Shut Up And Choose - STOP DIETING. START CHOOSING.
The weight loss industry hopes you never find this podcast.
Welcome to Shut Up and Choose, the no-nonsense weight loss podcast for busy professionals who are done with diets, gimmicks, and false promises.
I’m Jonathan Ressler — Amazon bestselling author of Shut Up and Choose, keynote speaker, and former 411-pound chronic dieter who lost over 140 pounds without dieting, without the gym, and without giving up the foods I love.
This show isn’t about restriction or willpower. It’s about sustainable weight loss, fat loss without diets, and creating real lifestyle change through small, smart, daily choices.
Here, you’ll learn how to:
✔️ Lose weight without tracking calories or starving yourself
✔️ Build healthy habits that last — even with a busy schedule
✔️ Stop the yo-yo dieting cycle once and for all
✔️ Shift your mindset and take back control of your health
✔️ Achieve lasting weight loss results through choice, not deprivation
No detoxes. No diets. No discipline contests.
Just real talk, simple strategies, and a proven system that helps high performers lose weight and keep it off — in real life, with real food, and without giving up the things they love.
Because transformation doesn’t start with willpower — it starts with choice.
If you’re a leader, executive, or high achiever who’s ready to stop dieting and start living, this podcast is for you.
🎧 Subscribe to Shut Up and Choose with Jonathan Ressler, your no-nonsense transformation guide for sustainable weight loss, mindset mastery, and real-world health success.
STOP DIETING. START CHOOSING.
Shut Up And Choose - STOP DIETING. START CHOOSING.
If Diets Worked, You'd Be Done By Now
The calendar doesn’t change your body—your choices do. We dive straight into the uncomfortable truth the diet industry won’t touch: rigid rules feel like discipline until real life shows up. Then they snap, and you blame yourself. We break that cycle and show you how to build control that actually survives stress, travel, late nights, holidays, and all the messy parts of a real schedule.
I lay out why diets fail by design and why choosing—moment-to-moment ownership of your next smart move—wins every time. We unpack the psychology of all-or-nothing thinking, how perfection turns tiny slips into week-long spirals, and how outsourcing your judgment to plans and apps quietly drains your confidence. Then we get practical: what choosing looks like at breakfast, how to move without punishment, how to keep foods you love without losing control, and how to adapt when the day goes sideways so you never need to “restart Monday” again.
Expect a no-fluff teardown of popular programs—intermittent fasting, keto, paleo, 75 Hard, Whole30, points systems—and a clear path to something better. This is about steady, human choices that bend instead of break, results you can live with, and confidence that grows because outcomes come from you, not from obedience. If you’re done pretending effort equals change and ready to lead yourself through your real life, hit play and step into agency. Subscribe, share with someone who needs a wake-up call, and leave a review to help more people shut up and choose.
Stop Dieting. Start Choosing.
I’m Jonathan Ressler, Transformation Guide and author of Shut Up and Choose. I lost 140 pounds and built a movement the diet industry hopes you never find. No starvation. No obsession. No gym marathons. Real transformation starts when you stop outsourcing discipline and start leading yourself.
The truth is simple: weight loss isn’t about willpower—it’s about integrity. Every time you keep a promise to yourself, you rebuild confidence. Every smart choice strengthens self-trust. That’s the foundation of lasting change. My mission is to help busy, high-performing people take back control of their health, energy, and mindset—without diets, shots, or shame.
Each episode of the Shut Up and Choose Podcast cuts through the noise with real talk, proven strategies, and small, smart steps that actually last. No gimmicks. No hype. Just truth that works in real life.
Get free weekly tips at JonathanRessler.com/weekly-tips.
Click here for my Choice-Weight Analysis
Grab my book Shut Up and Choose on Amazon.
Follow me on Instagram @JonathanResslerFatLoss.
Leave a review—it helps ...
You're listening to Shut Up and Choose. The no bullshit, no excuses podcast for people who swear they want to lose weight, but keep choosing everything that stops them. And before we continue, if you're gonna bitch in Moon and act like a fucking pussy the entire time, skip this one. Listed by Jonathan Ressler. This dude dropped 140 pounds with no shots, no diets, no pills, and not one single fucking membership swipe at the gym. Just real choices that fit real life. If you're tired of gaming, tired of the bullshitting, and ready for somebody to finally call you out and tell you the truth, you are in the right place. This show punches all of them right in its fat face. Stop coming, start choosing. This is Shut Up and Choose. Now, here's Jonathan.
Jonathan Ressler:Hey, welcome back to Shut Up and Choose, the podcast of touching the noise. It's about all the bullshit diet industry. Instagram and Bluetooth, online videos, and all those assholes are thrown away. It's uh it's an ugly world out there. But let's not get caught up in that because hey, it's New Year's Eve today. It's New Year's Eve, and you already know tonight is about to go off the rails. Drinks, food, noise, chaos. You'll listen to this tomorrow, not today, because right now you're too busy pretending Monday is gonna fix your life. But you need this before you step into 2026 thinking a new diet is gonna save you. It will not, it never has, and that's exactly where we're gonna start today. Dieting is the laziest form of pretending, period. People hate hearing that because dieting makes them feel busy. It gives them charts, it gives them rules, it gives them something to point at when they fall apart. It feels productive because it looks organized and it gives you structure without requiring you to think. It asks nothing from you except blind obedience, and that's why most people love it. Dieting removes responsibilities. You get to follow someone else's plan and then blame the plan when you collapse. You get to claim you're committed without making a real single choice. You outsource your power and you call it discipline. And the entire time you're doing it, you know the truth. You know you're not changing, you know you're not building habits, you know you're not learning anything about your behavior. You're repeating the same pattern in a different fucking costume. And dieting guarantees failure every time. Not because you're weak or because your life is chaotic. Diets fail because they were designed to fail. They depend on perfect conditions that do not exist. The second your schedule gets messy, the plan falls apart. The second someone brings food to work, the plan falls apart. The second your energy dips, the plan falls apart. Diets collapse the moment that real life shows up. Look at your own history. Every diet came with the same promise and the same ending. You started strong, you follow the rules, you told everybody how focused you were. I know I've said that hundreds of times, but then life punched a hole in the structure and you had no idea how to adjust. You slip once and declared, hey, the day is ruined. You slip twice and said, Oh, fuck it, the week is over. Then you shop for a new program so you could repeat the problem with a different flavor. Diets look hard. Choosing is hard. Diets feel controlled. Choosing is controlling. Diets give you a script, and choosing forces you to be honest with yourself. This one kills me, but diets tell you what to eat. Choosing teaches you why you eat. Diets hold your hand, because we all need a little hand holding. Choosing actually holds you accountable. This is why you run to diets and run from choice. Choice exposes the truth. You don't want to face your patterns. You don't want to admit how often you surrender your decisions, and you don't want to own the moments. You negotiate yourself straight into chaos. So you pick a diet, you hide behind rules, you tell yourself you're fixed as long as you follow the plan, and you convince yourself structure equals transformation. Well, here's some bad news. If structure worked, you'd be finished by now. Dieting is an illusion of discipline without the growth discipline requires. Diets don't teach you how to handle stress, they don't teach you how to handle travel, how to handle nighttime eating when your day blows up, they don't teach you how to course correct when you fuck up. Diets teach you one thing, and that's dependence. You follow the rules, you lose control, you blame the rules, then you search for new rules over and over, year after year. Meanwhile, you convince yourself you're working hard when all you're doing is repeating the same loop. Choice is the exact opposite. Choice demands honesty, it exposes your habits, it forces you to lead yourself, it builds confidence because you stop handing off your decision, and most importantly, it works in your actual life. In real stress, with real schedules, in real kitchens, eating real food, and this is where my work lands hard. I'm not the person for you if you want to get ripped abs in a second home inside the gym. I show people how to lose weight and get healthy while living real lives with real schedules and real responsibilities. No fantasy world, no performances, and no bullshit. That's why stop dieting and start choosing works. It strips away the nonsense and shows you the truth. Your weight is not shaped by plans, it's shaped by your decisions. Your life changes when you take ownership of those decisions and choices. You already know diets can't give you that. You have enough evidence. Diets pretend to fix you, and choice actually does. So welcome to this episode. I think you're gonna learn a little something. So here's why dieting never works. Notice I didn't say rarely works or not works or works for some people. Dieting works never. People keep trying to outsmart this truth, like one more flavor of the same failed idea will somehow behave differently, but it won't. Dieting fails for one simple reason: it can't survive real life. And real life is where you live. Diets depend on strict rules that only make sense in perfect conditions. Conditions that I know I don't live in, and I'm guessing that you don't have, conditions that really nobody has. The plan looks impressive on paper, and the structure definitely feels safe. Someone hands you a list of what you can and can't eat, and you convince yourself that structure equals success. But the second your job or your family, your schedule, your cravings, your emotion, your travel, I mean, you name it, or stress shows up, the diet cracks. And once it cracks, it collapses. Here is the core problem: diets trap you inside someone else's system, someone else's rules, someone else's idea of your life. Those rules don't come from your habits, they don't come from your patterns, they don't come from how you operate, they come from a template built for imaginary people who always have time, always have energy, always have structure, always have a quiet brain, and never face temptation. You, me, us, we're real people. Our lives don't run on a template. That's why every diet fails the second reality arrives. I don't know, your kids get sick, you're working late, you're stuck in traffic, you're traveling, there's a birthday in the office, the holidays, the week go sideways. Any one of those can snap your perfect plan in half. The diet demands obedience. Your life, on the other hand, demands flexibility, and life wins every fucking time. Once the rigid structure cracks, everything falls apart. First, yeah, I messed up at breakfast, so I'll fix it at lunch. Then lunch falls apart. Then I'll be good tomorrow, then tomorrow collapses, then I'll restart Monday, and Monday collapses. Then you shop for a new diet so you can repeat the exact same bullshit problem with a fresh set of rules. You think you're failing and you think you lack discipline, and you think that you're the problem, but you're not. The diet failed the moment real life showed up. Diets only work when everything is calm and predictable. Do you live a calm, predictable life? Right, exactly. My point. So choosing is the opposite. Choosing adjusts with your life instead of fighting it. And it doesn't demand perfection. Choosing demands presence. Choosing says, what is my next smart move right now? Not tomorrow, right fucking now. And right now is the only place that change happens. When you choose, you stop outsourcing your decisions to a list. You stop pretending someone else's plan knows you better than you know yourself. Come on, it's ridiculous. You stop begging for permission and negotiating with guilt. You stop resetting every time one moment goes sideways, and you stop quitting because he just fucked up one time. Choosing teaches you how to respond instead of react. And that's why it works. And of course, choosing fits inside of real life. You can choose on a stressful day or in a restaurant or during travel. You can choose when you're tired, you can choose at night, you can choose around the food you love, you can choose when the month is crazy, you can choose during holidays, you can choose anywhere because choosing is a skill. Think about your own life. Every diet felt powerful on day one. It felt exciting on day two. By day four, something went wrong. Someone brought in bagels, you got stressed out, you forgot to pack food, you got hungry at night, you didn't want to weigh portions, you got bored, and instead of adjusting, you quit. Not because you're weak, but because the system gave you no room to adjust. The plan broke, so you broke with it. Choosing, on the other hand, does not break. It bends. Choosing moves with your life and it grows with your habits. Choosing supports you instead of punishing you. That's why I lost 140 pounds and kept it off for two years. That's why more than 300 people have used this philosophy to lose 1,300 pounds collectively. None of them followed a diet, none of them relied on a list, none of them needed perfection. They learned how to choose inside their own real lives. They wanted health, not abs. They wanted control, not punishment. That's who this system is built for. And this is why dieting will never work, and this is why choosing will always win. You can keep pretending rules will save you, or you can lead yourself through your own life. So let me show you exactly what I mean. Because if you want proof diets fail, all you need to do is look at the popular ones people keep recycling. Everyone treats these plans like they're the solutions when they're nothing more than structured bullshit. They look shiny, they feel controlled, but they collapse the second your actual life shows up. So let's walk through each one and be honest for once. Intermittent fasting. That one has to come first because people love pretending skipping meals is discipline. You brag about not eating until two like it's some heroic act. Here's what really happens: you skip food, your energy tanks, your cravings get loud, and you head into dinner ready to raid the fucking pantry. Timing rules hijack your common sense. You think you're being strong when you're really building a binge cycle. No stability, no long-term strategy, just a daily collapse dressed up like discipline. Next one is NutraSystem, and it lives in its own world of nonsense. Boxes of pre-packaged dog shit food show up at your door and suddenly you convince yourself you're on a program. You stop engaging with real meals, you stop learning anything about your patterns, and you eat from a system someone else created, and then you call it progress. Then the boxes stop coming and everything snaps back instantly. Because you never built skills or developed awareness. You rented a structure and wonder why the weight jumped back the second the subscription ended. I know you know what I'm talking about. Have you been on a nutrition? That's the way it works. Paleo is the next one, and you know that I love paleo and I'm successful on paleo. But people flock to it because it sounds tough and primal, even though there's no one living a modern life that can follow it cleanly. It throws half your normal food out the window and it forces you into rigid purity tests. You burn out fast because real life doesn't support extreme restriction. Social events become a chore. Restaurants become stress zones, and you spend your days explaining your rules instead of living your life. There's no flexibility there, and there's no longevity. Now the next one is keto. This is the internet's favorite miracle. You cut out whole categories of food, feel a temporary rush, and tell everyone you found the answer. But then reality hits and the cravings get brutal. Your energy starts to swing like a pendulum. You miss fucking carbs. I mean, that's normal. You miss enjoying meals. And once you reinduce even a little bit of normal food, the binge cycle hits you like a fucking truck. Keto fights everything natural about human eating. No one sustains it without misery or social isolation. Hard 75, the next one, it deserves its own spotlight. The punishment plan people grab when they feel guilty and want to prove something. Tasks on tasks on tasks. Miss one and you start over. It's built from fear, not growth. And you follow like a soldier and call commitment. Then you miss a task, you collapse, you quit. Why? Because no one can live inside an all-or-nothing thinking or plan forever. It's designed to break you, and it succeeds every single time. How about whole 30? That one sells itself as a reset, and in the short term, it does deliver one. But people try to make it a lifestyle, and that's a terrible idea. You reach the final day with no idea what comes next. You panic at the thought of real eating. You slide back into your old patterns because the plan never taught you how to choose. It taught restriction. Resetting without strategy creates nothing lasting. And then, of course, there's Weight Watchers, the long-running celebrity of diet culture. It's supposed to be flexible. You track points, you stay in range. Sounds easy. Here's the reality: you obsess over numbers instead of behavior. You game the system by loading up on low point snacks. You cram whatever junk fits inside the loopholes. You don't learn why you eat, you learn how to maximize the scoreboard. You become a mathematician, not someone who changes. Now pause. Let's look at the pattern. Every one of those diets forces you into someone else's structure. Every one of them ignores your real life. Every one of them relies on rules instead of responsibility. Everyone pulls you out of the driver's seat, and everyone collapses the second real circumstance of sit. Intermittent fasting fails when your day changes. Nutrition fails when the boxes stop. Paleo fails when you want to enjoy a meal with friends. Keto fails when you eat a normal carb. Hard 75 fails when you miss one task. Cole 30 fails when the reset starts. And Weight Watchers fails when you get tired of tracking every fucking bite. None of those plans include your stress, your schedule, your travels, your cravings, your emotions, your exhaustion, holidays. None include the actual life you live. They treat you like a machine instead of a person who wants to lose weight, get healthy, and still live a real life. Not someone chasing abs or gym culture. Someone who wants control without giving up their world. Choosing works because it adjusts, it bends, it evolves. It fits inside your life instead of fighting it. Choosing teaches you how to lead yourself instead of handing your decisions to a chart. And choosing gives you internal control instead of external rules and builds confidence because every outcome comes from you, not some fucked up meal plan. So choosing says you can pick a breakfast that stabilizes your day. It says you can move your body without performing punishment. It says you can enjoy food you love without losing control. Choosing says you can adjust when life shifts, and you can live like a human being and still lose weight. Choosing says you get to keep your sanity. Every diet fails because it replaces responsibility with structure. Choosing succeeds because it replaces avoidance with awareness. If you want results at last, you need choices that fit your world in your life, not rules designed for imaginary people who never get tired, never get stressed, never travel, never socialize, never crave anything, and never have a bad night. Those fucking people don't exist. You do, I do, and we need something that's built for you. Not a diet, a choice. So let's get into the real reason diets fail because it has nothing to do with your willpower, your schedule, your genetics, or your age. It's psychological. It's built into every diet you've ever tried. Diets fail because they remove your agency. They take you out of the driver's seat and drop you into a system that you didn't create. You stop thinking and start obeying. And the moment those rules crack, everything falls apart. And that's the truth no one in the diet industry ever says out loud. Dieting takes away your judgment. It takes away your ability to adjust. It takes away your responsibility for your own decisions. You follow the plan, you follow the chart, you follow the app, and you convince yourself obedience equals change. Then the second you fail to obey, you quit because the structure told you that one slip-up equals failure. This is how the psychology works. You start a plan and you feel excited because the rules feel clear. You don't have to think, you don't have to make decisions that challenge you. I've said that a hundred times on diets. Oh, this takes away all the decisions. I never realized what I was actually saying. But you don't have to face your habits on a diet. You get to outsource your choices. It feels easier because it requires no real leadership. And it feels controlled because the system tells you, do this and you'll be fine. And then you break a rule: a snack that you weren't supposed to have, a portion you didn't measure, a missed day, and your brain goes fucking straight to the story that you ruined everything. Diets teach you, and they pound this into your head, that perfection is the requirement. So when that perfection cracks, you tell yourself you failed. You treat the moment as a disaster. You don't look at the choice, you judge yourself. And once you judge yourself, you quit. Because if you already failed, what's the point of continuing? That's how one slip up becomes a day, that day becomes a week, that week becomes a week. The reason you look for a new diet so you can reset and pretend the next round will be different. That's the trap. Diets trigger all or nothing thinking. They set up a mental scoreboard where anything less than perfect equals zero. So you never get better at choosing. You get better at quitting. You get better at restarting over and over, year after year. You never learn how to manage stress or cravings or social situations or emotional eatings or nighttime habits because the diet never taught you anything about your behavior. It only taught you how to follow the rules until you couldn't. And here's the part that no one realizes until I say it. When you follow rules instead of building decisions, you never develop confidence. You develop dependence. You think you're getting stronger when you're getting weaker. Everything feels fine as long as the structure holds. And the moment the structure falls, you fall with it. Choosing, on the other hand, fixes everything the diet mindset destroys. It puts you back in control. It forces you to show up for yourself instead of hiding behind a system. Choosing breaks the all or nothing trap because every choice stands on its own. One slip is not a spiral. It's a moment. And then you get to choose the next one. This is what you have never experienced. When you choose, one bad decision does nothing to your progress. It becomes a blip in the day, not the end of the day. You stop stacking guilt and you stop exaggerating mistakes. You stop tracing your progress because of one second of being human. One slip doesn't matter when you control the next decision. That's where the freedom is. That's where the long-term changes, and that's why choosing works when dieting never will. Dieting requires perfection. Choosing requires presence. Diets punish mistakes. Choosing ignores them and moves forward. Diets collapse when life gets messy, and choosing just adapts. And diets make you an obedient dog, and choosing makes you powerful. When you understand those differences, you stop reaching for the next program and start leading your life. And that's where the transformation begins. You know what I believe. Choice is the only path that works. It's the only path that works because it solves every problem that diets create. Diets hand you rules. Choosing gives you control. Control is the thing you've been missing this entire time. When you choose, you decide your meals instead of following a chart written by some fucking stranger who has no idea how you live in real life. You pick foods that keep you steady. You pick meals that fit your day, and you pick portions that make sense for your hunger instead of squeezing your appetite into some checklist. You stop treating eating like a math assignment and you start treating it like a decision. Choosing puts you in charge of portions instead of forcing you to track numbers. You don't have to weigh the fucking chicken on a scale or scan barcodes like an idiot. You look at your food, decide what supports your goals, and eat. Simple. It's clear, it's human. And when life gets messy, choosing keeps you in the game. You don't quit because something went sideways and you don't panic because a meeting ran late. You never restart on Monday because you had a stressful night. You adapt. You do the next smart thing. You keep going. Diets collapse eventually, and choosing just keeps getting stronger. Choosing stays consistent because the system fits your life. You can choose in a restaurant, you can choose in an office, you can choose in an airport, you can choose on vacation, you can choose during holidays, load with every fucking trigger out there. Choosing works in chaos because it was built for chaos. Diets work in none of these places. They pretend they do, but you know better. Choice builds discipline without punishment, it builds confidence without the restriction, and it creates results without sacrifice, and it works everywhere your real life exists. So dieting gives you the illusion of effort. You know that by now. It feels active and structured and like you're doing something, but you're not changing a fucking thing. You follow rules that you didn't create and hope obedience will transform your life, and it never will. Real change comes from choices, not rules. It comes from ownership, not outsourcing responsibility. If you want results you can live with, then stop hiding behind the programs and start leading yourself. Stop dieting, start choosing is not a slogan. It's a system. It's the framework I used to lose 140 pounds without dieting, restricting, starving, punishing myself or giving up any of the food that I loved. It's the approach that more than 300 people used to lose over 13,000 pounds in the past years. I said that before, but that number continues to shock me. 13,000 pounds. None of them followed a meal plan. None of them got a single shot, a supplement, an app, or gym routines that they hated. Most of them never went to the gym at all. They chose their way through real life and their bodies responded. If you want support while you build your own system, start with my free weekly tips. They cost nothing. Zero, zip, zed, nana, niente, nunca, nothing. They arrive in your inbox every Wednesday and they take less than a minute to read. No nonsense, no bullshit, no pitches, no sales, shit, no filler. Just one sharp, useful tip that keeps you steady when most people fall apart. You can sign up for them at my website, jonathanresso.com. Then you can read my book. And I warn you in advance, it's not a diet book. I've sold tens of thousands of copies, but it doesn't tell you what to eat or how to track anything. It doesn't force you into a rigid plan that collapses in real life. It shows you how to change your life through choices. It breaks down the psychology and the patterns and the excuses and the behaviors that keep you stuck. It gives you tools to shift your thinking, to adjust in real time, and build a relationship with food and your body that supports your life instead of fighting against it. If you want transformation without deprivation, this book is your starting point. It's available on Amazon. It's an Amazon bestseller. If you're against or if you're allergic to profanity, you might not want to read that book. But hey, if you listen this far, you know that I have a tendency to use profanity. And if you're truly ready, not pretending, not dabbling, not wishing, but ready to transform your health and your life, reach out to me. My one-to-one transformations are for people who want to end the nonsense for good. You get a strategy built around your world, your schedule, your patterns, your triggers, your challenges. No diets, no starvation, no rigid plans, no shots, no treadmills. You build results through choices that work in your real life and stay with you forever. Here's the moment. You can keep pretending effort and change are the same thing, or you can start choosing and live the life that you keep talking about. So subscribe to my tips, read the books. If you're serious, reach out to me and let's build your transformation. So I want to say a happy and a healthy new year to all of you. Here is the 2026 being the year that you finally shut up and choose.
Annoucer:Thanks for listening to Shut Up and Choose. If today's episode slapped you with some truth, good. That means it worked, and you've dropped the pussy attitude. Make sure to like, rate, and review, and connect with Jonathan on Instagram at Jonathan WrestlerFatlos, on YouTube at Jonathan Wrestler, and online at JonathanWrestler.com. No gimmicks, no excuses, no bullshit. Smart choices. Starting the second units on this episode. Now, don't make a better fucking choice.