Caloric Restrictive Diets Do Not Work Over the Long Term
A 25 year review of the effectiveness of caloric restrictive diets in sustaining long term weight loss reports a 97% failure rate. So why...
The theme of great hunger remains an underlying cause in the study of obesity and depression. INSATIABLE posits—using many authoritative sources—that the human soul loves beauty and desires it, seeking the appeasing fragrances of nature’s beauty (Younghusband, 1921), to quiet the turbulence, at least in the first step. The book’s unique exploration of monasteries and the silence that dwells in them offers a remarkably simple remedy to the reader’s hunger in a rather frenetic world.
U.S. society, since the 1970s, has had a high interest in weight loss as evidenced by the sale of millions of diet books, yet despite this, obesity trends continued to increase. Overall efficacy of caloric-restrictive diets varies between 1-3% when measured over 5 to 7 years after completing the diet. Weight loss diets have clearly failed Americans. Could it be that caloric restrictive diets are actually driving the growth of the obesity epidemic?
INSATIABLE identifies the obesity epidemic more as a symptom of a much more profound social malaise than organic disease. This unique analysis of what has been until now primarily a medical condition attributes this social malady—now defining American society— as a deep insatiable hunger that drives chronic diseases, medical epidemics, and social unrest. Using many interpretive lenses, Dr. Bissonnette draws the reader into an in-depth exploration of many other epidemics such as depression, anxiety, substance abuse, adverse childhood expe-riences, hopelessness, and loneliness, now peppering the American landscape.
It is simply no longer tenable to argue that obesity is a diversity issue. It is a medical problem of colossal proportions, that just simply will not go away, unless the deep-rooted origins of this epidemic are exposed—something INSATIABLE successfully does. The book uncovers the historical record confirming that the obesity crisis grew during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries when the cultural celebration of gluttony began among the aristocracies of Europe; it was a celebration of vice that carried over to the 19th century right up until our present times.
As a nation, we have a deep-rooted hunger for food that created an obesity epidemic that has brought our healthcare costs to the brink of insolvency. What is driving this hunger? We are spiritual souls that hunger for truth, who desire to possess truth, and all are given graces to ascend to truth himself, God.
Documentary
Explore how nutrition and spirituality conspire together to offer a complete understanding of the modern-day obesity epidemic, and a long-lasting remedy.