Wired to Eat: Turn Off Cravings, Rewire Your Appetite for Weight Loss, and Determine the Foods That Work for You

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars | 1,151 ratings

Price: 15.75

Last update: 07-17-2024


Top reviews from the United States

Rachel Higgins
5.0 out of 5 stars Spectacular Book!
Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2017
Disclosure: I'm a big Robb Wolf fan and a low-carb practitioner, so I did not exactly sit down to read this book as an outsider or as a critic or a skeptic. That said, I have been disappointed by the last three ancestral health related books I have read (each by authors who were writing their "next" book) so I did open the work a little concerned that it might kind of suck.

I read the first 60 pages or so in print, then shifted to the audiobook version for the next several chapters, then finished up with the print version. I thought the audiobook version was excellent. The narrator did a great job representing Robb's "voice." In fact, it might be the most I've ever enjoyed an audiobook that was not read by the actual author. The authors always do it best themselves, but the reader Kaleo Griffith deserves an honorable mention here.

As for style points, Robb mixed in just about the right amount of anecdotes, mild profanity and comic relief to keep me engaged even through some of the heavier content. There was a little too much, "In this book, you will learn" stuff in the first chapter or two, but that ironed out quickly once the introductions were over. And the book didn't beat me to death with gobs of basic stuff I already knew. The paleo sales pitch was barely there, which was great. Robb didn't just retread The Paleo Solution with a few new paragraphs and some updated geek speak. In fact, I was left with the feeling that he wrote this book for me and the thousands of mes he likely deals with all the time.

"Dude, paleo is awesome! I totally believe it, and I feel great when I do it! But then I get bored or sloppy or drink too much or I'm weak or whatever, and so I'm still a little fat and lazy after four years on a f***ing diet..." I can relate to this silliness, and I felt like the book both acknowledged my existence and offered me a fresh way to look at my own approach to diet.

For the beginner, the content is spot on and consistent in every detail with the ancestral health philosophies on food, sleep, sun, movement and healthy human interaction. His chapter on cheating and his section on the 30-Day Reset are some of the best health writing I have ever personally read. I believe the 7-Day Carb Test (which I will soon do for myself) will eventually become low-carb canon. And he even throws in almost 100 pages of recipes if you're into that sort of thing. The references and index are thorough, so you can do some further reading or easily look up a good Robb Wolf quote.

Wired is not a picture book full of oversimplifications and over-promises. It will ask you to work for what you earn, but it's written so well that it won't feel too much like work. In fact, if you're an unserious sicky or fatty who is not yet ready to make a change, I'm not sure I even want you to read this book yet. Read something else for now and come back to this one when you're plugged in. If you are ready though, this book is going to make a ton of sense to you. As Robb says in the book, "If you give the program and, more specifically, yourself a chance, you might be shocked by what you can achieve."

If the goal in writing this book was to help serious people understand why they have health and weight struggles and then help them to understand how they can best determine for themselves how turn things around in a lasting way, then Robb Wolf crushed it with Wired to Eat.
Tuit Nutrition
5.0 out of 5 stars Can't eat just one? You're not alone. Find out why!
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2017
Can’t eat just one? Welcome to the club. You’re not supposed to be able to eat just one. Whatever your Achilles heel—donuts, cookies, chips, ice cream, gummy bears—people build entire careers out *making sure* you can’t eat just one. So you can beat yourself up for being unable to muster a single molecule of willpower, or you can read this book and learn that you are actually an elegantly arranged organism that evolved under environmental and dietary circumstances that make it a rarity *not* to have issues with food. (Or weight, blood sugar, blood pressure, infertility, gout, mental clarity, and more.) In this age of a seemingly infinite supply of extremely inexpensive and, frankly, insanely delicious foods that didn’t even exist a hundred years ago, if you are healthy, lean, and fit, you are the exception, not the rule.

In Wired to Eat, well-known Paleo diet and ancestral health authority Robb Wolf explains why it’s so easy to be satiated after a pork chop and sautéed zucchini, but it’s darn near impossible to resist the siren song of things like kettle corn or honey-roasted peanuts, which combine sweet, salty, fatty, and crunchy all in one bite. Through millennia of evolutionary conditioning, we are literally “wired to eat” foods that provide large amounts of things the supply of which was very valuable but possibly unpredictable: fat, salt, and sweet. Millions of years ago, this served us well. In the 21st century, it’s killing us. And you don’t even have to go to the store anymore. You can have delivered right to your doorstep a bounty of palate-pleasing creations the likes of which would have been an unimaginable bonanza to our hominid ancestors by expending no more effort than clicking a mouse or pressing buttons on your phone.

So what do we DO about it? Following the very simple and straightforward plan Robb lays out, you can reset your appetite signaling in 30 days using a basic Paleo template. Once you’re off the sugar rollercoaster and you’re experiencing healthy blood sugar, steady energy, and clear thinking—maybe for the first time in your life—then you take things a step further and use Robb’s 7-day carb test to identify your individual carbohydrate tolerance in order to tailor a diet that’s best for *you.* (News flash: not everyone needs to follow a super-strict low carb diet in order to remain metabolically healthy.) Using nothing more than a drugstore glucometer, you’ll have numerical explanations as to why you get sleepy after a high-carb breakfast, or why you’ve struggled for decades to lose weight while eating lots of “healthy whole grains.”

This book is written in Robb’s inimitable down-to-earth style. You feel like he’s sitting in your living room having a (gluten-free) beer while you shoot the breeze and he takes away the guilt and shame you’ve felt for not being able to eat two Girl Scout cookies and then close the box and forget about them. (No one can.) Don’t beat yourself up for going up against your hard-wired biological impulses, and failing. But that was in the past. With Wired to Eat, you’ll understand *why* it’s so difficult to eat certain things in moderation, and that this doesn’t make you weak, lazy or greedy. It makes you human. But after reading this book, you’ll no longer be able to plead ignorance. You’ll know which foods ring these bells for you, and you can decide for yourself whether you’re able to limit your intake of them, or whether you are best served by avoiding them completely.

If I have one complaint about this book, it’s that I wanted it to be more technical. I *wanted* the nitty gritty scientific details. The tone is very casual, and it’s obvious that Robb wrote it not to cater to the Paleo and low carb crowds who already know most of this stuff. He wrote it for the people who don’t want to be inundated with biochemical jargon. It’s for people who want to get in, learn something quickly and powerfully, and get out. I am a huge nerd, though, and I would have wanted to “geek out” more on the details, so what to me is a drawback, is actually a selling point for most *normal* people.

Bottom line: If you or a friend or family member feels hopeless because food—sugar and starch, in particular—is controlling their life, and you or they feel stuck in a cycle of binging, restricting, guilt, shame, and self-punishment, this book will help you understand that it’s not your fault. But once you know *why* it’s not your fault, it’s up to you to do something about it. Robb walks you through both steps using language that is fun, casual, and *readable,* while at the same time delivering enough science that you’ll take this all seriously.
Lisa
4.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended for those wanting more info on metabolic/digestive health issues and healthful eating
Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2017
Four stars because I haven't finished reading it yet. It is packed with really useful information, stuff I wish I had known years ago. Very helpful for those who struggle with weight and for diabetics to understand the issues around carbohydrates and blood sugar that doctors often don't tell you, if they even know. Hard to believe he had such health issues at one point, but that's probably what motivated him to achieve the success and knowledge he has. Plus, he's very funny! The book is well written and very interesting. I recommend this book if you have weight problems, insulin resistance, constant hunger, sugar addiction, diabetes, intestinal problems, or are just really interested in delving into a Paleo or Keto lifestyle. He talks about those in fair depth. He includes some science in his discussions, but it's not overwhelming. Just enough to provided background evidence and really support his points. A good read!

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