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Lifestyle not Diet

(Can the word "Diet" be a trigger?)

> I have also been made aware that the word DIET sends me
> off into a massive binge. I felt like I would never be
> able to eat again. How weird is that?

Hi _______,

"DIET" being a trigger word is not weird at all. It took me a very long time to turn the meaning of that word around in my head to simply mean "the food I eat" or "the way I eat as a lifestyle". A person's diet can be either healthy or unhealthy. I found that to get started and stay started, I had to think a lot more about the quality of my diet rather than the quantity. When I got use to eating primarily foods with a high nutritive value, the quantity almost took care of itself and the cravings ceased. I believe that when our daily diet includes all of the various vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, essential oils, soluble and insoluble fiber, carbohydrate, protein and amino acids our bodies need, our cravings will cease. Our brains no longer have to send out signals that we are starving. When our bodies are not lacking for quality fuel and we eat often enough to have a stable blood sugar level, getting healthy gets a lot easier.

Also consider that our brains need a steady supply of good quality fuel to function right. That is, our brains are the source and center of our emotional selves
our feelings and emotions. The food we eat can greatly affect our emotional well being and how we react to the world and those around us. Eating empty calories (sweets, junk food, white bread, rich desserts) may fill our stomach up, but leave our brains lacking some vital element. Our creator did a pretty good job of insuring that we have the instincts for survival. When our brain perceives a deficiency of some vital nutrient, it tells us we are starving, and it's time to go hunting. This is also one reason diets, as we usually think of them, don't work. At least not over the long haul. We simply have to eat and eat well (healthy) to shed our excess weight and keep it off or our biology works against us.

Maybe it would help if you think in terms of making a choice to change your lifestyle instead of a temporary "diet". It helped me a lot to think in terms of my eating plan being something positive I am doing for myself rather than a diet where I am being deprived of anything.

I think in terms of putting healthy wonderful nutritious food into my body
getting excellent quality fuel so my body and mind can function optimally and heal. That's what we are really doing when we are eating a balanced diet composed of nutritious foods. It becomes a choice we make before every meal to do a self loving healthy act. ThinkI choose to eat this way because it is a healthy, healing, self-loving thing to do, rather than I can't eat ______ (fill in the blank with your favorite calorie laden junk food or dessert). When I make a choice between the various options, I feel much more empowered. When I choose a healthy diet and moderation, I choose healthy consequences. I need to remember that when I choose to binge, I am also choosing the negative consequences to both my physical and mental health that go along with it. I know this is a little bit circular, but when my body isn't craving nutrients, I am empowered to make healthy choices about what I eat. I find I do then, have the power of choice over food.

One last thing, when I came to this list, I was pretty certain that I knew a whole lot about nutrition. After all, I'd tried countless diets and read just about every diet book around. The truth is though, that nearly all of what I thought I knew was either based on bad science, outdated science, or no science at all. A lot of what I grew up with and took for granted, just doesn't hold water anymore. I highly recommend everyone do their own brand new research and get their info from a variety of credible sources. If I had but one book about nutrition to recommend it would be "Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy: The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating" by Walter C. Willett. This guy is one of the leading researchers and authorities in the field of human nutrition. This is not a "diet" book. It's not based on anecdotal evidence, personal success stories, gimmicks, or fad diet thinking
just sound science based on multiple peer reviewed scientific studies, common sense, and good health.

You can do it my friend!
Love, Dave

An excellent source of information about a healthy diet is: "Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy: The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating" by Walter C. Willett  (Simon & Schuster, August 2001)

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