~ ~ ~ |
by Caryl Ehrlich In order to identify hunger, you must first understand what it is. This is not as easy as it seems. Many of you may never have let yourself experience true hunger, only a feeling of discomfort. Not knowing exactly what it was, you may have been eating past hunger for such a long time you can no longer differentiate between hunger and the feeling of anxiety, stress, boredom, or any number of other emotional or circumstantial stimuli. You
haven't
allowed yourself to go without eating for a long enough period of time
to have felt true hunger; you may not have experienced it since
childhood. You might have clenched your little baby teeth and not permitted one extra spoonful of anything to enter your mouth. She might have pushed your chubby little cheeks together trying to force you to open your mouth, but you would not. If she did manage to insert some food, you spit it out, sometimes on your bib, sometimes on mom. The message was clear. "No more food, Mommy." As she persevered, you finally learned to please your mother by finishing everything on your plate. You may have been told that if you ate your vegetables, your reward would be dessert. You
were bribed
with a lollipop if you‚d stop crying. You learned to eat all your food
because it gave pleasure to others. It didn't seem to matter anymore
whether
you were hungry or not. You were taught to ignore your feelings of
hunger
and satiation just to please someone else. And you learned well.
Others
experience
hunger as feeling lightheaded, empty, low, headachy, or hollow. At
times
a growling stomach prompts an eating episode. Some eat when they get
depressed.
Others lose their appetite when they get depressed. External
stimuli
are abundant, as are emotional and physical ones, yet few of these are
hunger, just some other strain on your nervous system.
Years later, you still face the tigers. A death in the family, loss of a job, or an illness may certainly have the bite of a tiger. Your pulse quickens, your mouth feels dry, your palms sweat and you revert to old behavior and try to quell the anxiety by putting something into your mouth. You
also may
be reacting to the fluctuations of daily life -- a waiter being inept,
traffic inching along, a line at the bank -- that cause you to eat a
box
of cookies or ask for a second helping of food. You might be
misidentifying
a minor travail as a tiger when it is only a baby cub.
True
hunger
cannot wait a few hours. It demands to be fed. You were not hungry at
noon
but were responding to a time of day stimulus, another reason you've
given
yourself to eat. If you distract yourself with some other activity, the
urge usually passes within a few minutes. Try to differentiate between
your hungers and your urges. As
your clothes
get looser, you'll start to enjoy leaving food on your plate. It is a
process
that takes time to achieve. Remember: ~ ~ ~
Caryl Ehrlich also teaches The Caryl Ehrlich Program, a one-on-one behavioral approach to weight loss in New York City. Visit her at ConquerFood.com to know more about weight loss and keep it off without diet, deprivation, props, or pills.
~ ~ ~ related
Talent Development Resources pages:eating disorders......eating disorders : resources.articles books sites addiction
/ dependency: page 1......addiction
/ dependency resources : books change / coaching / self-help articles article authors / titles ~ ~ ~
|
~ ~
|