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Possible Pitfalls
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Possible
Pitfalls by: Caryl Ehrlich
There
are as many reasons you’ve given yourself to eat as there are minutes
in a day. Storm clouds do it for me. They trigger a memory from when I
lived in Florida and went deep-sea fishing in Key West. When a squall
was imminent, we’d pull our boat into a nearby atoll and wait out the
storm while eating fresh fish sandwiches and drinking cold beer.
Sandwiches are finger foods, which I now steer clear of, and I don't
drink beer anymore, but the smell of a rainstorm can be a powerful
pitfall for me. I don’t act on it, but the memory is a tantalizing
trigger, nevertheless.
A splash of red wine on white pants may
not trigger an overeating episode nor will the car not starting, a flat
tire, and your cell phone losing a signal at 4:58 p.m. when you must
reach someone before 5:00 p.m. But these things have a cumulative
effect, and all the mini-annoyances have the potential of becoming
maxi-eating responses by the end of the day.
You might stumble
because you saw your favorite dessert on a restaurant menu. Or a
celebration may convert a tentative no to an emphatic yes as soon as
you hear a champagne cork pop from a bottle.
“I could resist
anything but temptation,” said Oscar Wilde.
Consider the reasons
you’re tempted to eat. Highlight or circle the ones to which you
respond. There are many and they are varied.
Do you eat because
you’re hungry? Do you even know what hunger is? Or are you eating
because you’re lonely, tired, angry, or bored?
Think of all the
reasons you eat that have nothing to do with hunger.
Perhaps you
eat because you’re up: it’s your birthday, my birthday, our
anniversary, or Groundhog’s Day; or because you’re down: sad, or
grieving. You might eat because it’s there, or someone else is eating
so why not you? Is food easily available in your office, your home? Do
you eat in your car?
Are you eating because of good news? Bad
news? No news? One man said he eats during the news.
You might
find yourself eating some foods because they came with a restaurant
dinner or others because they came free with your airplane ticket or
hotel room. There’s bread on the table in a restaurant, peanuts on the
plane, chocolates on your pillow, and you think: I’ll never pass this
way again.
To some, food is seen as a reward: I’ve been so good
all day. I didn’t have breakfast. I didn’t have lunch. I’ll just have
this side of beef for dinner. Of course, if you’re feeling stuffed,
bloated, and not so good about yourself, then overeating is not a
reward. It is a punishment.
When a young woman used the excuse
that she overate prior to going to the ballet, I asked, did you dance?
Unless she was dancing on that stage, she ate too much for dinner. She
ate more than she was able to burn.
For many, food has become a
socially acceptable drug. It seems to numb the tensions and stresses of
your life. Perhaps you use food to stuff down feelings and thoughts you
don’t want to feel or think or to escape.
Do you eat when you’re
frustrated, disappointed, or angry? One fellow told me he knocked off a
box of cookies and a pint of ice cream when the courts awarded his
ex-wife a big divorce settlement. I wanted to know if she had returned
the alimony check when she realized he was hurting
himself.
Although eating doesn’t change the outcome of anything
but your waistline and self-esteem, you might still be eating to cheer
yourself up when you’re down. Or not to feel so alone when you’re
without company. Or to socialize: you don’t want to be left out. You
might continue eating even though your clothes are too tight and you’re
huffing and puffing when you walk. That is part of addiction: you
continue doing what you do even though there are negative
consequences.
Perhaps you eat because you’re bored or have to
fill unstructured time, such as evenings and weekends, or because you
experience family, business, money, or peer-group pressure: (“Come on.
We’re all going for pizza and we want you to come.”) You don’t want to
be left out. You might use food to avoid intimacy or sex. Perhaps you
use food to avoid nurturing or being nurtured. You are procrastinating:
(“I’ll have lunch first and then work on that report.”)
You
might eat during food preparation and put-away. Perhaps because once
you start you can’t stop. You might think, what the hell, I blew it
anyway. Maybe food is used as a reward because you did something
wonderful, or a punishment because you already overate and figure What
the hell, it won’t make a difference. When you smell the coffee in your
office or the popcorn in a movie, or fresh donuts in a bakery, do you
queue up? Do you use food as a meal extender? You’re having such a nice
time and don’t want the evening to end so you order another cup of
coffee, a cocktail, a dessert. You’re entertaining guests. There is an
abundance of extra food and all those leftovers.
Going home to
family is tricky for some. You may feel guilty that your family and
friends have been cooking since last Thursday, and you have to taste
(and comment on) everything that is offered. Does the cook get offended
if you don’t have seconds and thirds?
We eat differently when we
are in the company of two people, three people, four people, more
people. A recent study said that people who eat with six or more other
people consume a whopping 78% more than they would if they ate alone.
The more people there are, the more food is offered.
The longer
food remains on the table, the longer you’re tempted to eat.
Are
you too tired to cook so you pick pick pick and convince yourself you
didn’t eat anything?
A point to remember:
If it’s not
water, it’s food.
And this, too:
If you swallowed it, you
ate it. It all adds up.
Whether you overeat because of genetics,
ethnicity, religion, circumstance, or emotion doesn’t matter. Perhaps
you eat for some of these reasons or all of these reasons. Each person
gets into the habit of using food inappropriately by eating for reasons
you tell yourself it’s okay to eat, even if you’re not hungry. Having
followed these habits for such a long time – sometimes decades –
they’ve become involuntary conditioned responses. Just as Pavlov’s
dogs, when a stimulus appears, can a yes, thank you, be far behind? The
intelligent you, thinks you shouldn’t be doing what you’re doing, but
you can’t stop. That’s the sneaky part of the addiction – as if making
up your mind will do the trick when it never has before. This might be
the moment to make a list of the reasons you eat. Put down the
breadstick and get a pencil.
After seeing my list, a middle-aged
woman said to me, “According to your program, I haven’t been hungry
since 1963.” She was correct. She and you may have misidentified these
situations, circumstances, and emotions as hunger for such a long time,
you’ve lost your innate ability to identify this most basic of
feelings.
If you’re trying to satisfy a physical hunger, your
body doesn’t require a great deal of food. If you’re trying to fill an
emotional hunger, you could back up a truck full of food to your home
or office, and it would never, ever, contain enough food. “Okay guys,
put the Mallomars in the cabinet, the Häagen-Dazs in the freezer. The
Twinkerdoodles go on the bed.”
If you become so overwhelmed,
confused and paralyzed with not knowing what to do about this
multi-faceted, many-layered topic of weight control that you can’t stop
eating once you start, chances are you do nothing.
If hungry,
you need to nourish the body. If, along the way, it also tastes good,
looks good, and smells good, you’ve got a bonus. But you shouldn’t be
eating because it looks, smells, and tastes good. Almost everything
fits that criteria.
If you’re thirsty, drink water.
If
you’re responding to one of the above stimuli, change habits by
creating new and constructive responses to replace your old and
destructive ones. This is called repatterning.
I might have
missed one of your Possible Pitfalls, but you get the idea. Add yours
if it’s not here. Observe how you eat when you’re up or down, alone or
with friends. We even eat differently with men, differently with women,
and another way with children. These pitfalls might be because of
emotions, circumstances, or just because it’s there or you’re there, in
the neighborhood where your favorite something is prepared as nowhere
else in the world! Pitfalls can be any of these things or all of these
things.
None of the Pitfalls I’ve described above are hunger.
And if it’s not hunger, it’s not a reason to eat.
What are your
Possible Pitfalls?
About The
Author
This article is an excerpt from the book
Conquer Your Food Addiction published by Simon and Schuster. Caryl
Ehrlich, the author, also teaches The Caryl Ehrlich Program, a
one-on-one behavioral approach to weight loss in New York City. Visit
her at http://www.ConquerFood.com to know more about weight
loss and keep it off without diet, deprivation, props, or
pills.
Caryl@ConquerFood.com
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