Positive self-talk: March 2007 Archives

Which comes first--discovery or change?

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Which comes first, discovery of the source of the problem, or change? The answer may not be as obvious as you think.

Case in point. Years ago, I applied myself to melting and taming my perfectionist tendencies. I knew I had them because so many people told me so, and I'd gotten the message from experience that they weren't working for me. So often, friends would say, "Have you always been this hard on yourself?"

So after much practice and finding out the sun still comes up in the morning if I'm not perfect, I realized one day that I'm just not the perfectionist gal I used to be.

That was twenty years ago. But only this morning did I discovered the origin of my long-ago forgotten perfectionist tendencies. It happened in one moment's thought, just last week.

My third grader had bounced out of school, declaring he was the fourth to last person to lose the spelling bee. I praised him to the hilt for making it that long. Then I thought "Hmmm...I'm praising him for doing his personal best. That comes naturally to me. I wouldn't want it any other way."

Then I was struck by the connection. As a child, I had never been praised for doing my personal best. Only for being the best in the class, best in the family, best in my grade, best in my school. Being the best was never personal. It was never my choice.

Now I see the origin of my bad habit, the one I changed years ago.

Which comes first--discovery or change? Sometimes discovery. But not always.

What a relief to know we don't have to uproot every last blessed origin of our destructive behavior before we can move on.

Likewise, you can learn intuitive eating without examining every last blessed fault in yourself and without delving into your childhood. Those things are nice goals too, but not necessary to be a normal eater.

Temperance

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In my book How to Survive Your Diet, I talk about greed. Greed for food, greed for the perfect body, greed for certain numbers on the scale, greed for all our problems to be fixed right now.
Greedy man

Clearly this is not the religious kind of moralistic greed. After all, what's wrong with wanting to be thin? Is that immoral? Of course not.

The greed that Diet Survivors are helped in understanding is the obsessive need to have everything they want right now, and to an extreme.

Folks learning to ditch the diet need to learn some other principles along the way, in addition to intuitive eating. They need to recognize that greed is a normal trait of human beings that is best resisted.

Why must we have the whole cake? Ask yourself that question today. Is one thin slice enough? Greed is a habit that is fueled by fear (the cake may never be here again) and extreme thinking (I must get underweight so I don't get overweight.)

Normal eaters need to simply recognize that greed is probably not doing them much good. They can learn to resist greed, not because it's the moral thing to do, but because it helps us place reasonable, livable constraints on ourselves.

And what do we replace greed with? Temperance. Temperance in all things. It's a good word to commit to memory, and perhaps meditate on a bit. Here's a definition from Answers.com: Moderation and self-restraint, as in behavior or expression.

Temperance will help you ditch the diet for good.



Click on the book cover for more information



How to Survive Your Diet book cover

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.

Too many habits to change?

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You have all these habits to change, yet in your support groups you're told "Don't be so hard on yourself!" Man shaking fist

How can you have both? Can you go easy on yourself, yet change such a basic, entrenched part of yourself? And the answer is...

It's a balancing act. If you're a black and white thinker, you might not like hearing that.

But I have a secret for you that will make it easier. There is one single most powerful and critical habit which, if you are willing to work out, will make all the other changes easier. You really can be easy on yourself while making this change, and forever afterward.

Ready? Here is the work:

Your habit of saying "I must." Yes that's it. Think about "I must."

I must lose weight now
I must learn Intuitive Eating
I must stop weighing in three times a day
I must learn to love myself
I must learn portion control
I must legalize all foods
I must learn to listen to my hunger signals
I must learn to stop when I'm slightly full
I must learn to stop saying I must

Consider its replacement. "I'd strongly prefer."

Now let's return to the starting gate of this essay. We said you have all these habits to change, yet at the same time you're told not to be so hard on yourself.

Doesn't "I strongly prefer" resolve this dichotomy?

You have all these habits that you'd strongly prefer to change. That's not being hard on yourself. It's identifying what you'd really like to do. Doing what we really like to do is manageable. It's not being hard on ourselves. It's being very easy on ourselves.



Click on the book cover for more information



How to Survive Your Diet book cover

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.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries in the Positive self-talk category from March 2007.

Positive self-talk: February 2007 is the previous archive.

Positive self-talk: April 2007 is the next archive.

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