
By Jennifer Whitmire, MS, MEd, MH, CHES, NEP
For years, I believed that there was a perfect diet. I thought that if I just read another book, went to another conference, completed one more training program, and studied more research, I would find it. There has to be an optimal way for human beings to eat.
That seemed like a reasonable assumption. Nutrition science was advancing so rapidly. New research was being published every day. New headlines with experts who appeared confident in their recommendations. Every dietary approach seemed to come with compelling evidence, enthusiastic advocates, and success stories.
The more I learned; however, the less certain I became.
One headline promoted a low-fat diet, and another stated that healthy fats were essential for optimal health. Some experts stated that whole grains are a dietary staple and must be included, while others said grains are problematic and not essential. One camp stressed animal protein and said vegan diets are dangerous, while another pointed to populations who have been thriving on plant-based diets for millennia.
Each study contained elements of truth, but they also had limitations. What I eventually realized was that many of these experts were asking different questions, studying different populations, and measuring different outcomes. It was not always that one side was right and the other was wrong. Often they were looking at different pieces of a much larger puzzle.
What felt confusing eventually became one of the most important lessons of my professional life.
Looking back, my belief in a perfect diet was not entirely unreasonable. My education taught me that science is a process of asking questions, gathering evidence, and moving closer to answers. If we can identify the causes of disease, understand physiology, and study populations over time, shouldn’t we eventually be able to determine the optimal way for human beings to eat?
That was my expectation.
The more I studied nutrition; however, the more I realized that nutrition science is not simply the study of food. It is the study of food interacting with uniquely individual human beings. Genetics, early-life exposures, stress, sleep, activity level, medications, digestive health, and the microbiome all make a difference.
What began to emerge was not a single answer, but a deeper appreciation for complexity.
My quest for the ONE perfect diet should have been, “What’s the best diet for ME? What’s the best diet for this person born by emergency C section, exposed to countless antibiotics, a lifetime of excess fluoride treatments and dental exams, a history of gestational diabetes, these genetics, 2 c-sections, high stress, and an ACEs score of 5?”
The Appeal of Certainty
Human beings are naturally drawn to certainty.
We, especially me, like clear rules and straightforward answers. We prefer knowing precisely what to do. It is comforting to believe that health can be reduced to a simple formula.
Eat this. Don’t eat that.
Follow these steps, and achieve this outcome.
Unfortunately, our bodies rarely behave so neatly.
As both a health educator and someone who has navigated her own autoimmune journey, I have learned that human health is influenced by an extraordinary number of variables. Genetics, sleep, stress, activity level, medications, environment, digestive health, microbiome, food quality, and social factors all play a role.
Nutrition is vitally important, but it does not operate independently of everything else.
Two people can follow the same dietary pattern and experience very different results. One person may thrive while the other may struggles.
The difference is not necessarily the diet but the individualities of the person.

My Graves’ Disease Diagnosis Changed the Conversation
When I found out that I had Graves’ disease, nutrition became much more personal. I needed to know WHY?!
Like many people facing a health challenge, I wanted answers. I was no longer studying nutrition purely from an academic perspective. I wanted to know what would help me feel better. What could I do to prove to these doctors that I didn’t need meds for the rest of my life?
At first, I approached the problem the same way I had approached many others. I searched for information.
I dove into the research. I attended lectures and conferences. I studied every dietary philosophy. I became my own experiment with various approaches.
As I shared in Why Giving Up Dairy Was Harder Than Giving Up Meat, the process of changing my diet taught me that food is much more than nutrients.
Those experiences were valuable, and they taught me a lot about food, physiology, and individual variation. They also taught me that no single dietary plan has all the answers.
Some strategies were helpful for a little while then backfired. Others were not helpful at all. Some interventions addressed specific symptoms but were not sustainable.
I began to realize that I had been looking for the wrong answer. Instead of searching for the perfect diet, I needed to understand the principles that consistently supported health across different populations and different circumstances.
What Healthy Populations Taught Me
I love the study of food in terms of longevity and traditional dietary patterns. If there truly were a single perfect diet, we would expect healthy populations around the world to eat the same way.
That is not what we find.
First, the Mediterranean diet is touted as the best, but communities around the Mediterranean don’t all eat the same way. When we compare healthy centenarians around the world, the traditional diets of the Mediterranean communities are different from traditional diets of Okinawan communities. Rural populations in Central America, specifically Costa Rico, eat differently from those in Scandinavia. Even within a single country, dietary patterns may vary significantly according to geography, culture, climate, and food availability.
The foods are different, but the dietary patterns are not. Rather than searching for the perfect diet, I began focusing on simple ways to eat more whole foods and vegetables consistently.
Healthy populations tend to eat diets centered on minimally processed foods consume fewer ultra-processed foods, with plant foods making up a substantial portion of what they eat. They have more foods that remain close to their natural form like you find in the produce department or the local food stand. They generally consume lots of plant foods, including vegetables, legumes, herbs, fruits, nuts, and seeds. Meals are cooked at home. Food remains connected to family, culture, and community.
These observations fascinate me, because they don’t focus on individual foods. It’s not that these foods should be included and those are “bad.” We need to pay attention to how an overall way of eating supports health.

The Difference Between a Therapeutic Diet and a Healthy Diet
A therapeutic diet is designed to accomplish a specific purpose.
- An elimination diet may help identify food sensitivities.
- A low-FODMAP diet may help reduce digestive symptoms.
- An autoimmune protocol may help identify sensitivities and provide useful information during a period of healing.
- A ketogenic diet may have therapeutic applications in insulin resistance, cognitive concerns, or digestive concerns during a short period.
These approaches can be valuable tools, but a therapeutic intervention is not intended to be used in the long term.
This is where many people get confused. They discover a dietary strategy that feels good and helps address a particular problem at the moment, and they assume it must therefore be the ideal way to eat forever.
In reality, the purpose of many therapeutic diets is to gather information, reduce symptoms, or support a specific goal. This helps with healing and removing symptoms so a longer-term strategy can be created.
Long-term health requires a broader perspective. It requires considering nutritional adequacy, sustainability, quality of life, cultural preferences, social connection, and the question of whether a person can realistically maintain the approach and obtain health.
What I Focus On Today
After years of studying health and working with clients, my approach has become considerably simpler.
Not simplistic, but simpler.
I spend far less time examining dietary ideologies and more time focusing on principles that consistently support health.
I pay attention to food quality.
I prioritize vegetables, legumes, dark leafy greens, herbs, fruits, nuts, and seeds.
I read ingredient lists. (My #1 Rule!)
I think about fiber.
I consider blood sugar balance and glycemic load of foods.
I pay attention to how foods affect energy, digestion, and overall health.
Most importantly, I focus on overall patterns, not isolated choices. One meal isn’t going to hurt or heal very much (UNLESS you have a food allergy or sensitivity! 1 meal with gluten can have a HUGE impact on me!)
One week of food choices (healthy or unhealthy) can really make a difference. A year or years of certain foods makes the most difference.
Health is rarely determined by a single food or a single decision. When I’m traveling or at a celebration, I tend to let certain foods and ingredients slide. Health is shaped by the cumulative effect of countless choices made over time.

The Lesson I Wish More People Understood
The wellness industry rewards novelty, and influencers are excellent at marketing and grabbing attention.
There is always a new diet, a new protocol, a promising new supplement, and a new miracle promise.Many of the habits most consistently associated with health have remained unchanged.
These recommendations are not particularly exciting or sexy:
- Eat more foods that resemble food.
- Include a variety of plant foods.
- Move your body regularly.
- Sleep.
- Manage stress.
- Cultivate meaningful relationships.
- Cook at home when possible.
Repeat those habits enough that they become part of daily life.
The foundations of health don’t make headlines, but they are necessary and powerful. Their power lies in their consistency.
Looking back, the healthiest thing I ever did was stop searching for the perfect diet. That decision allowed me to focus on something more useful: understanding the principles that support health regardless of the latest trend.
In the end, I discovered that the goal was learning how to fuel a human body for a lifetime.



Leave a comment