Maryanne’s Recovery From Daily Binging and Purging
Read about how she transformed from Daily Binging and Purging to Peace and Freedom in 6 Months
Her Last Resort
Archive for Relationship with Food
Tags: anxiety, binge eating, bulimia, compulsive eating, counselling for binge eating, eating disorders, growing, natural eating, rebalancing, Recovery from binging & purging, self esteem, triggers
Posted in: 2012, Complete Recovery, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Self, Uncategorized
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Posted in: 2012, Complete Recovery, News Release, newsletter, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Others, Relationship with Self, Relationships 101, Self-Help Services, Services, Upcoming Events, workshops
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Posted in: 2012, Audios, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Others, Relationship with Self, Self-Help Services, Video, Video, Workbooks
Leave a Comment (0) →I’ve posted a snippet of the article here for you to read. Just click on the link to read or listen to more:
“When I use my tools, they work! Things are easier, more peaceful. I just don’t feel the need to use food to cope when I use my tools.”
I hear this a lot from clients. And it’s true.
However, from clients who are a little new with the process, there is usually a “…but” attached to the end of it and the rest of the statement sounds something like, “…it’s just so hard to use my tools.” Or “….it takes too long and I don’t have the time or energy to do anything other than eat.” Or even “….what if they stop working? I need to hang on to my use of food to cope just in case my new tools stop working.”
Okay, for starters, under what circumstances could increased awareness and compassion for yourself and others ever stop working for anything? They are the key to the happiness in every single happy person. That last statement, “…what if they stop working…” if you’ve ever thought it, is a great indicator that your Drill Sgt. is in charge of your healing in that moment and not your adult self. The all-or-nothing thinking; The doubt; The belief that coping with food actually helps you in any way and would be a good thing to hold on to are all indicators that your mind has kicked into one of the basic characteristics of the Drill Sgt.: Learned Helplessness.
In essence you’re saying to yourself “I don’t really think anything but food can make me “feel better” and I don’t really think I can learn to resolve my underlying stressors so I have to keep my numbing tactics at the ready.”
If that’s the mindset that you are bringing to this process – which it is – because no one who uses food to cope ever does so from any place other than learned helplessness – this process can feel hard and like it takes a long time. My role in your life is to shift you out of that stuck, all-or-nothing headspace asap and get you into a possibilities mindset where you genuinely realize the many options in each situation and you don’t default into that stuck, sinking feeling that makes you believe the only solution is to restrict, or binge, or purge.
Common learned helplessness statements sound like this:
When you think of not using food to cope and you feel sad and scared and disappointed, it’s only because the part of you that is thinking about using food to cope in that moment is the part of you that believes that you can not truly feel peaceful and nurtured and safe and comforted without food. Thus it imagines that what’s really going to happen when you use your tools instead of eating is that you’ll still feel anxious and overwhelmed but you won’t let yourself comfort yourself with food. So of course it resists using the tools. Who wouldn’t!
That’s the same part of you that believes that using your tools is a lot of work, that it’s hard and that it won’t actually lead to any lasting change anyway. We call that the Drill Sgt. and his characteristic “learned helplessness.”
Read more of Tools for How to stop binging, overeating, emotional eating and dieting.
Tags: binge eating, compulsive eating, drill sergeant, eating disorder clinics, eating disorders, grounding, healthy eating, mindful eating, natural eating, self care, self esteem, self love, self worth, tools for stress-free eating, triggers, When I use my tools they work
Posted in: 2012, All-or-Nothing Thinking, Audios, Podcast, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Self, Self-Checklist
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Posted in: 2012, All-or-Nothing Thinking, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Self
Leave a Comment (0) →Tags: binge eating, brain chemistry and food, brain’s pleasure centre, compulsive eating, cravings, Dopamine, eating disorder treatment, Effects of Dopamine on binginig, effects of hormones on craving food, emotional eating, influence on our moods, overeating, stress eating, triggers
Posted in: 2012, Brain Chemistry, Relationship with Food
Leave a Comment (0) →Tags: acceptance, achieving goals, balanced eating, binge eating, comfortably full, commit to your goals, committment to yourself, compulsive eating, core beliefs, eating disorders, eating realistically, healthy eating, Listen to your body's hunger cues, natural eating, reasonable goals, stop overeating
Posted in: 2012, Natural Eating 101, Relationship with Food, Relationship with Self
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