Archive | October 2009

Say “No” to Food Saboteurs

I was reading an article in today’s Parade magazine about how kids can teach us to eat better. It touched on a topic that hits close to home for most food addicts.

Often with someone who has a food addiction or anyone who is working to lose some weight, it is family and friends who present the greatest challenges.

Food saboteurs may come in different shapes and sizes, but most of the ones I’ve met are not overweight.

They seem to have the collective goal of getting us to eat things that will inevitably trigger our food addiction and yank us off plan.

Why bully someone into eating something you know will cause them to fall off the wagon? It doesn’t make sense. Family and friends should support you, not use the relationship to pull rank or shame you into doing something they know you don’t want to do.

It happens all the time. When drinking was expected of any respectful guest back in the 70’s, I was continually barraged with demands that I join the party so I didn’t make the hostess look bad.

Being a non-drinker, this made me feel embarrassed and irritated. It ruined many evenings for me. Later, when I began using food to stuff down my feelings, I considered myself lucky that I was only a food addict and not an alcoholic.

Today’s article made an important point. Kids turn down food if they don’t want it. They don’t worry about offending people.

Joy Bauer’s article rightly points out that adults usually eat what’s put in front of them. Add a little coaxing or subtle bullying and there goes the trigger.

So, don’t be afraid to offend. Be polite, but don’t eat something you don’t really want, whether it’s something that might trigger your food addiction or something you just don’t care for. It’s okay to say no.

No wonder kids feel so empowered. Too bad that many don’t stay that way. All the more reason to listen to your inner child.

Obesity, Food Addiction and Pills

I read today where the FDA is close to approving a new obesity medication. Yet another drug to cure all ills. It’s enough to make you sick.

Why not come up with a new way to decrease stress or to have a work schedule that didn’t force you to eat in your car?

Or–here’s one–take a vacation. Is obesity as big a problem in European countries that give their employees six weeks paid vacation a year?

Is food addiction a problem when people get enough sleep, some fun exercise, and enough time to do what they need to do during the day?

Why isn’t there enough time to go to the bathroom more than once or twice in an eight-hour period? Is the work you do at your office so important that you can’t take time out for a 30-minute lunch.

Is food addiction the problem it is because there is simply no way to combat the stress and the health problems, including obesity, that it causes?

Somewhere down the road, food addicts fat and not-so-fat must decide if they want to be healthy or not, happy and energetic or barely able to get through the day without overdoses of caffeine and diet soda.

If drugs really were meant to heal, the body would heal. People would heal. After the healing occurs, why do you still need to take the drugs for the rest of your life.

Experts can call obesity a disease but it is really an out of control lifestyle so filled with stress that no comfort can be found and no boundaries exist. It causes diseases like diabetes which can be “cured” when the pounds drop off and a healthier lifestyle is maintained.

No more pills, please! Let’s let some relaxation back into life, some enjoyment, some connection with the Universe, so we can see our value. We are not what we eat. We are who we are.

Who do you want to be today?

Let’s Hear it for Ancient Foods and Grains!

One of the negatives about food addiction is that you don’t really get to enjoy your food. Food is supposed to be nurturing. Nurturing requires love; and love heals.

Maybe love equals food to a food addict, but why can’t love equal good food?

This video about healthy eating reminds me of just how delicious and energizing good food can taste. It’s hard to crave junk food when you compare it with this.

Enjoy.

In Touch With Food Addiction

Check out the latest issue of In Touch magazine. There’s a great article in there about celebrities and their battles with food addiction.

Mentioned in the article are Oprah Winfrey, Kelly Clarkson, and Kirstie Alley, all of whom have had very public bouts with food addiction.

Among the comments from various mental health professionals is one by psychologist Dr. Stacey Rosenfeld who says this:  “A food addiction is when a person uses food in order to cope with difficult emotions.”

That’s a pretty clear interpretation and a very accurate observation.  Simple to define but a  complex problem, nonetheless.

In Touch is a weekly magazine so  it will disappear off the newstands in three days. You’ll still be able to see it at the library though.

It’s an easy and interesting read and if you’re like me, you will really be able to relate to it.