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My Story
In the past, I believed that managing weight was a very difficult combination of restricting fat grams and exercising like crazy. I admired those who “could eat whatever they wanted without worrying about weight”.
Learning the Secret of Eating Right
It seemed like there must be some secret to weight regulation that I didn’t know, but I really wanted to learn. This rather superficial reason led me to study nutrition in college. Upon graduation, I was involved in interning at a facility which provided information on a non-diet approach to weight management. I connected with this philosophy immediately.
Because I was already disheartened to know that most people who diet ultimately regain their weight, I was very interested in a different mentality. I was certain that I did not want to place people on diets, as it seems unethical to know ahead of time they will fail.
I now know there is an easier way to be a normal, natural eater. This type of eating promotes a person being at their body’s set-point weight (where their body naturally wants to be), without the use of dieting and excessive exercise.
There are millions of people in this country and around the world who are struggling with their weight. They, too, are beginning to see after many diets, that dieting is not the answer. So that begs the question: What is the answer?
What I have learned about normalizing the relationship with food is this: it is not so much about what you eat, as it is about why you eat.
I want to help others improve their relationships with food. I now feel that I am the kind of person who can eat whatever I want—and I have seen that anyone can have that freedom if they are willing to follow this approach.
The Lies We Buy about Healthy Eating
It seems like everywhere you turn there is someone telling you how to eat, what to look like, and what to do. Family members (with their best intentions) affect your food behaviors in profound ways. From the first time you are offered a cookie when you are crying (and not from hunger), you begin to make some unfortunate associations.
As you grow older, your friends go on diets, complain about their bodies, etc, until you become increasingly uncomfortable with your own appearance. Media comes in with unrealistic representations of what people should look like. ‘Lose 5 pounds in 5 minutes’ is plastered on every magazine you pass while trying to buy groceries (hence the second-guessing of your choices).
• The Lie we are fed: “I (your name here) will be perfect/happy/etc…when I weigh_______ or am a size_______. In fact, my biggest problem is that I am fat or am getting fatter every minute.”
• The Solution we are told: Dieting is the path to this life of bliss you are seeking. All of your dreams will come true from the moment you cross below the threshold of _____lbs. Fireworks will shoot across the sky,
Angels will sing….
The Endless Cycle of Self-Destruction
So you begin the famine/feast cycle of dieting/not dieting. This wreaks havoc on your biology as well as your psychology of eating.
There are more diets available than ever, yet obesity is at an all-time high. Still, people are praised for eating ‘good’ and criticized for eating ‘bad’.
Your thoughts become progressively more obsessed with your eating patterns. You get distracted from what you are doing because you are thinking about what you should eat vs. what you want to eat. Of course, you feel perpetual guilt about the amount of exercise you aren’t getting.
Disordered eating is basically a focus on eating and body size that is negatively impacting a person’s quality of life.
Nutritionist Debra Waterhouse defines it as, “any [person] who has some form of an unhealthy relationship with food and [his/her] body is a disordered eater. [S/he] may be caught in the diet—binge cycle, restricting ‘forbidden’ foods, feeling guilty after eating or in a semi starvation state from chronic under eating, fasting, skipping meals, or over exercising.”
If you can’t go to a party or holiday gathering without anxiety about your eating, this is a problem. If you feel guilt or remorse for what you’ve eaten, your quality of life is being affected. Chronic dieting is essentially a socially accepted form of disordered eating.
THE PROBLEM:
These behaviors ultimately impact your relationship with food and your body. The side effect of this problem is your weight change. Did you hear that?
WEIGHT CHANGE IS A SIDE EFFECT
THE PROBLEM IS:
YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH FOOD
I emphasize this because throughout the course of this process (yes, it is continual, but gets easier over time), you may falter. If the focus shifts to the weight, the relationship with food becomes more distorted.
You may get distracted by sudden urges to ‘drop 5 pounds in 5 minutes’, despite the knowledge that you have tried that a gazillion times before—only to gain more weight back than was lost. You will think all this food relationship mumbo jumbo is not quick enough. Well, tell this to your inner hare:
• One year after people lose weight from dieting, 95% will have regained the weight.
• After a few years, this number jumps to 98%.
• And it may be possible the other 2% are lying.
Your inner tortoise, who is willing to do
the work to improve quality of life
by normalizing the relationship with food,
wins this race.
Causes of Overeating:
1. Physical Overeating: becoming too hungry between meals (ie. going too long without eating), which causes a biological reaction of overeating. The body seeks high carbohydrate and high fat foods in an effort to stock up for future famines.
This site will contain information on how to avoid overeating for physical reasons. This includes concepts like timing of meals, combining at meals, etc.
Some people will resist implementing new habits, because they will rationalize them as being ‘rules’ about eating—and this process is here to reject rules. I do so hate to provide specific instructions because I know that your body knows best.
However, I also know that many people embark on this journey after long abusing their bodies. I want to help your body use food efficiently and minimize overeating for physical reasons.
So many people come to me feeling they eat ‘out of control’ and once they implement these techniques, they find it was not a will-power issue at all. Just simple biology.
2. Non-hunger Overeating (Emotional): this is eating for reasons other than hunger. Eating because it looks good, because of boredom, stress, etc.
This part of the process is much more involved. But the work done in these areas will set you free for the rest of your life. You will begin to understand why you eat the way you do. You will actually begin to understand yourself much better—who doesn’t need that?
type="text/javascript">11 Comments for “My Story”
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How to Eat Right – Business Articles Team-Blog5.BestCategories.info says:
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Eat Right by Listening to Your Body | Worldly Articles says:
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Eating Right | Health Infos says:
3 August 2009 , 6:22 am[...] professional. In her private practice in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, she helps otherslearn about eating right. Grab a totally unique version of this article from the Uber Article Directory Written by [...]
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3 August 2009 , 11:19 am[...] professional. In her private practice in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, she helps otherslearn about eating right. Grab a totally unique version of this article from the Uber Article [...]
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Eating Right | News From Now says:
6 August 2009 , 4:02 pm[...] She has a private practice in DFW, Texas, where she specializes in helping clients learn about eating right. Grab a totally unique version of this article from the Uber Article [...]
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How to Eat Right - Heskimya.com Homes says:
6 August 2009 , 4:04 pm[...] professional. In her private practice in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, she helps others learn about eating right. :Health No comments for this entry [...]
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Trendssite says:
6 August 2009 , 4:04 pm[...] So the next time you are struggling with good foods and bad foods, remember that it is not about those choices. Every food in the universe can fit into a persons lifestyle if it is eaten in the presence of physical hunger. In fact, satisfying our true food cravings can lead to decreased eating overall. Having a bit of your favorite food my actually result in fewer daily calories consumed because you dont end up eating half a box of wheat thins later in the day. So if there is a question to eat or not to eat, simply check in with your body (not a diet) to determine the answer. About the Author: Jennifer Pereira, RD/LD, CSCS is a nutrition and exercise professional. In her private practice in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, she helps others learn about eating right. [...]
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Eat Right by Listening to Your Body | says:
7 August 2009 , 9:35 pm[...] professional. In her private practice in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, she helps others learn about eating right. You can get a unique content version of this article from the Uber Article Directory. Mail [...]
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Eating Right | Bigg Articles says:
7 August 2009 , 9:36 pm[...] If you start to get wrapped up in good foods and bad foods, you need to remember the issue is not about what you are eating. Any food is fine to eat if you do so when you are truly physically hungry. It is important to satisfy cravings — this can actually decrease overeating of other, less satisfying foods. When you have the food you want, you are not likely to later binge on a bag of rice cakes in an effort to feel satisfied. It is critical to listen to your body, rather than some diet, when you are deciding when and what to eat. About the Author: Jennifer Pereira, RD/LD, CSCS is a nutrition and exercise expert. She works with clients in her private practice in Dallas, Texas, to help them learn about eating right. [...]