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| Laurie Stolmaker, MA MFT |
The First Step
In my work with women who are perfectly
exhausted from trying to be perfect, I often
end up teaching that it is a crazy notion
that we have to feel bad about ourselves in
order to do better.
Diets don't work because they are based on the idea that we are bad, morally bad, because of the food we eat. With this underlying belief, we then go about trying to ignore our bodies' signals of hunger in order to follow someone else's guidelines about what we should eat.
Aside from the fact that these guidelines are
often contradictory, they are also always
changing. Think about the innocent egg, a
villain one year, then good, but in limited
quantity, then "the perfect protein
package". Another thing about diets is that there is a pull to eat, when we anticipate future deprivation. So, when we make moral judgments about our food being "bad", then judge ourselves as "bad", we make plans to be "good" and do "better" and start planning this restricted or deprived future. As human beings we are designed in such a way that, when a famine is approaching, we begin to store up. If you have dieted repeatedly, you know what I am talking about. In my family, I was invited to help finish up the Girl Scout cookies the night before we all went on a diet! For years, I blamed my parents for this crazy behavior. Now, I know that it was an instinctual drive to prepare for famine. They had been on diets before and they knew what was coming! I recently read some interesting descriptions of the physiological effects of dieting behavior. Have you ever restricted your eating successfully over a period of time, and then found yourself standing in front of the fridge, hunting for food? Or making a late night trip to the grocery store in search of something to satisfy? Here's what I learned about that. Think back to cave days. You have stored up your food for the winter and survived almost until spring. You are a bit weak, tired and still pretty cold and the last thing you want to do is go out hunting for more food. But, your supplies are almost gone. The brilliant design of your body is such that your hypothalamus kicks in with a very strong urge to hunt for food. This urge has to be powerful enough to get your weak and sleepy body out of the warm cave. If you don't, you could starve.
OK, now translate that same experience of
famine to modern day. Only this time, you
have been creating famine by putting yourself
on starvation diets, restricting calories,
restricting fats- whatever is your diet du
jour. The hypothalamus still kicks in- "MUST
FIND FOOD"- and there you are munching out of
the fridge or wandering the aisles of
Safeway. But the first step is to stop making moral judgments about yourself, based on what you eat and how you look. Start listening to your body more. Learn to feel what hunger and satiation feel like. Your body may be confused at first. Be patient with it. Make a commitment to love yourself. To find healthy, to find strong and to give yourself back the time and energy that diets have been stealing from you. Please let me know, by emailing me, if this article was helpful to you! Writing a newsletter is an effort of love and devotion for me. I would love to hear from you! |
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Individual, collaborative counseling sessions are available in Santa Rosa, CA at my downtown office Monday through Thursday. To learn more about my counseling practice click here: counseling practice. I now offer phone sessions by appointment. Sessions are available Monday through Thursday. I accept MasterCard and Visa as well as checks and Paypal.
All Articles Copyrighted by Laurie Stolmaker, MA,
MFT 2005-2008 |
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