A binge is a message -- By Geneen Roth
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A homeless guy with a wheat allergy...Only in America....Lol..:laugh:
LOL!0 -
*Bump* to come back to later0
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Thanks for posting this! I need to come back to it next time I find myself digging through my cabinets and fridge for that something to satisfy me....when I know darn well nothing will! Thanks!0
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That makes sense and is very helpful thanks0
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Why Am I Eating This?
A binge is a message--stop and listen to it.
By Geneen Roth, Geneen Roth is the author of six books about emotional
eating, including When Food Is Love.
A few nights ago, I was walking to a party in Manhattan. Halfway
there, I stopped and bought a hot pretzel from a street vendor.
That should have been my first inkling that something was amiss.
Why? Oh, only two minor reasons: I don't like pretzels and I wasn't
hungry.
For someone who has devoted half her life to understanding the reasons
why people turn to food and binge eating when they're not hungry, this
last teeny fact--lack of hunger and eating anyway--is always a red
flag. Usually, when I want to eat and I'm not hungry, I take some
time--at least a couple of minutes--to ask myself what I am feeling.
Usually, I know that no matter what's going on, it's always better to
feel it than to use food to swallow it.
But that night I seemed determined to go unconscious. I pulled off a
hunk of the pretzel, slathered it with mustard, and took a bite. It
didn't taste good, so I took another bite just to make sure that I'd
tasted it right the first time. Still gluey, still bland. I asked the
next homeless person with a "Need Food" sign if he wanted the pretzel.
He told me he was allergic to wheat, so I gave him a few bucks, threw
out the pretzel, and continued on my way to the party.
The moment I arrived, I headed straight for the food. It wasn't
exactly a binge eating paradise--sesame shrimp, polenta cakes, Swedish
meatballs (none of those yummy, deep-fried, trans-fat, or
insulin-hysterical foods), but I made do. Every time a tray came past,
I took what was offered. Then I started following the trays around,
after which I stationed myself in the kitchen and greeted the trays as
they were taken from the oven. I felt like an overstuffed sausage. As
I waddled from room to room, my belly preceded me.
On my way back to my hotel that night, I realized that this was my
first bout of binge eating in 5 or 6 years. If my husband, Matt, had
been around, he would have eyed me and said, "A coupla polenta cakes,
some shrimp, and six bites of cookies hardly doth a binge make..." But
then I would've had to remind him that binge eating is not defined by
the amount of food you eat but by the way you eat it. Two cookies can
be a binge if you eat them with urgency, desperation, and the pressing
need for an altered state. Food is a drug of choice, and when you
binge, you are using your preferred substance to deny, swallow, or
escape your feelings.
I tell my retreat and workshop students that kindness and curiosity
after binge eating are crucial. And so, the next morning, I was kind
to myself.
I was curious. I wanted to know what was going on. Why food had
suddenly seemed like my only salvation.
And here's what I discovered:
I was tired. I was feeling raw and vulnerable from having spent the
day with a dying friend. I wanted to be alone, but I didn't feel like
I had a choice about going to the party, because I'd already agreed to
meet a friend there.
I made a quick decision to go, except, of course, that because I was
binge eating, I didn't really show up at the party. I was preoccupied,
edgy, self-absorbed, and then numb. Not your ideal companion.
What If You Didn't Eat?
Recently, a student of mine--let's call her Rita--had a daughter, her
third child in 6 years. I met her when the baby was a year old. Rita
told me she spends every night binge eating. I asked her why. She
said, "I want to get my own needs met, have someone take care of me.
Sometimes I think I'm going to go crazy and throw my kids out in the
rain just so they'll leave me alone. I feel so awful about myself when
I think these thoughts, but then I remember that I can microwave some
popcorn, pour half a cup of butter on it, and sit in front of the TV
and eat. I remember I have food. That calms me down."
I asked her what would happen if she didn't eat. She said, "I'd end up
feeling awful about myself for having these feelings about my kids." I
said, "Seems like you end up feeling awful about yourself anyway."
"Yeah," she said. "But at least it's for eating and not for being a
terrible mother."
"Who says you're a terrible mother for wanting to leave your kids out
in the rain? Wanting to do it and doing it are different universes," I
said. "What if you let yourself have the full range of your feelings
without judging them or believing that having feelings means acting on
them? What if when your kids went to sleep, instead of eating popcorn,
you sat on the couch with a blanket and just stared into space? Did
nothing for a while? Gave yourself some kindness that didn't also hurt
you at the same time?"
That was 3 months ago. She's had a few binges since then, but she's
also had evenings of letting herself be exhausted without eating,
temporarily hating her kids without having to hurt herself (or them)
for it. She's realized that when she wants to turn to binge eating,
it's a sign she needs to slow down, take some time for herself--even
if it's only 3 minutes--and pay attention to what's actually going on.
Wanting to binge means: Stop, slow down, be curious about why food
seems to be the answer to everything. Wanting to binge is a way to get
your own attention. When you want to binge, it's as if you were
jumping up and down with a banner that says, "I need you to notice me
now!"
So go ahead. Notice yourself. Be kind. Be tender. Be curious. You'll
be surprised at what happens.
Trust me--it'll be good.)
Three-Minute Warning
The next time you want to succumb to binge eating, tell yourself that
you're going to take 3 minutes--only 3--to be with yourself before you
eat. Then, sit down, breathe a few times, and with as much kindness as
you can muster, ask yourself gently what is going on. What do you
need? Whom do you need it from? What would be the kindest thing you
could do for yourself now?
If you still want to eat after you've done this, notice how the food
tastes in your mouth. Notice how you feel after you've eaten. Ask
yourself if eating felt kind.0 -
Two cookies can
be a binge if you eat them with urgency, desperation, and the pressing
need for an altered state. Food is a drug of choice, and when you
binge, you are using your preferred substance to deny, swallow, or
escape your feelings.
Truth... Man Ive got some problems I need to address0 -
Three minute warning is a great idea. Must remember that!0
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Three minutes, gotta remember that ;x.0
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bump0
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Thanks for sharing. This was a great read.0
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bump0
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Boy, that totally spoke to me. I appreciate you posting this.0
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I need 2 read this again, and again, and again! Kinda like a hinge huh?
Seriously -good read0 -
A homeless guy with a wheat allergy...Lol..:laugh:
Is it bad that that is the first thing I thought, also?0 -
Thank you for posting this.0
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Thank you so much for posting this. As someone else mentioned, I need to refer to this when I feel a binge coming on. Very insightful. Thank you.0
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Great article!0
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I actually experienced this today...I was craving ice cream, even though I wasn't hungry. I stopped at Dairy Queen and got a chocolate dipped cone, which normally I love, but it tasted nasty in my mouth so I shoveled it down and proceeded to forget about it.
Even though I'm staying in my calorie goal, I have been eating a lot of unhealthy treats since I restarted this journey 35ish days ago. But I'm still losing weight so I haven't thought much about it. But while reading this, I started thinking about my binges. I started this journey the day my husband left for basic training. I feel lost and lonely without him...we've barely been apart since we met almost 3 years ago and it really feels like part of me is missing with him gone. I feel like I'm eating to fill the hole inside me. Next time I crave a something unhealthy, I am going to stop and let myself miss him for those 3 minutes and see if that helps.0 -
She is one of my favorite authors...always a good read!0
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thank you... i've been struggling with this0
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OMG! This is speaking to my LIFE right now! Thanks for posting.0
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Stealing it and posting it in the Binge Eating support group.
THANK YOU!!0 -
love it!0
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bump. awesome read.0
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Thank you for sharing this!!!!!!! bump.0
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I am learning to do this the last three weeks... it's been quite a roller coaster of a journey. Things are just starting to stabilize now, I'm not gaining any more weight (I gained 15 pounds in the first week and a half of my mindful eating journey), in fact I lost about 4 pounds this week without even trying and eating all my favourite foods--just when I felt like it and not bingeing at all for 3 weeks!!!
I have to order some of her books... thanks for posting this...
EDITED TO ADD: I just noticed the OP has deactivated her account--this thread is 4 years old! It still rings true... glad she posted it...0 -
Thank you, this is great! I never really thought about a binge being about eating when you're not hungry instead of eating large amounts. I've been binging since I was about 9 years old. Loneliness is my biggest culprit. I will definitely try the 3 minute wait next time I feel the need to eat something I don't need.0
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This is so true and so well put,
Thank you for sharing this !!!
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Thanks for sharing! Puts things into perspective.0
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lol yeah i binged today i knew why i was doing it and the 1/2 lbs of maple walnut filled gaint chocolate egg still tasted good, and im still upset......:grumble: stil it was yummie0
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