Self sabotage
annbutler560
Posts: 15 Member
I am trying to change the behavior that sabotages my effort. Any ideas that have helped you?
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Replies
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Having realistic goals and prelogging my days really made me accountable and helped me stay on track. What are you doing to sabotage your goals?1
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I am trying to do the same by letting go of my fixation to overly restrict and create too less of an intake and then lead myself into a binge.2
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Try to find any triggers for said behavior and plan other strategies for dealing with them.1
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Plan ahead and meal prep. If I have my meals/snacks set up ahead of time, I rarely find a quick meal when I'm hungry and over do it2
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If snacking in front of the TV is an issue, either cut down on the TV time (easier said than done, but having two young kids accomplished it for me) or take up a hobby that uses your hands while you're watching - knitting, crocheting, cross stitching, colouring, whittling, etc.2
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Change one thing at at time -- starting with the biggest offenses first. For example, you might want to start eating clean by eliminating processed sugar from your diet. Once that becomes a lifestyle attribute, move to eliminate extra salt, and so on. Before you know it....voila !3
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Making sure I have food at work and planned dinner.
Making sure I sleep well otherwise I will spend the entire next day feeding my tired vs hunger.
Measuring wine and making sure Ive allowed calories for it.
Pre-Logging.
Planning grocery shopping.
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I agree with @sarsather Making sure I'm getting adequate nutrition throughout the day and setting realistic goals made a MASSIVE difference in stopping the cycle of overeating.1
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I started journaling for this very reason. Through rereading my journal I found that over-restricting, not having a small breakfast around 9 am and trying to make too many changes all at once were causing me to binge and fail. Although I've never liked to journal and view it as a chore, it has been a real eye-opener and really helped me to help myself.2
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Thanks, when creating a journal, are you keeping track of details besides eating?0
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I use MFP to log my foods. I write in a journal about my feelings regarding food. Like if I have a headache and am having the urge to eat bad foods and I note the time and whether or not I had anything healthy to eat prior to the headache. Or if I exercised and it made me feel empowered and how that affected the rest of my day. Or if I binged, what time of day, when I had last eaten, how I was feeling. Etc... It's mostly about writing about the good and poor choices I made and the circumstances surrounding those choices. I really discovered some definite patterns which I could use to help me change my behaviors.4
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Thanks for sharing, very helpful2
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I started journaling for this very reason. Through rereading my journal I found that over-restricting, not having a small breakfast around 9 am and trying to make too many changes all at once were causing me to binge and fail. Although I've never liked to journal and view it as a chore, it has been a real eye-opener and really helped me to help myself.
I dont have a separate journal but I take full advantage of the notes section at the bottom of my diary. It is very helpful when looking back!2 -
Meal planning - that way I'm not worrying about what I'm eating next. I found that I needed to up the calories that MFP allotted in the beginning because it wasn't enough for what I was burning.0
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Yes lots of things - but what specific things are you struggling with? It helps to know what you are doing to better help.0
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I don't keep any snacks while dieting. Meal prep is the key as well as self motivation and discipline.0
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Be accountable to yourself.. accept that no one can "make you" feel, say, do, eat, drink, think... your world is designed by you. Empower yourself by accepting that responsibility. Set realistic goals...if you have never been athletic perhaps entering an Iron man is out of the question for a couple of years... and set goals that do NOT involve the scale... a certain hole in a belt, a hill or mountain that you would like to climb... being more informed about diet as a way of providing nutrition rather than a way of restriction... THIS is your life... no one can make you... what you do, and how you got to this point is on your shoulders no one elses... lastly be brave and take chances...bein gher... and asking questions is a great start!!!2
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This book on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for overeating was available in my library system, so perhaps yours as well.
The Beck Diet Solution: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Person
Can thinking and eating like a thin person be learned, similar to learning to drive or use a computer? Beck (Cognitive Therapy for Challenging Problems) contends so, based on decades of work with patients who have lost pounds and maintained weight through Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Beck's six-week program adapts CBT, a therapeutic system developed by Beck's father, Aaron, in the 1960s, to specific challenges faced by yo-yo dieters, including negative thinking, bargaining, emotional eating, bingeing, and eating out. Beck counsels readers day-by-day, introducing new elements (creating advantage response cards, choosing a diet, enlisting a diet coach, making a weight-loss graph) progressively and offering tools to help readers stay focused (writing exercises, to-do lists, ways to counter negative thoughts). There are no eating plans, calorie counts, recipes or exercises; according to Beck, any healthy diet will work if readers learn to think differently about eating and food. Beck's book is like an extended therapy session with a diet coach. (Apr.)
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The lights are coming get on.
I thank you for taking the time to inspire me.2 -
Meal planning, prelogging, and food prep are key for me. It kind of takes the choice and effort out of eating if you know what is slotted for the day and how much.1
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I am trying to do the same by letting go of my fixation to overly restrict and create too less of an intake and then lead myself into a binge.
Me too. For more than a year now I have been purposely slowing down the weight loss process to no more than .5lbs a week. It's made a huge difference.
Strangely, just yesterday I contemplated a rapid weight loss program to lose the last 5 lbs and "be done with it". Not sure where this thinking came from after all this time. Luckily I researched the comments from people who followed this rapid weight loss program and realized how fruitless those efforts would be. All reviewers said it was miserable, most said it led to a binge at the end and a weight regain.
Slow weight loss for the win!
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For me , I have to get my rest ,,,if I'm tired I don't eat as well
Good luck1 -
My goal in this is to relearn my entire way of thinking. And, finally relinquish the fixation of weight being my main thiught. I've spent a lifetime of judging myself based on weight. What a waste of time and heart. I just really want to be healthy. The bonus can be new clothes.0
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