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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Dealing with Food Jerks

    Last Modified: Feb 10, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท 1 Comment

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    Hereโ€™s a couple of comments you might be familiar with, especially if youโ€™ve experienced noticeable physical changes since starting Paleo:

    • โ€œWhy canโ€™t you just eat pizza like a normal person? This Paleo thing is so extreme. Just eat in moderation." (5 minutes later) "Why are you taking the croutons off your salad? Stop being so weird; itโ€™s not going to kill you." [Rinse and repeat for every single thing you eat]
    • (While youโ€™re still nowhere near your weight goal) โ€œYouโ€™ve lost enough weight already. You should stop now. Youโ€™ll get too thin and waste away!โ€
    • โ€œYouโ€™re already skinny; just shut up and eat itโ€ [puts junk food on your plate or pushes it towards you]
    • โ€œYou know Paleo is just a fad diet; youโ€™ll never lose weight that way. You really need to count calories like my nutritionist says.โ€
    • โ€œOoooh, look whoโ€™s got a ~Paleo~ lunch today! Howโ€™s the mammoth steak?โ€

    Of course, not all comments about your food or diet are intended to put you down or control you. Some people are casually curious; some people are impressed by your progress and want to know how you did it; some people are just making conversation on the first topic that comes to mind. But if the comments are obviously invasive or rude, or if the person just wonโ€™t let it drop after you ask them to, youโ€™re probably dealing with a Food Jerk.

    Itโ€™s Not About You

    Food Jerks are (unfortunately) talking to you, but their comments really have nothing to do with you. Everything a Food Jerk says is all about the jerk.

    Emotionally secure and well-adjusted adults do not make intrusive comments about other peopleโ€™s food or bodies. They donโ€™t harass people about their food, give uninvited critiques of their diet, or try to push them to eat things after an initial refusal. They can accept that what works for them might not work for you, and vice versa, and they donโ€™t feel the need to control your weight or diet, because they recognize that itโ€™s really none of their business.

    On the other hand, people who are insecure will try to control you or bully you into agreeing with them so they can feel validated. Maybe they feel guilty about eating something they think is unhealthy, so theyโ€™re trying to get you to eat it too because that gives them โ€œpermissionโ€ to eat it. Maybe theyโ€™re jealous of the healthy changes youโ€™re making, because it makes them feel inadequate for not doing the same, and itโ€™s easier to tear you down than build themselves up.

    Maybe they feel insecure in their relationship, and you represent the theoretical โ€œhot other man/womanโ€ who might โ€œstealโ€ their partner if you get more attractive. Maybe theyโ€™re just miserable for some reason, so they put you down or try to control you as a power trip so they can feel good about themselves.

    Whatever the reason, a Food Jerkโ€™s behavior is all about them. It has nothing to do with you.

    If You Didnโ€™t Cause it, You Canโ€™t Fix It

    The natural response to a Food Jerk is to argue with them. Unfortunately, this doesnโ€™t work, because the root cause of their behavior is insecurity, and you canโ€™t fix their insecurity with an argument about Paleo nutrition.

    It doesnโ€™t matter how good your arguments are. If they have a compelling psychological need to believe the way they do, you canโ€™t change their mind with facts. They will always find a way to refuse to believe you.

    What to do instead? Disengage. Youโ€™re not responsible for their feelings or food issues. If theyโ€™re going to be nasty, controlling, or cruel as a result of their insecurity, you canโ€™t change that. Your job is simply to protect yourself from their behavior.

    Refuse to engage on their terms.

    A Food Jerk wants to engage with you on the premise that they have some kind of legitimate say in what you eat. But they donโ€™t. Itโ€™s your absolute right as an adult to eat whatever you want, for whatever reasons you want. It doesnโ€™t matter whether or not itโ€™s healthy by anyoneโ€™s definition. You donโ€™t need to justify your dietary choices to anyone but yourself. If you want to get involved in a nutritional debate, thatโ€™s fine, but you never have to.

    Unfortunately, if theyโ€™re making controlling or intrusive comments in the first place, they probably donโ€™t understand that, so here are some tips on Jerk Management:

    Deflect with I-Statements

    Start by phrasing everything in terms of how you feel and what works for you (also called โ€œI statementsโ€).

    Donโ€™t say โ€œPaleo is healthyโ€ (even though it is). Say โ€œYou might love whole-wheat toast and thatโ€™s totally fine, but it makes me feel sick and I feel better without it.โ€ This cuts down on their defensiveness (since youโ€™re very clearly not threatening their right to eat whatever they want), and itโ€™s very hard to argue with that without sounding insane.

    For extreme busybodies who just wonโ€™t accept โ€œI would rather not eat that food,โ€ hint at traumatic gastrointestinal consequences. Nobody wants to hear about your bloody diarrhea, particularly at the dinner table.

    Change the Subject

    paleo 12eggs
    "Hmm, so your theory is that animal protein causes all disease. That's interesting. Hey, I wanted to ask you though, did you see what happened at the game last night? It was so ridiculous! OK, so..."

    Another great skill to have when youโ€™re dealing with a Food Jerk is the ability to change the subject. They donโ€™t understand that your food is none of their business, and they won't ever understand it, so just refuse to talk about food.

    Remember that this is already after you've tried the "I'd rather not talk about my diet" line once (if they're fine with that and move on to other topics, they're not a Food Jerk to start with), so it's OK to be a little blunt about it.

    • If they think they know the One True Way to Eat, useโ€ฆthe appeal to authority: โ€œThanks, but my health/weight/diet is between me and my doctorโ€ [change the subject]
    • For an all-purpose response to comments on the healthiness of your diet, useโ€ฆthe noncommittal subject change: โ€œThatโ€™s interesting.โ€ [change the subject] If they call you out on the obvious subject change: "I just told you that I'd really rather not argue about diet." [change the subject again]
    • For food you donโ€™t want to eat, useโ€ฆthe polite but non-negotiable refusal: โ€œNo, thank you.โ€ [Change the subject]
    • For repeat offenders, useโ€ฆthe dog-training method: give them positive attention and enthusiastically engage when they talk about anything else; be brusque to the point of rudeness when they talk about food. Is it offensive to โ€œtrainโ€ a person like a dog? Possibly. But you know what else is offensive? Constantly making rude and invasive comments about your food.

    Again, donโ€™t justify anything you eat for any other reason than โ€œIโ€™m an adult; I eat what I want.โ€ Nothing else is relevant. Refuse to engage on their terms.

    If you canโ€™t disengage, make specific requests.

    With very determined bullies or busybodies, changing the subject doesnโ€™t always work. And sometimes you canโ€™t escape (you canโ€™t just quit your job because your coworker is a Food Jerk). Here are some tips for getting even more direct.

    • Make specific requests for them to stop a specific behavior, phrased in neutral language. Donโ€™t say โ€œStop being a jerk about my diet.โ€ Instead, say โ€œPlease stop commenting on my lunch.โ€
    • Keep using I-statements. โ€œI would appreciate it if youโ€ฆโ€ is not something they can argue with.

    Sometimes, even that doesnโ€™t work. If you really canโ€™t escape, remember that your success is the best revenge you could ever get on a Food Jerk, and surround yourself with other people who support you. Minimize your contact with them and get the support you need to focus on your goals and keep the negativity out of your life as much as you can.

    Summing it Up

    Making positive changes in your own diet often brings out other peopleโ€™s weird fears and insecurities about food in the form of intrusive comments, weird and controlling behavior, or even attempts to sabotage your way of eating.

    This is all about the other person's insecurity, and you canโ€™t change that by arguing on their terms - refuse to let them suck you into an argument based on the premise that they have any say in what you eat. You're an adult; you get to eat what you want. Use I-statements like โ€œthis works for meโ€ to make it hard to argue with you. Then change the subject and just refuse to engage. If they donโ€™t get it, ask them politely but directly to change a specific behavior. Describe the behavior in neutral language to give them fewer reasons to get defensive, and then minimize your exposure to that person as much as possible.

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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Anonymous

      June 06, 2023 at 7:15 pm

      Well written, thank you, this is really helpful to read.

      What about people who treat *you* like a dog, giving praise and encouragement each time they see you mess up on your food choices?... You've already told them you're avoiding sugar because it triggers inflammatory episodes that give you brain fog, fatigue, and pain. And each time they see you doing well on your food choices, they sprinkle in brainwashing statements designed to trigger past addictions, such as "You know what would be so good on that? Some maple syrup!" Or, "What's for dessert?" Or, "Ohhh, chocolate would be so good right now..." Or, "You should try that with sugar on it!" Or, "Have you added any honey? You need to try that!"
      They design their statements so that *they* can't be criticized without you sounding unreasonable. Yet you've already explained that you are making these choices for serious medical reasons, and that your doctor told you that you need to do this, and that it is a big trigger for your inflammatory episodes. Yet the person in question tries to "train" you back onto sugar.
      They are also very pleased, upbeat, and encouraging if they see me eat something junky or sugared. There were times I had to pretend I was using sugar to prevent them from knowing that I was trying to cut back. I live with them and have to continue living with them for awhile. So I need a way to stand in my choices despite being surrounded by an actively manipulative person, and also despite regaining sugar addiction after having my extremely hard work eroded.

      Like you pointed out in the article, their behavior is driven by psychological factors. They are obese, and they saw me go from being obese to just being slightly overweight, and it bothered them. I asked them why they were being this way, and they answered that "you might end up in the hospital and die because you are so thin", even though I explained to them that my doctor was telling me that I'm (still) mildly overweight (but that it was ok and I wasn't upset about that at all-- there's no focus on weight for me, just a desire to live a normal life without chronic pain and brainfog). It's very sad and discouraging. Any advice?

      Reply

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