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The Mind Body-Fat Connection
by: Sara Lauritzen
The Mind Body-Fat Connection
“How Tensing Up Is Making You Fat!”
by Sara Lauritzen
Negative thoughts, symbolic protection, being who
we really are ..... we’re definitely getting closer. It does come from within,
we believe that much. But how? How do we connect a de-railed inner state of mind
to real life obesity without the hocus pocus element?
We find the biological link. We find out where
those resistive thoughts and feelings are going and what damage they are
managing to do along the way. Or at least that is what I did!
The first time I heard that being fat was all in
the mind, I was intrigued. “How exactly would that work”, I found myself
asking.
A friend and I were casually chatting about being
fat when he mentioned that he’d heard of a book describing weight gain as
being a symbol of protection. Negative mental thought patterns were apparently
responsible for making us all fat!
I wondered whether he was talking about
psychologically symbolic or a real biological connection that affected our
metabolism. I was searching for something deeper at the time because I had lost
faith in the traditional concepts of obesity. The medical, sports and scientific
worlds promoted concepts that seemed too broad and genetically unfair to apply
to all of us here on earth. It seemed that every new diet plan and book held a
new and revolutionary theory about how and why we all gain weight Yet no one
theory covered all situations and circumstances, like why we lose weight when we
fall in love.
Intrigued that thoughts and feelings could be
responsible for my weight, I threw myself into this belief. I practiced
affirmations and searched deep within my mind for the mental triggers that could
be influencing my body weight.
Although I celebrated this new concept and still
do, I became disappointed and frustrated when I couldn’t pin point, precisely,
which of my thoughts and feelings made my weight go up and down.
I could see my weight going up and down from one
week to the next but I needed to know exactly how it was all made possible.
“Where was the connection?” I asked myself, “How could a feeling influence
fat?” I couldn’t hold any exact thought or feeling responsible, which meant
that I could not intimately control it, as I so desired to do.
I went on wondering and speculating for two whole
years before I fell happily pregnant. During the early months I started losing
weight around my thighs, an area that had previously refused to budge no matter
how strict a diet I went on or exercise program I took part in. I knew that I
was changing on an inner level but once again, I could not pin point precisely
which thoughts or feelings corresponded with my thighs.
After the birth of my child, I didn’t do what
most new mothers do and accept to nurture the tender moments alone with their
baby. I stood up, tired and exhausted and pushed myself back into my old life at
the same time as juggling the demands of motherhood. A change of scene occurred
with a move to a foreign country both culturally and fluently removed from my
own which led me to start questioning who I really was. My weight, having not
recovered fully from childbirth started slowly creeping upwards despite what I
ate. A good strict diet curbed it for a moment but failed me the moment I hopped
off it.
In the approaching winter of 1997, I stood still
one day and took a minute to stare out the window. I was alone in the company of
myself. My senses caught my attention because although I was standing completely
still, my muscles felt like they were trying to stop me from going somewhere.
They were busy working against me even though I was not moving. I was “tensing
up” for seemingly no reason at all.
Not too long after that moment of introspection,
it dawned on me that the body fat I had slowly gained was only showing up in the
areas where my muscles were tensing up. “Could there be a connection?” I
wondered.
I proceeded to watch this strange occurrence in
the weeks that came and went. It didn’t take long to realise that my very own
thoughts and feelings were responsible for setting my muscles off. I was
desperate to lose the weight I was gaining and saw this observation as a saviour
sent from heaven. I immediately set about soothing my thoughts and feelings. I
was eager to find out if this situation could be reversed. Could it be possible
to lose weight by relaxing?
About a month later, it was obvious that my
weight had gone down. I was over the moon. I hadn’t eaten differently and I
hadn’t done any exercise. I wasn’t stressed and I wasn’t on any
medication. The only obvious change was that I had begun to relax and let go,
mentally. “Explain that!”, I thought to myself.
It was incredible. I had observed that my body
fat could come and go depending on how much my muscles tensed up or relaxed. My
body fat would accumulate or disappear in the precise same areas where my
muscles tensed up or relaxed, regardless of food intake or level of exertion.
However, along with the elation came confusion. I
was confused because I’d never heard of such a thing before and wondered
whether my mind was playing tricks on me. I decided that the only way to find
out was to ask. But who could I ask living in a foreign country far away from an
English library?
Intuition told me that the Internet was the
answer. I started out searching for documents relating to weight gain, muscles,
stress, metabolism, anything that would describe this strange experience I was
having. When I could no longer find my keyboard for mountains of printed
literature and reports which were proving to be dead-ends, I had to face the
possibility that no one had yet realised what I had come to observe. I could not
find one single document describing this strange phenomenon.
As the months went by I would inquire timidly
with as many people as possible about whether or not they tensed up a lot and
where they might be doing this tensing up. I slowly became convinced that only
overweight individuals chronically tense up and only in the areas where they are
fat. As more and more of the slim individuals I questioned failed to comprehend
my description of the feeling tensing up produces, I instinctively knew that
this was a phenomenon that deserved to be explored.
Through my own self-experimentation and sensitive
introspection I embarked on a journey of exploration through the mechanics that
bring about tensing up. I arrived at the belief that a mental conflict arises
when we oppose the very action we are making or intending to make. This belief
was further impacted by the realisation that we oppose our actions when we are
scared and when we find it difficult to relax and be ourselves. Through my mind,
I explored every inch of my body, intuitively listening to precisely what action
was being opposed by tensing up and how I could turn it around and start
relaxing and being myself again.
Science was of no interest to me in high school,
so I was really starting from afresh when I decided to broaden my knowledge of
biochemistry. I had got myself caught up in a challenging bind. I couldn’t
give up just because nobody else had come forth with this observation. Yet, at
times I felt way out of my league sifting through mountains of scientific
publications and looking up just about every word printed in them to make sense
of what they were saying.
This seemingly simple occurrence proved to
involve a multitude of variables. However, it raised one obvious question to me.
Was this yet another way to gain weight or was this the only way to gain weight,
in which case why had no one ever noticed this before?
At every corner I had to remind myself that the
regulation of this occurrence was real. I had experienced it and observed it
with my own eyes. Every piece of information I read on the causes of obesity was
how things might possibly hang together, theoretically, or under particular
circumstances.
Having established a psychological link in the
regulation of tensing up, I proceeded to investigate exactly how this activity
could influence fat accumulation in specific areas. I trusted my intuition to
guide me to the right reference material day after day, month after month.
In order to know what was causing me to tense up,
I also had to know what was not causing it. I very quickly learnt that when a
particular trail became too difficult to follow or not enough information was
forthcoming, then I was on the wrong track. In these instances, I went with the
clues that were opening up for me. Key words emitted a strange energy as if
beckoning for my attention.
My mind became insatiable for information and new
clues, ticking over loudly in any spare moment I had. I would lie awake at night
pondering over why I should be the one to observe this phenomenon, having not
been formally educated in the medical sciences.
However looking back at it now, it had its
advantages. Should I have been formally educated, I would not have started out
in ignorant bliss. Fortunately, I was not blinded by any preconceived ideas
about what was medically possible and what was not. I just trusted and expected
that I would find the answer and slowly the pieces started falling into place.
No sooner had I put a textbook hypothesis
together, than I realised that I would have to find current evidence to support
that hypothesis, if I wanted anyone to sit up and take notice. This was perhaps
the most challenging part of my research. I would spend hour after hour sifting
through the literature both current and outdated. I realised I had made a
breakthrough when the pieces of my text book hypothesis started fitting into the
gaps, holes and question marks posed in the latest scientific research and
reviews.
At this point, I knew that regardless of the
mounting anecdotal evidence, facts and implications of this very real physical
occurrence, I had seen proof enough in my own body to share this observation
with other people. The fact that I could lose weight and keep it off without
dieting or exercising was all the proof I needed, no matter how it came about.
However, standing up and saying what I truly
believed in ultimately turned this journey into an experience of believing in
myself. I learnt to trust in what I was experiencing and watched it grow and
develop into a fully-fledged phenomenon. I invested my love and energy into
researching and proving to myself that this phenomenon is a reality to be
believed in and followed.
The Mind Body-Fat Connection eBook, is available
from www.mindbodyfatconnection.com
in both Microsoft Reader and PDF/Adobe Acrobat format.
About The Author
Sara Lauritzen, Australian Author and practised
alternative thinker, has researched and experienced the phenomenon of The Mind
Body-Fat Connection first hand. Sara is dedicated to helping people find their
way back to being themselves - she can be contacted at info@mindbodyfatconnection.com
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