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Showing posts with label emotional hunger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emotional hunger. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 August 2014

3 Tips That Lead To Lasting Weight Loss

I spent years struggling with my weight. During these years, I learned about healthy eating, and even with eating all organic foods and finding the right nutrition plan for me, as well as the right exercise for me, I still struggled with my weight. 
 
Then I discovered the underlying cause of weight issues and the powerful secrets to permanent weight loss, and my weight struggles ended! Here are the secrets I learned that can help you make peace with emotional eating, and end your weight loss struggles.

1. Acknowledge your feelings.
The primary cause of emotional eating is that food is being used to avoid core painful feelings — feelings that we could not manage when we were little, and that most adults have never learned to lovingly manage.

It took me years to fully understand what these specific feelings are, why they’re so difficult to feel, and what we need to do to be able to feel them rather than avoid them with food and other addictions.
The main feelings we use food to avoid are:

Loneliness
We feel loneliness when we want to connect with someone and either no one is there, or the person or people who are there are not available for connection.
Most of us experienced much loneliness as children. Since this feeling was way too big for us, we learned to avoid it in different ways, and food may have been one of the ways.

Heartbreak
Most of us had our hearts broken over and over as children. It’s heartbreaking when we aren’t heard or seen, or are controlled, rejected or abused. We learned various ways of avoiding this very painful feeling, including eating for comfort.

Grief
If we’ve experienced a major loss and were not held in love over the loss, we needed to find ways of avoiding this overwhelming feeling.

Helplessness over others and events
This is one of the hardest of feelings to feel. Many of us will do almost anything to avoid accepting and feeling helpless over others and outcomes. This avoidance may go all the way back to infancy: if we cried and no one came to feed us and tend to us, we could have died, so the feeling of helplessness over others may become connected with an actual fear of dying.

2. Don’t abandon yourself.
As children, we may have learned four major ways to avoid these painful feelings, which we had to do to survive. But as adults, these survival strategies lead to self-abandonment, and cause other painful feelings — such as anxiety, depression, guilt, shame, loneliness, emptiness and anger. Just as actual children feel alone, rejected and abandoned, as well as anxious, depressed, shamed or angry if you avoid tending to their feelings with compassion, your inner child — your feeling self — feels the same way.

3 tips that lead to lasting weight loss

The four ways you may be abandoning yourself are:

You stay in your mind rather than in your body.
When you stay focused in your mind, you become disconnected from the feelings in your body. This is a form of dissociation, a survival mechanism to avoid your feelings, and always results in feeling alone and rejected inside.

You judge yourself.
You might have learned to judge yourself as a way to try to have control over getting yourself to do things “right” so you could gain others’ approval. Again, just as actual children feel anxious and rejected when you judge them, your inner child will feel anxious and abandoned when you reject yourself with self-judgments.

You turn to substance and process addictions.
Here’s where food comes in. Food is one addictive way of numbing your feelings, which you might do when you don’t know how to lovingly manage your painful feelings.

You make others responsible for your feelings.
Just as an actual child will feel rejected and abandoned if you give him or her away, so your inner child feels alone, rejected and abandoned when you give him or her to others in order to feel loved, worthy and safe. To heal from addictive eating, you need to learn to lovingly manage your painful feelings and make yourself feel loved, worthy and safe. 

3. Love yourself.
When you learn to love yourself, you’ll no longer need to emotionally eat to avoid your painful feelings. When you learn to hold your heart with deep gentleness and compassion, rather than avoid your feelings with the above ways of abandoning yourself, you will find yourself losing weight and permanently keeping it off. When you learn to fill your inner emptiness and loneliness with love from a spiritual source, you will no longer need to fill up with food.

Source: Positive Med
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Saturday, 7 June 2014

How I Healed My Body & Lost 60 Pounds Along The Way

Do you ever find yourself craving foods that you don’t want to eat? Do you ever feel guilty after eating food you wished you hadn't? Do you find yourself in a constant struggle with your fluctuating weight and self esteem? 

If you said yes to any of the questions above, there is one thing I want you to know: you can change your life for the better. 

Why do I know this to be true? 

Well, I spent most of my teenage years secretly tormented by my relationship with food, my excess weight and my ever-dwindling self confidence. Just days before turning 20, I was 60 pounds overweight and was suffering from a host of chronic ailments including eczema, asthma and adrenal exhaustion. It was at the precise moment that my body completely broke down, leaving me bedridden for months. 

When my doctors offered me experimental medication, I just knew that there had to be another way. Despite not really knowing which way to turn, I was intuitively guided towards the path of healing. Over the course of the following two years, I consulted with healers and naturopaths, as well as many alternative books before uncovering the path that was right for me.
 
Not only did I heal all of my chronic conditions, I also managed to lose 60 pounds naturally and have kept it off for over 15 years now.
 
In this article I share three healing thoughts to inspire you along your own weight loss journey. 

1. Allow food to nourish you.
Let me be frank. Food addictions are one of the most challenging addictions to overcome. Unlike addictions to drugs, alcohol, smoking and sex, where at times, under medical supervision, addicts can go cold turkey or participate in a program to wean themselves off of the substance over time to break the cycle of addiction, food addictions necessitate a completely different approach. 

To break free of a food addiction, you need to transform your relationship with food. Allow yourself to see food as a source of nourishment rather than something you need to fight or struggle against. Using deprivation or restriction will only strengthen your addiction and is one of the big reasons most diets fail. 

Treat your body with love and kindness. Give it what it needs so that you can create strength, flexibility and wellness. If you really want to lose your excess weight for good, let food be a source of vitality in your life. Let it fuel and energize you. 
 
You don't need to radically change your diet overnight, either. All you need to do is keep taking baby steps towards improving your nutritional intake. The key here is progress not perfection.
 
2. Listen to your body.
If you are like most people, you're probably prone to being hard on your body, even when you know that you shouldn’t. I spent many years overburdening my own body until it finally broke down.
There are countless ways that people but excess strain on their bodies including working too hard, sleeping too little and overeating, drinking too much and exercising too much or too little. 

As an alternative to over-extending yourself, give yourself permission to work within your natural limits. Start to listen to your body so that you can give it what it really wants.
The body has its own secret language and will tell you exactly what it needs if you create enough space to listen to it. A great way to begin attuning to your body is by gently reducing your intake of stimulants such as caffeine, sugar and television. 

Reducing your intake of stimulants has the added benefit of creating space in your life for things that truly nurture your body like gentle stretching, yoga and breath work. 

All of these factors contribute to building a deeper awareness and will help you to feel more at home in your body. When you do this, you will find that you naturally move in the direction of balance without pushing or straining. 

3. Do the things that make you happy.
Doing what makes you happy is one of the most important keys to healing. To cope with our complex modern world, most people end up living the life that other people want them to lead rather than pursuing their own dreams. 

When you push yourself to do things you don't want to do, you work against your natural self and create unnecessary mental, emotional and physical stress. This stress, if left unaddressed, can become chronic and result in many different forms of illness as well as weight gain. 

A number of years ago I felt stuck in a career that didn't make me happy. I had graduated from college with an honors degree in marketing so I thought that it made sense to begin working professionally in the field. 

It didn't take me long to figure out that not only did I not like working in a corporate environment, but I wasn't particularly good at it either. After a number of unsuccessful work experiences, it became obvious that I needed to do something different in order to reduce my stress levels and regain my natural happiness. 

I quit my job, went to art school and life has been an amazing adventure ever since.
When you do the things that make you happy, you create an environment for a healthier life. This will not only help you on your weight loss healing journey, it will also help you to become a happier and more balanced person in the process.

Source: MindBodyGreen
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Thursday, 3 April 2014

Is Emotional Eating OK?

Are you an emotional eater? Chances are if you are overweight and actively seeking help for that you are. Emotional eating occurs when individuals turn to food in order to deal with or, more accurately, forget about emotional stress or depression.

Even after losing over 50 per cent of my total body weight, I emotionally eat. It is a natural reaction to stress, which, if properly managed is okay. What is far more important is training your mind to view yourself differently and to use occasional emotional eating for when it is needed, not as merely an excuse to over indulge and stuff your face.

You Cannot Be Victim Anymore
A lot of attention in the weight loss industry surrounds the psychological reasons behind overeating and obesity. As a result, I am constantly asked in interviews and personal meetings how I learned to 'deal' with my emotional baggage in order to shed my weight. The short answer is that I didn't!
That's right, I am still stressed and I still get depressed over my past and my future. However, rather than conceal those problems with food I made the conscious decision to stop being a victim to these thoughts and rather use different ways to manage the inevitable stresses in my life. I have learned to become a mover and a thinker, to use activity to manage these bouts rather than calories.

If you want to 'win' your war against weight you need to become a soldier, a victor, not a victim. You need to be fearless, and put the problems that lead you to food into perspective. Think about it: if you eat every time you think about your failed marriage are you doing anything to pick up the pieces and start again? No! If anything you're preventing it and action is better than inaction. The "if onlys" in our lives hold us back.

The Higher the Hurdle, the Higher the Jump
I am always asked about the biggest 'hurdle' in my weight loss journey all those years ago. And, while I readily admit that walking into the gym for the first time on my own was scary, that is about all I can come up with.

This isn't because the process was easy or natural for me. Quite the contrary! Rather, I chose to view each 'hurdle' not as a barrier, but a reason to learn how to jump. Each craving I fought, each sore muscle I had helped me prepare for that jump. They were simply learning experiences that I needed in order to make it.

One of my signature sayings is, the higher the hurdles you have to jump in life the higher you learn how to jump. Continuing to view yourself as a victim does not make you a winner. Yes, it is harder for others, but just as the barefoot Kenyan works harder to earn an Olympic gold than the private school boy from America, at the end of the day, the winner still needs to be the fastest man on the track, no matter the road it took to get there.

Life is not fair. There is no way to get around it and the sooner you come to that realisation the better. There are many reasons that we emotionally eat and many of them are heartbreaking and valid.

However, you cannot allow them to continue to define your life and your journey.

Successful weight loss is similar to taking your life and straining it through a sieve-the more muck at the bottom, the longer the process takes, but, eventually, all the bad bits are separated out. Success relies on your ability to choose to be a victor, not a victim.

Article Source: EzineArticles
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Wednesday, 12 March 2014

How To Control Your Desire For Food

When I get questions from readers I often see them explain that there are certain foods which they are their ‘weaknesses’. These foods are never in the category of vegetables and are more likely to be sweets or takeaways. Moreover, giving up those ‘weaknesses’ is what most people find as ‘the hardest thing to do’. Sometimes it is not certain foods the issue. Is food in general, and some people will describe being hungry all the time and can’t stop.

Embarking on a weight loss diet most of the time means restricting or minimising sweets, sugars, junk food, takeaways and so on along with restricting calories and often the amount of food consumed. So how do you control the desire for certain foods if it is ‘the hardest thing to do’?
This article will look at what makes us crave or desire certain foods and food in general and will suggest weight loss tips in controlling the desire for food.

Tip1. I will start the article with the first tip which is read this article. This may sound vain; however I will just say knowledge is power. If you know why you are hungry then you will be more able to deal and control your desire for food. How can you follow some tips if you don’t know why or what is going on?

So to move on, what is going on?

Eating yourself happy

In nature’s terms, hunger is one of the ways for the body letting us know that it needs fuel. However, hunger for the modern human is a lot more complicated than the simple ‘run out of fuel’ terms.

One area in which research has looked at is emotional eating. In emotional eating hunger is not just a fuel signal but is influenced by our emotions.

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