ladybird64 said:
I couldn't think of another title.
Bottom line is, I have food "issues". I'm not bulimic or have an eating disorder as such but have massive difficulty controlling my eating and have done since childhood. (Just realised, "massive eating"-pun was unintended) I don't know how to get this under control and I am not the type who seeks therapy for everything.
I gave up ciggies, have more or less overcome thirty years worth of panic attacks, anxiety and agoraphobia but this is something else, I really am an emotional eater and I don't know how to get past this. If it was as simple as replacing bad with good, that's not a problem but I eat when I'm not hungry, half the time I can't even taste the food. On my birthday I was full of good intentions and all was ok. My mum got ill, I looked after her for a week, she has been in hospital since and all I have done is fill my face with **** that I don't really want. I make jokes because that is the way I am and I have managed to cope with everything else this life has chucked my way but how the hell can I control the diabetes if I can't get the psychological side of my eating sorted.
What can I do to fix this? There has to be a way, I refuse to believe there isn't a solution for every problem but I really don't know what I can do.
As usual, all your suggestions are welcome.
PS. This was difficult to write so please be kind
Hi ladybird,
It is emotional eating IMHO.
I once spoke to a psychologist who was very good at helping the patients I nursed who had eating disorders. I asked him why many overweight woman pretend they are happy with their body and never diet. His answer was that the extra weight they are carrying is emotional baggage that they either do not address the problem, sweep it under the carpet or are so conditioned that they do not recognise it. This seemed a bit harsh to me but I never got another chance to speak to him as he moved abroad shortly after that.
Reading your post it seems that your emotions rule your eating habits.
I have read many articles and been to lectures about food issues and below I have set out what may or not may be the problem. These are only my thoughts and not set in stone and not all parents behave in this way.
We are conditioned from an early age to accept food as a reward. When we cry as babies, we are usually fed unless our parents are old school and make us wait until the clock says that it is time for us to be fed.
When we are a bit older, if we fall over, bang our knee, fall off our bikes, our Mum kisses it better and usually gives us a food treat to make us feel better. When we refuse our meal we are assured that if we eat it all then we can have some ice-cream, sweets or chocolate.
When we are feeling unwell we are told to eat all the chicken soup that has been prepared as it will make us feel better.
Passing an exam, failing an exam, being dumped by your boyfriend or waking up to the fact that he is a waste of space means that when you tell Mum about these milestones she will reward us with a cup of hot chocolate and a few hobnobs. This reward system carries on until we leave home but now we have been conditioned to accept that food makes us feel better and we now have a habit that is difficult to break.
We are now on our own in the big bad world and things can and do go wrong for us and so we carry on with the habit. It could be something simple as the washing machine breaking down, the dog needs to see the vet, simple things that make us emotional and so we carry on the old habit of eating to relieve the hurt and stress that we are feeling.
We find a partner and settle down and are really happy and the reward side of eating lays dormant. This will surface again if things go wrong and we have chosen Mr. Wrong as opposed to Mr. Right and then it may surface again if we have kids because we might feel inadequate as a parent, feel guilty that we are not the best parent in the world, be unable to discipline the children properly or a million and one other things that family life throws at us. We may also have started to instil the same conditioning and reward system into our kids. The stressors that cause us to eat are all around us and what stresses one person does not necessarily stress another. If I lose my house keys it is irritating but it doesn't throw me as I have a back up set. I may have to change the locks but it is not the end of the world. For someone else, it will cause them great anxiety and they will feel helpless and resort to eating that packet of biscuits.. Different people have different coping skills for life's problems and there are all manner of things like poor relationships, lack of confidence and poor self esteem that came into play. We are real complex creatures us humans. :lol:
A habit has been formed and, like you gave up the ciggies, you have to break it. Find another way to deal with anything that is making you overeat.
You may think this is a lot of rubbish or you may be able to identify some of the things I have written. Nobody needs to bare their soul about what is going on in their life but it may help to read another point of view. Always ask yourself before you put that food into your mouth, "Am I feeding a need or needing a feed".