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Why You May NOT Want To Lose Weight
Lets say you are stressed, frustrated, angry, sad,
lonely, tired or depressed. You want to feel better
and you find yourself mindlessly reaching for food.
You eat quickly, paying little attention to the type
of food or how much you're eating. At some point, what
you've just done registers physically, mentally and
emotionally. You feel disgusted, angry, guilty, upset,
discouraged with yourself and resign yourself to believing
that this unhealthy habit will never change.
There are a few things happening here. First, you're
trying to find a fast, easy way to self soothe which
doesn't require any thought or pre planning. Its easy,
it temporarily numbs the pain, calms the anxiety, reduces
the anger, keeps the fear down and provides a temporary
distraction so you don't have to evaluate, fix or solve
your problem. Yes it keeps you overweight, but it also
provides an opportunity to remove yourself from feeling,
thinking and dealing with your fears, doubts and insecurities.
You may even be unaware that you do this or you may
not know why you've chosen this coping strategy. What
you do know however is that eating emotionally leaves
you overweight and unhappy.
There are many reasons why we may eat emotionally,
ranging from staying with conditioned behaviors we were
taught to having poor coping skills or outlets to help
us handle our problems and ourselves in a more effective
way. While it seems natural to want to kick the emotional
eating habit in order to lose weight, many of us may
need to consider why we may feel the need to keep the
weight on.
Weight provides a protective barrier. Remember when
you would hide behind your moms leg when you were
scared? Our extra layers of weight may be providing
that same security. For many, losing weight may leave
us feeling insecure or uncertain because our role may
change once the weight is lost. Expectations by others
and ourselves may change as a result of weight loss
success and we may feel that we are expected to accomplish
more, perform or behave differently as a result. This
feeling can generate fear and it may seem easier to
stay with what is familiar than to venture into the
unknown.
The extra weight also keeps us out of the game of life,
giving us an excuse to avoid something rather than risk
failure. With the weight, you may justify being rejected,
overlooked or disregarded as being a result of the excess
weight rather than deal with the pain of not being liked,
wanted or valued.
Yet another reason why we may keep the weight on is
to punish someone or to test someones love for us. Maybe
you dislike your husbands, partners, parents or coworkers
comments, criticism or judgment about your weight. Keeping
the weight on may be your passive/aggressive way of
talking back.
Finally, for some of us, keeping the weight on is a
way to test our spouse's love for us and we use it to
see if the relationship will withstand the weight. When
you're overweight yet confident, loving and supportive,
relationships can survive almost anything. When you're
negative, pessimistic and using your weight as a testing
tool, you may want to consider what the real reason
is that you're putting your relationship through this
test.
It takes some real soul searching to look deep within
and try to understand what the excess weight provides.
Does it provide security, protection, an excuse to avoid
a perceived failure? Whatever the reason, its important
to discover and understand why you've chosen to keep
the weight on. Now try to see if you're trying to punish
anyone other than yourself, if its rational and worthy
of continuing. If you discover something traumatizing
or it feels too difficult for you to handle alone, get
the help and support you need to get you through. By
uncovering the reason for your weight, you're taking
the first step to doing anything to change it.
Very often, excess weight is an outward sign that something
is going on inside. For many moms, excess weight provides
nothing more than a lack of energy, frustration and
larger clothes. For others however, the excess weight
provides much more. Its up to you to determine what
the extra weight is giving you and what price you're
willing to pay to keep it there.
Author: Debi Silber, MS, RD, WHC
Debi Silber, MS, RD, WHC is a Registered Dietitian,
Certified Personal Trainer, Whole Health Coach, Lifestyle
Expert just for moms and the President of Lifestyle
Fitness, Inc. For nearly 20 years, Debi has been working
exclusively with moms, inspiring and empowering them
to become physically fit and emotionally strong through
gradual, lifestyle changes. For more information on
the Lifestyle Fitness Program, please visit
http://www.lifestylefitnessinc.com
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