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Intuitive Eating: a Revolutionary Anti Diet Approach

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Paperback

Published June 23, 2020

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About the author

Evelyn Tribole

32 books161 followers
Evelyn Tribole, MS, RD is an award-winning registered dietitian, with a nutrition counseling practice in Newport Beach, California. She has written seven books including the bestsellers Healthy Homestyle Cooking and Intuitive Eating(co-author). Her newest book is the Ultimate Omega-3 Diet.

Evelyn was the nutrition expert for Good Morning America, appearing from 1994-’95 and was a national spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association for 6 years. She was contributing editor for Shape magazine where her monthly column, Recipe Makeovers, appeared for 11 years.

She is often sought by the media for her nutritional expertise and has appeared on hundreds of interviews, including: CNN, Today Show, MSNBC, Fox News, USA Today, Wall St. Journal and People magazine.

As a speaker, Evelyn is passionate and has been called, "Wonderfully wise and funny", whether providing a keynote or full-day workshop.

Achievements and honors include, receiving the American Dietetic Association’s Award for Excellence in Private Practice. Many national magazines have rated Evelyn as one of the best nutritionists in the country including: Self, Harper’s Bazaar, and Redbook magazine.

Professional memberships include: the Am. Dietetic Assoc., International Society for Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids, the Celiac Disease Foundation, and the Academy for Eating Disorders.

Evelyn qualified for the Olympic Trials in the first ever women’s marathon in 1984. Although she no longer competes, Evelyn runs for fun and is an avid skier and hiker. She also enjoys surfing, kayaking and white water rafting. Evelyn’s favorite food is chocolate, when it can be savored slowly.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Jessica.
103 reviews
July 12, 2024
I have some mixed feelings about this book. I appreciate that it’s a whole different way of thinking about eating, and I think it’s a needed corrective for our culture’s screwed up attitudes toward food, dieting, fat phobia, etc. For me personally, it’s not a giant epiphany - I think I’m already an intuitive eater, for the most part (could use some tweaking here and there). But it served as validation for me that dieting doesn’t work and I’m not a failure for giving up on attempt after attempt to lose weight. So I think that course correction is valuable for my own mental health (freedom from inevitable disappointment, guilt, shame, etc.)

However, the authors never address the very real health risks of obesity/overweight. It’s well documented that carrying extra weight increases risks of many diseases and shortens life span. We know this. If we are to leave diet culture behind (a worthy goal) and never trouble ourselves about safe, sustainable ways of losing weight, how are we to manage the resulting risks? The book never even touches on this aspect of health care and management, so in some ways I think this avoidance just fuels the confusion that many people feel when it comes to eating healthfully. There is also little to no advice on how to deal with health care professionals who focus on their patients’ weight to the exclusion of all else, or who focus on problematic measures such as BMI. I don’t want to have to educate my physician on why BMI is BS when I’m really there for some other problem (hypothetical example, my actual doctor is pretty awesome).

One more quibble I have is that the chapter on movement is pretty thin (no pun intended) and not really all that helpful. This is an area that’s actually the biggest struggle for me personally, and I didn’t really get any new insight on what might be behind that and how to address it in a way that’s in line with the Intuitive Eating philosophy. Or I should say, I would have liked this chapter to go a bit deeper.

Overall, I think this is a good resource for anyone who struggles with yo-yo dieting and a messed up relationship with food. It’s a good start in healing that relationship, but I think it’s only part of the whole story.
Profile Image for Betsy.
1,785 reviews85 followers
September 13, 2025
Some parts of this book I thoroughly enjoyed--and benefited--from. 5 stars for those.

Other parts felt incomplete or worded so "correctly" that they were unhelpful or just didn't say anything. (Body positivity isn't bad, but there are real health risks associated with genuine obesity.)

Profile Image for marg.
25 reviews
December 6, 2024
Embarrassed that i read this but honestly really good stuff
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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