
The original page can be found on-line at http://www.pioneerthinking.com/ag_overeating.html
Overeating is so easy to do, and it is becoming a way of life for lots of people. Some see this as an addiction or a disease. Overeaters Anonymous, for example, addresses the problem as an addiction. Physicians see it as an eating disorder. I see it differently. I see it as disordered eating, and while that seems like semantics it is not.
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Overeating is often an unconscious act of eating too much and not really realizing that a lot of food was just consumed. How often do you grab for something to eat, only to look down a while later and realize that the full bag or carton or bowl is empty? You didn't even see or feel it happen. You don't even know why you ate it, because you weren't even hungry to start with - or maybe you were. Overeating can also occur because of an uncontrollable urge to binge, and frequently on simple carbohydrates (as in lots of pastries, ice cream, chocolate, pretzels, macaroni and cheese). Many different things cause us to overeat, and most are not obvious. I'll start with three common situations. The first is that you haven't ate much all day. You've skipped a meal and gone long hours without eating. Maybe you got hungry and nothing was available, or maybe you decided to ignore your hunger signals. By the time you get home you are famished. Does this sound familiar? Then you ate a bit before dinner, had a bit more than you needed at dinner and later had some more food. Or maybe you waited for dinner and stuffed yourself and forced in a bit of dessert. When you started eating you thought the food would feel good, but later you felt sick. A second scenario is you ate pretty well during the day, but still found yourself unsatisfied when dinner was over, even though you got full, and needed something sweet to top it off later. And a third situation is overeating every time you eat. These are all common experiences to many people. It doesn't make them addicts or ill or bad. There is another explanation. |
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In addition, it is at night that
the emotions of the day try to buddle to the surface, and food
is a way to keep the emotions down. We all have emotions, including
frustration, irritation, anger, stress, emptiness, loneliness,
sadness, and excitement. We are good at keeping them in check
during the day, and then at night we use food as a way to deal
with these feelings - feelings we don't even know we are having.
This is called
emotional eating - when we use food to cope with emotions.
In the second scenario, the reason could be emotional eating. It could also be because of your beliefs. It could be your belief that dessert always follows a meal, or a plate of food is always finished off no matter how full you feel. And then you have to have dessert because it is what happens after dinner.
In the third situation, constant overeating can be attributed to only eating carbohydrates, because it is hard to tell when fullness occurs and carbohydrates drive up blood sugar levels, which drive up cravings. It can also be because of emotional eating, or because fullness has become such a normal feeling you don't even realize how it feels to stop before you get full. It never occurred to you.
I have seen all of these and more explanations, and each of them is easy to address with a method of becoming mindful of hunger levels, of understanding emotional eating and balancing food choices to minimize high carbohydrate meals and snacks. This is not to say that some people don't have addictions and disorders, but I believe that many overeaters are simply suffering from a lack of balanced and emotional eating knowledge and tools. Be mindful as you eat this week, and see if you are overeating for any of the reasons I explained. If so, don't judge yourself. Guilt or shame will only lead you to eat more. Simply observe and say to yourself "isn't that interesting".
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