Episode 56:The Portion Distortion Problem: How We Were Taught to Overeat
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About this listen
Picture this: You sit down at a restaurant, and the platter that lands in front of you could easily feed a family of four. You grab a muffin for breakfast, only to realize it’s the size of a small cake. Or maybe you order a medium soda, and it’s so large it could double as a flotation device. This is the modern food landscape—a world where excess has become the norm and our understanding of what qualifies as a single serving has been completely warped.
You might think the amount you eat is a conscious choice, dictated solely by how hungry you feel. But the harsh reality is that we’ve all been participants in a decades-long experiment in consumption, led by the food industry. And the results of this experiment? They’re all around us, evident in the global obesity crisis. The gradual and deliberate inflation of portion sizes—a phenomenon known as portion distortion—is one of the most insidious forces driving overeating. It’s not just that we’re eating more food; it’s that our brains and bodies have been systematically retrained to expect and consume far more than we actually need to thrive.
This didn’t happen by accident. It was, in fact, a calculated business strategy. The food industry realized they could maximize profits by upsizing portions and marketing the illusion of better value. And so, over the years, portion sizes ballooned—not just in restaurants, but in packaged goods, fast food chains, and even grocery store staples. Suddenly, a single-serving bag of chips could rival a meal in calories, and a value meal became a ticket to overeating disguised as a good deal.
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