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Overcoming Food Addiction - How to Lose Weight and Beat the
Cravings
I am a food addict. In this era, I don't think
anyone would advise an alcoholic to drink only in
moderation. Yet, as a food addict, that type of advice
comes at me constantly from doctors, media, and friends. I
have had to learn on my own that if I want to maintain a
healthy weight, I can never eat certain foods again.
Millions of people can drink in moderation, but alcoholics know
that no matter how much they crave it, one drink can ruin their
lives. With our epidemic of diabetes, high blood pressure,
heart disease, stroke, and obesity we may have to realize that
even moderate quantities of addictive food can be harmful,
nevertheless, millions of people can and do eat ice cream,
pizza, and fast food in moderation; I can't.
For a long time, I tried to cling to the belief that I could.
Berating myself for my lack of will power was preferable to
facing a future filled with only low-cal, low-carb food. A life
of steamed veggies seemed like a steep, endless path of craving
and self-denial.
Fortunately, the reality of my 'sobriety' is definitely not the
uphill grind that I imagined. Just as alcoholics have impaired
judgment when they are drinking, I was sadly lacking the
ability to judge what life could be like without my fix.
I don't mean to trivialize the difficulty of this feat though.
Unable to find a program that took the addictive nature of
certain foods seriously, I decided to create one for myself. I
compare this to trying to self-manage an alcohol detox while
living in the backroom of a bar. I failed many times, but kept
trying.
In the face of intense cravings, I had to find and eliminate my
trigger foods. At first, the constant pull of my addictions
made it hard to be honest with myself about what those were.
Many foods claiming to be healthy or good for dieters turned
out to be on my list of foods that make me hungrier or that I
can't stop eating once I start.
I've found it extremely challenging to cope with the total
profusion of addictive food and the advertising for it. I had
to purge my house of unhealthy choices and try to find ways to
gather with family and friends that don't revolve around food.
I videotape all the television shows that I watch and zip
through the commercials to avoid seeing all those juicy food
close-ups, but even that doesn't help eliminate the scenes in
the shows themselves where the characters chow down on all my
old favorites.
By far, though, the most challenging thing has been discerning
the foods I can eat safely. Whether by accident or by the food
industry's design, the very foods that have been most helpful
to me are the most maligned.
Try this experiment: Casually drop into a conversation that you
had lunch at McDonald's--no reaction, right? At most, if you're
very overweight, you'll get a look. Now, drop into a
conversation that you eat nuts or avocados. Chances are your
audience will be immediately compelled to warn you about their
high fat content.
Just like putting money in a vending machine that pops out a
programmed product, put nuts or avocados into a conversation
and out pops a programmed high fat warning. Eavesdroppers have
even run from the other side of the room to join the chorus of
those trying to make me understand the folly of my ways.
I have lost over 80 pounds in less than a year while eating as
much as I want of fresh avocados, raw unsalted nuts, and virgin
olive oil in my diet. Perhaps the food industry doesn't want us
to know that all fat calories are not created equal. It's
definitely in their best financial interest for us to overeat
addictive fats, and, when we stop, to become so fat-deprived
that we must once again become enslaved consumers. This would
explain the vilification of high quality fats that help create
and maintain a healthy weight loss lifestyle, and the
glorification of non-foods like diet soft drinks that destroy
it.
Once I eliminated addictive foods, including all sugars,
refined flours, prepared foods, and chemical additives, and
replaced them with excellent nutrition, including high quality
oils, fresh veggies, beans, whole grains and 3-5 quarts of
filtered water a day, the strong physical cravings passed
quickly. They return now only when I make a mistake in my
diet.
The emotional cravings still plague me occasionally, but not
nearly as much as I feared, and the freedom and joy I feel with
the monkey off my back are much more than I dared hope. If you
are a food addict like me, don't believe anyone who tries to
sell you on a so-called easy diet that allows you to eat all
the foods you love.
Don't believe it even if it seems to work for your unaddicted
friends. Trying to maintain the delusion that you can just eat
smaller portions of foods that have you hooked perpetuates the
agony of cravings, and dooms you to repeated failure. Better to
just accept that you, like the alcoholic, need to embrace total
abstinence one day at a time.
by Rita Wings -
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Rita Wings is a food addict with the dream of having a healing
center to help food addicts reclaim full health and enjoyment
of life, and to educate them and the general public about the
nature of food addiction. One of her many passions is setting
things right for obese people who are being misinformed by the
medical community and offered mutilating surgery instead of
real help. She believes that these lucrative surgeries seem
like the answer only because the advice that food addicts are
given to eat in moderation is so self-defeatingly wrong. Please
visit and sign up on her website for additional information and
support.
http://healthyweightlosslifestyle.com/ezine
Source: http://healthyweightlosslifestyle.com/ezine
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