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Emotional Eating
"Inside me lives a skinny woman crying to get out. But I
can usually shut her up with cookies." - Anonymous
Is there a screaming banshee inside of you demanding, "GIVE
ME LOTS OF VERY RICH FOOD AND NOBODY GETS HURT!"? Do you raid
the fridge when you're not really hungry and eat in an effort to
escape feelings of boredom, anger, stress, fear, or depression?
If you use food to change the way you feel, if food is your drug
of choice, you're not alone. Like a drug, food releases opiates
that comfort, soothe, and pacify us.
Often, a strong biological link is established between food and
comfort when we're young. When we're held and fed as babies, we
learn to associate a full tummy with love and security. My attachment
to comfort food began early in life. My sweet daddy would try to
cheer me up with food treats (ice cream was a favorite) so I learned
to use food to improve the way I felt. It set up a link between
food and mood that later inspired many evenings with my comfort
food friends - pasta, cookies, ice cream, etc.
Emotional eating is an effort to satisfy emotional hunger rather
than physical hunger, but emotional hunger can never be satisfied
with food in any quantity. It can be dulled for a while, only to
rise up in full force the next time you feel sad or unloved or afraid.
Emotional eating is an effort to avoid feeling negative emotions.
But here's the thing: Your negative emotions are designed to help
you. They're designed to get your attention, to notify you that
your connection to Source is weak. As you develop your ability to
raise your vibration by choosing thoughts that feel better, you
hook up with the stream of Well-Being and reconnect with Source,
which is what you really wanted in the first place.
If you self-medicate with food, how about nurturing and comforting
yourself in other ways? If you feel like pigging out, try a different
response - take a walk, meditate, call a friend, do deep breathing
exercises, put on music and dance, do something fun. Here are three
tools to use instead of overeating when the hunger monster strikes:
1. Choose Thoughts That Feel Better. Ask yourself: "What would
feel better right now than stuffing myself with food?" Then
choose thoughts that feel just a little bit better, such as "I
have a choice. I can change the way I feel with food or I can change
the way I feel with my thoughts and actions. It's nice to know I
have a choice. I really am free to eat or not eat. I may choose
to take a walk. The fresh air and the activity will FEEL GOOD. I
know that my natural state is Well-Being and I know that overeating
is a poor substitute for what I really want - which is to feel good,
so I'll spend the evening doing things that feel good."
2. Replace Limiting Beliefs. Ask yourself, "What is the limiting
belief that is causing me to want to pig out?" Limiting beliefs
are generally things like - "There's something wrong with me.
I'm not good enough. I can't really have what I want. It's too hard.
Nothing ever works out for me." After identifying the limiting
belief, replace it with an empowering belief such as - "I can
do this. If I keep going in the right direction, I know I'll be
successful. I AM good enough just as I am. I can attract what I
focus on - that's the way the Universe works."
3. Write Your Feelings. When you feel the cravings coming on, write
down your thoughts and feelings. If you can get the feelings out
on paper, the cravings will dissipate. Knowing that it's not real
hunger for food, ask yourself what you really want. "What am
I really hungry for?" It will generally be something like:
"I want to feel safe. I want to feel confident. I want to feel
loved. I want to feel happy. I want to feel good about myself."
Writing is a great way to get in touch with what you truly desire.
If you self-medicate with food, it is NOT because you're bad or
weak. It's because you learned to avoid unpleasant feelings by eating.
As you practice feeling better and raising your vibration with your
thoughts, you regain your power. As you find other ways to comfort
yourself, you reclaim conscious control of your life. As you feel
your feelings and identify the true source of hunger, you let food
be food rather than a drug. As you continue to do these things,
your desire to anesthetize with food will vanish and you will be
free -- free of emotional eating and free to live your life as you
choose!
Kate Corbin is a Law of Attraction Life Coach and the creator of
Gold Star Coaching. Both her coaching practice and her books - Dining
at the Cosmic Café: How to Be and Do and Have Whatever You
Desire as well as Think and Grow Thin with the Law of Attraction
- http://www.goldstarcoaching.com/ebook.html
are designed to empower you to truly live the life of your dreams.
To contact Coach Kate, check out her books, and subscribe to her
free ezine, Magical Musings, visit http://www.goldstarcoaching.com/
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