The Core Claims in Aubrey Gordon’s Latest Book

Aubrey Gordon’s newest release continues her advocacy for body neutrality and critiques of the diet industry. She argues that intentional weight loss is both ineffective and harmful, citing high regain rates and psychological damage. I’ve spent two decades reviewing clinical data on midlife metabolic changes. While Gordon raises valid concerns about yo-yo dieting, the research shows a more nuanced picture than outright rejection of all weight management.

What Large-Scale Studies Actually Reveal About Weight Loss Outcomes

The Look AHEAD trial followed over 5,000 adults with type 2 diabetes for nearly 10 years. Participants who lost just 7% of body weight and kept it off reduced cardiovascular events by 20% and improved blood pressure control dramatically. This directly contradicts Gordon’s assertion that all intentional loss fails. Similarly, the Diabetes Prevention Program showed sustained 5-7% weight reduction cut diabetes incidence by 58% in adults aged 45-54.

However, Gordon correctly highlights metabolic adaptation. After significant loss, resting metabolic rate can drop 15-20% beyond what’s predicted by new body mass. My own methodology, outlined in The Midlife Reset, addresses this by pairing modest 1-2 lb weekly loss with resistance training three times weekly to preserve muscle and limit adaptation. Joint pain, a top concern for our readers, improves measurably at even 10% body weight reduction according to Arthritis Foundation data.

Hormonal Changes, Set Point Theory, and Practical Reality

Perimenopausal women face declining estrogen that shifts fat storage to visceral areas and slows metabolism by roughly 100 calories daily after age 45. Gordon leans heavily on set point theory, yet randomized trials show that while the body defends a range, consistent behavioral changes can reset it over 12-18 months. The National Weight Control Registry tracks 10,000+ individuals who’ve maintained 30+ lb loss for five years; 98% modified both eating and activity patterns.

Insurance barriers and time constraints are real. That’s why my approach emphasizes three 20-minute strength sessions and simple plate-method meals—no complex plans required. For those managing diabetes and hypertension alongside weight, the research is clear: losing 5-10% improves A1C by 0.6-1.2 points and systolic blood pressure by 5-10 mmHg.

Balanced Path Forward: Evidence Over Ideology

Gordon’s book shines when exposing diet culture’s emotional toll, a pain many in our community know too well after repeated failures. Yet dismissing all evidence-based weight management ignores the lived health improvements millions experience. The anti-diet movement’s intuitive eating shows strong mental health benefits in studies, but physical outcomes vary widely without structure. My recommendation: blend compassionate self-acceptance with sustainable habits that respect your hormones, joints, and schedule. Small, consistent changes beat perfection every time.