Eating real food: February 2007 Archives
I was one of those people, just like on the commercial, that said, "I could have had a V-8." Every so often, maybe not more than once a year, I'd have a V-8. I really liked it, and I liked the idea of it, and I'd say "I'm going to drink this more often." 
Then I'd go to the store and buy a six pack of those little cans, and they'd sit in the fridge until I threw them out. I've been doing this for years and years.
Recently I heard a news report about how juice in particular can curb the onset of Alzheimer's Disease. They even mentioned V-8. Once again, I hit myself upside the head, and said "I could have been drinking V-8."
I told my husband about it, and he surprised me with the news that he loves V-8. Go figure! Why didn't he drink what I had bought? What is it with this V-8?
So we decided together that we will drink V-8. After all, we do like it, right? This time, instead of those little cans, I thought I'd buy one of those big plastic jars, because we were so committed this time.
And it worked. We're drinking V-8 a few times a week, rather than a few times a decade.
What has made the difference between then and now?
I'll bet you think I'm going to wax eloquent about motivation, determination, or commitment. But I'm not. It suddenly hit me one day, just as I sometimes hit myself upside the head--the difference is the bottle. The V-8 tastes better from the bottle than the can. That V-8 I always thought I liked had an aftertaste. But from the bottle, it has no aftertaste.
What's my point? Everything matters. Presentation, color, even whether it's packaged in a bottle or a can. Pay attention. Your body is finely tuned. It knows what it needs.
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A friend of mine named Sarah tried intuitive eating, after years of frustration with low-fat diets. Her down fall had been night eating, which she blamed on her lack of self-control. She would do fine all day long, then after dinner, was tempted by her children's high-fat cookies and snacks.

So she declared that from this day forward, she would eat smaller portions, and she would wait for hunger and fullness.
But...she added one other thing. She kept up the low-fat. Her reasoning? "I'll lose the weight even faster. After all, fats do make you fat. And after all, if I eat less fat, that means I'm eating fewer calories, right?"
She had missed the point, but she was determined that low-fat eating still made sense.
For months she sought hunger and fullness. For months, she stuck by her low-fat regimen so she would "lose the weight faster."
For months, Sarah didn't lose any weight. Why? Her stubborn night eating had worsened. She finally complained to me that this "method" doesn't work.
When I reminded her that no food was off-limits, she tried ditching the low-fat, but the range of choices was suddenly unlimited. "How do I know what I buy? There are no more guidelines. I need to have restrictions!" Sarah gave up in less than a week, and returned to her low-fat diet.
What happened here?
1.The faulty assumption that lowering her fat intake would somehow benefit her.
Granted, lowering your saturated fats would be a healthy choice, but that's not related to normal eating or weight loss. Normal eaters who make healthy choices allow themselves ample unsaturated fats and foods with health-giving fats such as fish and nuts.
2. Failure to understand the cause of her night eating.
The problem was that she deprived herself all day of maximum taste from fats (fats house the flavor of food). Then, when night time came, of course she'd be tempted, both because she's looking for the satisfaction of some flavor, and because her body really wants more fats. Sadly, her body ends up getting the unhealthiest kind. And worse yet, she tells herself she must redouble her efforts to resist temptation.
3. Difficulty in transitioning from buying low-fat to buying delicious.
She did not realize that her food choices didn't have to be overwhelming. All she had to do was pass by all the less than tasty foods. Sarah needs to tune in to her appetite. She needs to home in on what she actually loves to eat. She doesn't even know where to start.
Does Sarah sound like you?
These problems can seem hard to solve because they require a change in thinking and beliefs, not just a technical change of seeking hunger & fullness. That is why fed-up dieters need to re-talk their self-talk. They've bought so many lies, established so many habits.
Now they face undoing it all.
If you're struggling with finding your food wisdom, you may need to replace a tape or two in your head that's still running over and over and over. One tape might be "fats make you fat."
Replace it today with "Fats are delicious. They satisfy."
Check out the free Diet Survivors newsletter
This blog is a companion to the free Yahoo! Diet Survivors message board and the free
Diet Survivors newsletter.
Find out more about Linda Moran's book, How to Survive Your Diet.
