Nutrition3 min read
Eating clean. Cutting out junk. Tracking everything. From the outside, it looks like you're doing everything right. But what if the way you're eating is actually making things harder? This happens more often than people think. A diet can look healthy on paper and still leave your body struggling. Here are five signs to watch out for. 1. You're always tired no matter how much you sleep Fatigue that doesn't go away with rest is one of the most common signs that your body isn't getting enough fuel. When you're under-eating or cutting too many food groups, your metabolism slows down to protect you. Your body starts rationing energy. Everything feels heavy and slow even though you're "being good." If you wake up tired, drag through the afternoon, and crash by evening, the problem might not be your sleep. It might be your plate. 2. You're constantly thinking about food If food is on your mind all day long, that's not a willpower problem. That's your body sending hunger signals because it genuinely needs more. Obsessing over what you ate, what you're going to eat, and whether something is "allowed" is a sign that restriction has gone too far. A way of eating that's truly working for you should leave you feeling satisfied enough that food isn't the main thing on your mind. 3. Your hair is falling out more than usual This one surprises people. Hair loss from dieting is very real. When your body doesn't get enough calories, protein, iron, or biotin, it starts directing resources away from things it considers non-essential. Hair is one of them. If you've noticed more hair in the shower or brush than usual and you've been eating very little fat, very little protein, or dramatically cutting calories, the two things are likely connected. 4. You feel worse after eating "clean" than you used to Bloating, low energy, mood dips, and cravings that spiral out of control are not signs of a clean diet working. They're signs of imbalance. Cutting entire food groups like carbs or fats can leave you low in the very nutrients your body needs to feel stable, think clearly, and manage stress. If salads and smoothies are leaving you hungry and foggy an hour later, your meals need more protein and fat, not more restriction. 5. The scale isn't moving even though you're eating very little This is the one that frustrates people the most. When you eat too little for too long, your body adapts by slowing down how many calories it burns. This is a survival response. It's not a character flaw, and it's not a mystery. It's your body protecting itself. Eating more food strategically, especially protein and fiber-rich carbs, can actually help kickstart progress again. What to do with this None of these signs mean you have to give up on healthy eating. They mean the approach needs adjusting. A good eating plan should give you energy, keep you reasonably full, support your mood, and be something you can actually live with. If it's doing the opposite, it's worth reassessing. That's exactly the kind of thing a dietitian can help you untangle. — A dietitian who has seen more people harmed by "healthy eating" than by the odd slice of cake.



