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There are, we all know, certain foods groups that are good for the human body. Many modern dietary and healthy eating regimes, particularly those endorsed by celebrities, will tell us to cut out one particular food group in favor of another. The most famous example of this, of course, is the Atkins Diet, which encouraged followers to abandon carbohydrates wherever possible and focus instead on ingesting protein. The diet (which masqueraded as a healthy eating plan) had many followers, people
queuing up to endorse its benefits and show off their new slimmer figures and healthier bodies.
Yet this kind of eating and dieting is not good for the body long term. The reason the food groups exist is because the human body needs to take nutrients from them all, not just one. If, in the case of the Atkins diet, one merely dismisses carbohydrates as 'evil' and protein as 'good', you are not actually doing yourself any favors at all.
Diets and eating plans like this may have taught the populace to believe that certain food groups are 'bad', and should be avoided at all costs. Carbohydrates were the victim of the Atkins diet, while less extreme examples include eating plans professing to be "no fat" or "no calorie". While you may lose weight and temporarily feel better on such a diet, it is not going to work in the long term.
Did you know that the human digestive system gets its energy from carbohydrates? Or that certain fats are necessary to sustain a decent level of human function? What about calories - the dieting industry would have you believe calories are the more enemy - and their vital role in breaking down sugars and providing energy throughout the day?
Eliminate one of these food groups, and you have eliminated the benefits that that food group has. This is why the phrase 'balanced diet' has become so important, to those who want to genuinely change their eating habits for healthy reasons - not quickly lose a few pounds so they fit in to a party dress. There is a tendency to associate weight loss with health, but that definitely is not the case. For a truly healthy body, your diet must be balanced.
That means - shock horror! - that no food group is 'evil'. Your diet should include a mixture of all groups, eaten in moderation, and mixed together to create a total way of eating that provides all the energy and nutrients that your body needs.

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