MerryMary wrote:BTW, that experience was so empowering for me I've not "needed" to have popcorn at the movies since!
That's exactly how I feel! The 'need' is really just 'want' in disguise, and it's hardly ever about wanting the food in question. It's about wanting freedom, or sleep, or company, or whatever. I feel that if I can learn to trust myself around food and use it for energy (and pleasure - I don't think that's so bad as long as I'm not getting ALL my pleasure from food) and not for companionship or reward or punishment or anything else, then I will not feel the 'need' to eat one thing or another. I always want what I can't have - and I've always felt that certain foods really should be 'never eat this' items for me - and immediately that makes me want them all! I feel that I can enter a place where there is nothing I don't allow myself - and as a result, I will not feel the terrible cravings and binge desires because there is nothing to feel deprived of or to rebel against. I will truly be eating what I want, and not what I have been tricked into wanting by my emotions or advertising. And I just don't believe that I want the kind of garbage I always eat in my binges - but I've put all that food off limits and so I leap at the chance to eat it.
It's like the little kid who has no interest in a toy until another child starts to play with it. You know?
The book, by the way, is called 'Overcoming Binge Eating' by Dr. Christopher Fairburn. The first half is the technical stuff, and then the program is in the second half. So far I'm already doing the first 2 steps - monitor your eating, weigh weekly (OK, I weigh daily, but I have truly stopped letting the number decide my mood for the day), and eat at regular intervals (he reccommends 6 meals a day - coincidentally). Step 3 I am eager to read about - it's how to avoid binges and stop the triggers. That's really what I need. Even though I've determined I don't binge according to the technical definition, I do subjectively binge/overeat and so I think this book will be helpful.
It also talks about finding your natural weight - not necessarily the number you want, but the number your body chooses when you are active, healthy, and eating properly. So as I approach goal, I may have to be flexible. He says your set point is never overweight or obese - it just may be higher in the range than you'd like. So I moved my goal to 135 but having never held that weight in my adult life, it might not be my natural weight. If I focus on habits of healthy eating and exercise, then my body will let me know what is the comfortable number, and it's not my place to impose a lower or higher number on myself. Or maybe I will reach that goal, and through maintenance I will 'settle in' a few pounds less, even - it should not be a constant struggle to maintain that weight though - it should not be about always dieting or working out excessively, but about getting the recommended exercise and living your best life.
That part reminds me of Lizabette, actually. She had a goal, and then tried to reach a lower goal, and her body just did not want to go there. She realized that and decided to be happy with her maintenance weight, where her body feels comfortable, what is best for her.
Now that I am embracing exercise I feel I am in an even better position for maintenance, when it comes - on other diets I would feel compelled to always do more and more, driving myself to the breaking point. With MF, I feel that if I am reasonably active and stay compliant, I will lose weight at a natural pace and I will acheive a realistic goal weight. That means that when this 2-mile brisk walk tape I've been doing is no longer a challenge, yes, I should step it up and find another activity. But it doesn't mean that I have to work myself up to sweating for an hour or more every day. I can find ways in my life to be more active in addition to my regular exercise in the mornings. I imagine I will top out at a 30-minute time committment to organized exercise. That's how long this current walk is. So my goal will be to increase intensity, not duration, when I choose new workouts. FOR ME - the goal of exercise is not weight loss - exercise is only going to increase my fitness level. The only thing affecting my weight loss is what I eat. So I can't eat a cake and then do 5 workout tapes and call it even. That kind of justification gets me in trouble. So, I exercise so that I will feel stronger, not so that I will lose faster.
Well, I always seem to go on and on and type way more than any human should in one sitting. I'm going to get back to work and I'll check in before bed tonight (which will be no later than 9:30 - that's a priority for me now because if I don't sleep, I don't exercise, and I LIKE exercising! Alert the media!).