Nutrition is drowning in fads, and the fundamentals are simpler and more stable than any trend. Understanding a few evidence-based principles — energy balance and what the macronutrients actually do — explains most of what matters and immunises you against the next miracle diet.
Energy balance is the foundation
Body weight is governed, at the most basic level, by energy balance: energy consumed versus energy expended. A surplus is stored; a deficit draws on reserves. Diets "work" when they create a sustainable deficit — the mechanism behind low-carb, intermittent fasting, and calorie counting alike is usually the same underlying deficit, dressed differently.
The three macronutrients
- Protein — builds and repairs tissue, supports immune function, and is the most satiating macronutrient. Adequate protein matters especially when losing weight, to preserve muscle.
- Carbohydrates — the body's preferred quick energy source. Quality matters: fibre-rich whole-food carbs behave very differently from refined sugar, despite the same "carb" label.
- Fat — essential for hormones, cell membranes, and absorbing fat-soluble vitamins. The type matters more than demonising fat wholesale.
Most diet debates are arguments about how to achieve an energy deficit and adequate protein — not about whether those fundamentals hold.
Fibre and micronutrients
Fibre — found in vegetables, fruit, legumes, and whole grains — aids digestion, feeds gut bacteria, and increases fullness. Micronutrients (vitamins and minerals) don't provide energy but are essential for the processes that do. A varied, mostly whole-food diet covers most micronutrient needs without supplements.
How to spot a fad
- It bans an entire macronutrient or food group as uniquely "toxic."
- It promises rapid, effortless results.
- It relies on a single study or a testimonial rather than the weight of evidence.
The unglamorous truth — mostly whole foods, enough protein, plenty of fibre, an energy intake matched to your goal — outperforms almost every branded plan, and it's sustainable.
This is general education, not medical or dietary advice; consult a qualified professional for individual guidance.
Build real nutrition literacy
My Nutrition Science course works through energy balance, macros and micros, and how to read evidence — so you can judge any diet claim for yourself.
View the Nutrition course →Questions
Is one macronutrient bad for you?
No — protein, carbohydrate, and fat all serve essential functions. Quality and quantity matter far more than eliminating a whole macronutrient.
Do I need supplements?
For most people eating a varied whole-food diet, no. Specific deficiencies or conditions are a matter for a qualified professional.