Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Books That Help in Weight Loss

The millions of books that deal with weight loss have not always helped the customers to come to terms with their body size or their food intake levels. Rather they have drastically increased the stress levels for the people concerned and ensured that there is virtually little chance of achieving inner peace if they follow all the advice that is given by the so called gurus that know nothing about the business or the human body. Besides there are plenty of charlatans that are only too happy to exploit the general public under the guise that they are providing weight control advice to the public. This is sometimes nothing more than yet another fallacy designed to keep the people in captivity on the ransom of cooperation with the diet and weight loss industries.

No one seems to mind that the general public is being fleeced from time to time by people that really have no business writing books but then go onto the market with their half baked ideas on the basis that they have ever had a weight loss issue that they have resolved. The celebrities have also joined the band wagon with their different and improbable tales of how they lost weight in an amazingly short time despite the fact that they have twenty four hour care from the army of advisers and other helpers that ensure that they only get the best services on offer. It is an absolute disgrace that no one in the weight loss industry is taking the time to put a stop to all this nonsense that is going on in the guise of trying to help the general public.

It should become a basic requirement that anyone that dares to write a book has an understanding of how that book impacts on the general public and that they are made aware of all the alternative views on how to lose weight and remain healthy. It ought to be a matter of course that there is plenty of research that goes on in the background before someone can public a book about anything. The alternative is a system that is broken and one that does not have the moral basis to tell people how to live their lives or lose weight. Dealing with the inconsistencies of the diet industry has to always remain a priority for everyone concerned. There is no cause or justification for complacency.