed around set us up for unhealthy approaches to food.

I emailed several registered dietitian colleagues to identify the most common offenders – words they wish would be eliminated from the nutrition chatter – and asked them how to reframe that language for a healthier perspective. Here are their top four.

We shouldn’t label food as either good or bad. Photo: Alamy
We shouldn’t label food as either good or bad. Photo: Alamy
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Good/bad food

Not surprisingly, almost every dietitian I surveyed ranked the categorisation of food as “good” or “bad” high on their cringe list. It is the root of unhealthy food speak, as most of the other reviled terms can be traced back to this notion.

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