“A is A. All the pain has come from the effort to evade the fact that A is A.”
These are the words of John Galt in Atlas Shrugged, summing up the core tenet of the Objectivist philosophy pioneered by the novel’s author, Ayn Rand. If you have to ask “Who is John Galt?” then clearly you haven’t read the book. Or then again, maybe you have.
“A is A” is a broad principle, so it’s reasonable to wonder how it applies to practical life. Well, let me take a stab at it: How does this maxim apply to diet and nutrition? As follows:
Poor diet, overeating and inactivity lead to excess weight and obesity.
Excess weight and obesity lead to pain: physical pain, in terms of an almost endless list of related ailments, and emotional pain and financial pain coming from all those doctor’s bills.
As John Galt so eloquently explained, pain results from efforts to evade the fact that A is A.
In other words, reality is reality—not what you want it to be. Ice cream is not a diet food. Hunger pangs are uncomfortable. Exercise is sweaty. Muscles ache when you work out hard. In other words, losing weight is hard work.
Now, telling people that losing weight requires effort may be true, but it’s a lousy marketing strategy. The way to make diet books and weight-loss products fly off the shelves is to promise something for nothing. Fad diets perpetuate the fantasy that some kind of metabolic magic will melt away pounds without requiring any real effort on the part of the dieter.
But the reason fad diets fail is simple: They shield dieters from the reality that successful, long-term weight management will require a fundamental change in habits, and habits are hard to change. But as the old adage goes: Sow a thought, reap an action; sow an action, reap a habit; sow a habit, reap a destiny. It’s that creation of new, healthier habits that will allow people to take control of their dietary destiny.
Most successful dieters report doing close to an hour of physical activity a day.
Such was the conclusion of the National Weight Control Registry, which tracked more than 5,000 participants to find common keys to successful weight loss among the long-term losers (and better-health winners).
Those in the study lost weight in a variety of ways, but those who kept it off shared a few things in common:
As difficult as the battle of the bulge may be, it can be won. And it’s worth remembering that as hard as it is to balance one’s dietary budget, it will be even tougher to face when the symptoms of heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and other excess weight-related ailments begin to set in.
Or as another pro-reason philosopher, John Locke, once observed: “Hell is truth seen too late.”
So take a fearless look in the mirror, a frequent look at the scale, an honest look at the statistics, and a searching look at your life. The changes you make today will turn into well-worn habits in time, which will, in turn, give you many more years to enjoy your new found health and active lifestyle.
Jennifer Anju Grossman é a CEO da Sociedade Atlas.
Jennifer Anju Grossman — JAG — tornou-se CEO da Atlas Society em março de 2016. Desde então, ela mudou o foco da organização para envolver os jovens com as ideias de Ayn Rand de forma criativa. Antes de ingressar na Atlas Society, ela atuou como vice-presidente sênior da Dole Food Company, lançando o Instituto de Nutrição Dole — uma organização de pesquisa e educação — a pedido do presidente da Dole, David H. Murdock. Ela também atuou como diretora de educação no Instituto Cato e trabalhou em estreita colaboração com o falecido filantropo Theodore J. Forstmann para lançar o Children's Scholarship Fund. Redator de discursos para o presidente George H. W. Bush, Grossman escreveu para publicações nacionais e locais. Ela se formou com honras em Harvard.