The quip by Quino’s beloved character Mafalda —“They told me I should lose weight; but I hate losing!”— is a small stroke of genius because it exposes a universal misunderstanding: when we talk about dieting, our minds instantly associate it with deprivation, restriction, and loss. And really, who likes to lose anything?
Perhaps that’s precisely why so many diets fail before they even begin, because they are born from a sense of sacrifice, from a battle against oneself.
But what if we flipped the perspective? What if we approached the idea of a diet as a way to gain something instead, confidence, self-respect, physical well-being, and, above all, health?
To do so, we need a little more discipline, but not the military kind. As Andrea Giuliodori writes in his book La Svolta, discipline can be seen as “the highest form of self-love.” It means respecting ourselves and our bodies, giving them what truly makes them feel good. It’s not a matter of counting calories, but of changing attitude.
