By Sami Taylor
“Summer is here in Australia, babes, and you know what that means … it’s teatox time.”
It’s difficult at any time of the year, but particularly during summer, for young women to scroll through Facebook or Instagram and not encounter advertisements bleating about #tanlines, #bodygoals and the need to #detox.
Summer is hunting season for “health” companies, and an opportunity to up the ante on marketing their fad diets. But while most fad diets are forgotten quickly, there’s one that just won’t go away. Tea detoxes, or ‘teatoxes’, are so-called “therapeutic” detox tea products that claim to help users shed kilos fast and get “the bikini body you’ve always dreamed of”.
The teatox trend took off in Australia a few years back, when local diet tea companies began emulating similar American products. Now, hundreds of thousands of young women follow skinny tea brands on social media with hopes of shedding “extra kilos” and looking like the tanned, toned Instagram models recruited to promote them.
Crash dieting through the ages
Of course, fad diets have been around forever. Dieting is something of a generational tradition — your grandmother probably tried to cut out carbs, you watched your mother crave sugar on the Atkins diet and your older sister once bought and suffered through a month’s worth of meal replacement shakes.
Young women grow up watching other women in their lives buy expensive quick-fixes, shed the kilos, and then put it all back on again.