Overcoming a fear of (over)eating to gain weight healthily
faithyang
Posts: 297 Member
Hi everyone
I have recently started the phase of gaining some weight to get back on track to maintenance mode (and staying there hopefully) as I am a little under my BMI.
It's week 2 now.
I've developed this paranoia of eating. More specifically, I've developed this paranoia that I am OVEREATING every time I eat something which is not a part of the "weight loss" acceptable foods that was in my repertoire.
Simply put - I have developed a fear of eating, that everything I eat is "too much" and will go over some invisible calorie limit.
This has even bled over to my cheat days where during my weight loss period I would happily and eagerly chow down relatively guiltlessly on pretty much most foods I wanted. It is really really torture because I am just destroying my mood and my positive mindset which I worked so hard to build.
Problem is I have never been in this weight gain category before (with view to maintaining) and while weight loss saw me confident and assured of my place and the structure of how it's meant to be, having to eat more has made me so scared and paranoid that not only am I getting fat and going to gain that weight back, but undo all my hard work.
This is to the point my obsession over food has become very twisted and convoluted - I think I have stepped into new territory which is an eating disordered mentality.
I will subconsciously skip a meal if I have eaten "too much" - literally one meal and a small(ish) dessert, maybe with a cookie or two on top will send me into "compensation" overdrive to "recover" the calories I have eaten. AND ON MY CHEAT DAY.
I know I will be told - see a psychiatrist. But this is something I need to beat for myself. I don't need pills, or for someone to say to me - yes, you are eating your emotions, yes, you are using food as a method of 'control' to feel like you are trying to control aspects of your life you feel you lack control over and cope with anxiety. I know these things - and I don't need someone to tell me that I have it.
Can someone please give me some advice on this, and how to manage this mentality because honestly my days have blurred into this horrible mental tortured conflict over food, how to recover calories, then swinging over to what I want to eat and planning for that - and this has caused me to sometimes even coop myself up in my home to avoid going out doing what I love doing (exploring urban places, socialising, markets, etc) for fear of wanting to eat and using "not wanting to spend money" as an excuse.
This is a mind over matter thing and I know I will win this. I would appreciate some advice but those who have gotten over that mental barrier on gaining weight after being so habituated to weight loss.
I have recently started the phase of gaining some weight to get back on track to maintenance mode (and staying there hopefully) as I am a little under my BMI.
It's week 2 now.
I've developed this paranoia of eating. More specifically, I've developed this paranoia that I am OVEREATING every time I eat something which is not a part of the "weight loss" acceptable foods that was in my repertoire.
Simply put - I have developed a fear of eating, that everything I eat is "too much" and will go over some invisible calorie limit.
This has even bled over to my cheat days where during my weight loss period I would happily and eagerly chow down relatively guiltlessly on pretty much most foods I wanted. It is really really torture because I am just destroying my mood and my positive mindset which I worked so hard to build.
Problem is I have never been in this weight gain category before (with view to maintaining) and while weight loss saw me confident and assured of my place and the structure of how it's meant to be, having to eat more has made me so scared and paranoid that not only am I getting fat and going to gain that weight back, but undo all my hard work.
This is to the point my obsession over food has become very twisted and convoluted - I think I have stepped into new territory which is an eating disordered mentality.
I will subconsciously skip a meal if I have eaten "too much" - literally one meal and a small(ish) dessert, maybe with a cookie or two on top will send me into "compensation" overdrive to "recover" the calories I have eaten. AND ON MY CHEAT DAY.
I know I will be told - see a psychiatrist. But this is something I need to beat for myself. I don't need pills, or for someone to say to me - yes, you are eating your emotions, yes, you are using food as a method of 'control' to feel like you are trying to control aspects of your life you feel you lack control over and cope with anxiety. I know these things - and I don't need someone to tell me that I have it.
Can someone please give me some advice on this, and how to manage this mentality because honestly my days have blurred into this horrible mental tortured conflict over food, how to recover calories, then swinging over to what I want to eat and planning for that - and this has caused me to sometimes even coop myself up in my home to avoid going out doing what I love doing (exploring urban places, socialising, markets, etc) for fear of wanting to eat and using "not wanting to spend money" as an excuse.
This is a mind over matter thing and I know I will win this. I would appreciate some advice but those who have gotten over that mental barrier on gaining weight after being so habituated to weight loss.
0
Replies
-
i'm not sure what to tell you but i definitely feel this (although i also have a past with EDs) but when it comes to maintenance it's a whole entire new ball game.
like sure i know how to lose weight, of course i do. that's a simple enough formula, eat less/move more. but maintenance? that's a little more tricky. because it varies on so many things. your activity level, how accurately you are logging/keeping up with what you eat, cravings, days where you don't feel like logging or keeping track of things, falling off with exercising etc whatever the reason may be. plus, to make things worse, not everyone's maintenance is the same, as you already know i'm sure. so you are in this guesstimate void for a little while, because TDEE & BMR and all that can only give you estimates, although a lot of them are pretty accurate. but like i said lots of things can change & so does your maintenance calories. you basically just have to get over that 'omg i'm gonna gain weight and ruin all my progress' mentality if you are consuming more.
a lot of people have a hard time determining how much to eat exactly when it comes to maintaining. so you just have to play around with it for a while, and try not to feel guilty for eating more. you've done it!! you made it this far, now the goal is to try and stay on target. i think of it as a game. like oh dang i messed up this week i ate too little or dang i ate too much, but it's not permanent. yep. not permanent. give yourself some wiggle room, to gain or lose while in maintenance. i give myself anywhere from 5-10 pounds. as long as my clothes fit and im okay with how i look, i try not to obsess on that 'perfect number' anymore. it's tiring and useless tbh.
and even if you do end up gaining a little bit of weight, it's not going to be dramatic or a huge surplus suddenly. the weight won't catch you by surprise unless you are not keeping track anymore. i still keep track of what i eat, some days more lenient than others. i mean you don't have to, not everyone does. but me? it really helps. but don't! get caught up! in obsession! easier said than done. but take a moment to take a deep breath, let it out. and tell yourself it's perfectly okay to eat more. eat your maintenance calories, and you will most likely adjusting it over time sometimes adding more or less. but please remember, even if you do gain, you can always lose it again and get back on track every time when you need or want to. i know i was a bit stressed after not loosing weight anymore because i became so accustomed to it, it became my habit and constant. but that is definitely unhealthy in the long run, to obsess over. you'll figure it out. try not to be so hard on yourself.0 -
also forgot to mention i had this fear of eating more/gaining weight when i was recovering from being underweight, due to medical issues. but i regained it back healthily and am back on track. much happier actually.0
-
It is obvious that you like to feel in control and plan. My suggestion firstly would be to make a 'new' plan, ideally write it down. Include in that plan the calories you need to achieve on a daily basis to gain weight at a decent pace and also a list of food (cookies, chocolate, ice-cream, nuts, peanut butter etc) which you MUST eat within that amount to boost your cals. If you set it to yourself as a positive challenge and then record your 'successes' everyday you might find it a little easier. The shift from losing to maintenance and gaining is incredibly difficult to manage. I do think you have some emotional / mental issues to overcome around food and would suggest if you don't want to seek professional help that you invest in some CBT and TA counselling technique books to help you change the way you think. Good luck.0
-
you have an unhealthy relationship with food and if you are have a "paranoia" about eating too much then you need to seek help. A public forum is not going to help you with any of the issues that you have identified. Please get help before your issue develops into a a full blown eating disorder.0
-
squishprincess wrote: »i'm not sure what to tell you but i definitely feel this (although i also have a past with EDs) but when it comes to maintenance it's a whole entire new ball game.
like sure i know how to lose weight, of course i do. that's a simple enough formula, eat less/move more. but maintenance? that's a little more tricky. because it varies on so many things. your activity level, how accurately you are logging/keeping up with what you eat, cravings, days where you don't feel like logging or keeping track of things, falling off with exercising etc whatever the reason may be. plus, to make things worse, not everyone's maintenance is the same, as you already know i'm sure. so you are in this guesstimate void for a little while, because TDEE & BMR and all that can only give you estimates, although a lot of them are pretty accurate. but like i said lots of things can change & so does your maintenance calories. you basically just have to get over that 'omg i'm gonna gain weight and ruin all my progress' mentality if you are consuming more.
Hi @squishprincess, EXACTLY!! When it comes to losing weight the formula is pretty straight forward - its just about willpower, structure, planning and consistency, and as long as you keep it on a routine, straight line the weight will drop off, even if its a little slow at first.
With maintenance when I started I was a little more positive at first, thinking oh yeah that may be kinda easy as I can now eat freely without too much constraint and not beat myself up so much over eating that few scoops of guilty ice cream.
I upped my calories minimally over the course of 5 days, adding a little more at every meal because I didn't want to and wasn't comfortable going on binge attack and having come from a binge background I knew full well what it meant if I opened the floodgates for that vanquished monster to rear its head.
I still ended up losing some weight. So I got a little worried and moved on to again, increase it a little more at each meal. I was constantly VERY full and unaccustomed to eating more - neither was my tummy, ironically, despite me having all these plans of having a big binge weekend.
I started to develop this fear in me that I am overeating, that I'm already eating so much, what if I gain weight (ironically again, considering the point of eating more is to regain some of that lost weight before going maintenance). If I ate one proper meal OUTSIDE the foods/meals I normally peg in my 'ok to eat' category and I fret anxiously over it, in the same way I would if I went on an unplanned binge, even IF this outside food wasn't that big a portion or if it was a healthy dish.
Then yes there's this guesstimate void. With weight to lose I know YES I just need to lose this much weight and I know more or less how much my body needs/doesn't need to lose that weight. With the maintenance thing I step on the scale see a 0.5kg increase and I completely, absolutely freak out.squishprincess wrote: »a lot of people have a hard time determining how much to eat exactly when it comes to maintaining. so you just have to play around with it for a while, and try not to feel guilty for eating more. you've done it!! you made it this far, now the goal is to try and stay on target. i think of it as a game. like oh dang i messed up this week i ate too little or dang i ate too much, but it's not permanent. yep. not permanent. give yourself some wiggle room, to gain or lose while in maintenance. i give myself anywhere from 5-10 pounds. as long as my clothes fit and im okay with how i look, i try not to obsess on that 'perfect number' anymore. it's tiring and useless tbh.
and even if you do end up gaining a little bit of weight, it's not going to be dramatic or a huge surplus suddenly. the weight won't catch you by surprise unless you are not keeping track anymore. i still keep track of what i eat, some days more lenient than others. i mean you don't have to, not everyone does. but me? it really helps. but don't! get caught up! in obsession! easier said than done. but take a moment to take a deep breath, let it out. and tell yourself it's perfectly okay to eat more. eat your maintenance calories, and you will most likely adjusting it over time sometimes adding more or less. but please remember, even if you do gain, you can always lose it again and get back on track every time when you need or want to. i know i was a bit stressed after not loosing weight anymore because i became so accustomed to it, it became my habit and constant. but that is definitely unhealthy in the long run, to obsess over. you'll figure it out. try not to be so hard on yourself.
Thank you so much for putting things into perspective for me.
I was exactly like this prior to maintenance. Very calm about the weight loss thing. If I ate a little more it was like oh dang, oh well, its ok, its not permanent and I can always just go back to 'routine' during the week, no fuss.
I agree. It gets very tiring. Its exhausting for me. I've gone from a foodie obsessed with food to eat to a foodie obsessed with food NOT to eat, despite still having all those food lists that I want to cook or places to eat at. I find myself sitting watching food videos, food channels thinking oh I want to cook/eat at that place. Its torture and I don't know how I let myself down like this
Again, thanks for the advice. I really take heart in what you have said about taking a moment, taking a deep breath - even a bit of weight gain isn't going to be a huge surplus or BOOM I'm back to being a "fatty" and all my work is undone, especially since I still exercise and weigh myself once a week. Also, that I can lose it again.
It's supposed to be a journey for the long run and I should loosen up.0 -
squishprincess wrote: »also forgot to mention i had this fear of eating more/gaining weight when i was recovering from being underweight, due to medical issues. but i regained it back healthily and am back on track. much happier actually.
I'm really happy to know you regained your weight back healthily and got over that hurdle!
0 -
juleszephyr wrote: »It is obvious that you like to feel in control and plan. My suggestion firstly would be to make a 'new' plan, ideally write it down. Include in that plan the calories you need to achieve on a daily basis to gain weight at a decent pace and also a list of food (cookies, chocolate, ice-cream, nuts, peanut butter etc) which you MUST eat within that amount to boost your cals. If you set it to yourself as a positive challenge and then record your 'successes' everyday you might find it a little easier. The shift from losing to maintenance and gaining is incredibly difficult to manage. I do think you have some emotional / mental issues to overcome around food and would suggest if you don't want to seek professional help that you invest in some CBT and TA counselling technique books to help you change the way you think. Good luck.
@juleszephyr, Yes, I do! I think the planning and control part is also a means in which I project my own insecurities into it, its one aspect of my life I know I have absolute control over. But importantly, I know that its something that will work if I plan ahead for it, because I have always been a chubby kid and had lots of trouble losing weight even as a teen.
I think the emphasis on a positive challenge - listing down successes and the list of food ties in really well with my habit of writing lists!
I shall give that a try. At least if I know yes I have planned an extra scoop of ice cream, a tbsp of peanut butter or an extra cookie, I won't feel so much like I'm spiralling out of control. I think I will still be very anxious about the extra food...but at least I can try to tell myself I incorporated this within my plan of gaining x-kg at x pace. So I know it won't be a "blow out" or can't talk myself into being convinced it is one.
I agree, it is difficult to manage because I just don't know what the balance/comfortable sweet spot of whether this weight gain is a controlled weight gain to stay at a healthy target weight, or a weight gain which is undesireable.
I guess from a weight loss mentality which has stuck so deeply in me where I avoided anything which would gain weight for me except for cheat days to graduating to a weight GAIN mentality is at such opposing ends and thus causes so much conflict.
It's like being brought up that killing is wrong and learning to love animals, then moving to a farm from the city and realising I have to kill/witness the killing of the animals I raise which I've only always seen as pets (sheep, cow, etc). You know it has to be done, but you can't bring yourself to reconcile those opposing concepts.
Thanks for the advice, I really appreciate it. I don't think I'm ready to see a counsellor or psychiatrist yet but I am concerned about my health so I made an appointment to see my doctor to get myself weighed and a health check up.you have an unhealthy relationship with food and if you are have a "paranoia" about eating too much then you need to seek help. A public forum is not going to help you with any of the issues that you have identified. Please get help before your issue develops into a a full blown eating disorder.
@ndj1979, thank you for your advice.
Perhaps paranoia is a bit overly descriptive because I do eat, but its the mental aspect of things which concern me...the mental somersaults, anxiety, etc, which I am aware of and am taking steps to fix.
I think a public forum is helpful because I get support from people who have been where I have been. It can be incredibly isolating to just see a psychiatrist and talk to them from a sterile medical pov.
Sometimes it is comforting to know that people can relate and that they have been there and back, so I can get advice, moral support and most of all, connect to people and know I can get over this hurdle which I feel is a waste of my life and time because life has so much more to offer than me fretting over this.
I am however like I mentioned above going to see my doctor for the physical aspect of things, maybe I'll chat casually with her about it so she is kept in the loop and can monitor my progress, and if she feels that I do need to take it further I will definitely not be so stubborn to refuse.
Thanks again.0 -
I feel the same way as you gals! It will be inspirational to share progresses with each other!!0
-
Just type in your weight goals with myfitnesspal eat all your macros and drink enough water and a few so called junk food isnt going to ruin you as long as you dont indulge and workout and progress with it if after 1-3 weeks of the same calories ups your weight and you dont like it cut 300-500 calories0
-
OP - your comments indicate that you have an unhealthy relationship/view of food. I suggest that you address that either internally on your own or through professional help.0
-
OP, I think your concern about over eatting and gaining unhealthy weight is perfectly natural. (No I am not a professional counselor) but u hit the nail on the head about using food to soothe emotions. It's great that u r aware of what's going on with u mentally/emotionally/spiritually etc. Those r potential triggers that may cause u too over eat.
I am in a similar place as u with trying to eat at maintenance.
continue to track your food, as someone stated earlier add some "non diet foods" cookies, cakes, chips, peanut butter to ur food list; continue to watch ur portions. It's totally normal that u eat less after over eatting during a previous meal...sounds like ur balancing ur food intake.
Try journaling to help process ur emotions, continue to post on the threads, use the advice that helps u and stay accountable.
Great job on reaching weight loss goal and staying accountable !
0 -
You need to decide to change girly. Fvck everything and fix it. Don't "journal emotions". Does you no good. Slows you down.
Prioritize your decision to change and it's maybe a few months. That's a small slice of time to get perfect. That's all it takes. Learn how to eat. Payoff is huge.
Not affiliated with below but it's good. Read it. Fat loss is the title but it's more about understanding nutrition with the body on a whole.
http://www.amazon.com/Everything-Need-Know-About-Loss/dp/09669168670
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions