Guest guest Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 I wanted to eat less... or lose weight While doing the work I have discovered that I am not suppose to eat less or weight less simply because I dont. Help with the turn around I want to eat less food T.A I dont want to eat less food (who am I kiding here?) My thinking is... (HELP) [FB] You wanted to eat less; is it true? If you really wanted to eat less, what prevented you from doing it? uses an example where she says she wants to stand up. " No, really, I want to stand up " (all the while sitting). Then after sufficient attempts to convince us that she wants to stand up, she finally stands up and says " Now, it's true. " Apparently you have a commitment to eat less. You also have another conflicting commitment that has you eating as much as you do. Honoring what is means being aware of both of those. [FB] - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 > Thing that I wanted to change in myself is: > > I wanted to eat less... or lose weight > > While doing the work I have discovered that I am not suppose to eat > less or weight less simply because I dont. > > Help with the turn around > > I want to eat less food > > T.A > > I dont want to eat less food (who am I kiding here?) > > My thinking is... (HELP) > > > Another way of looking at it is > > If I would lose weight and have the perfect body > would I be happy???? > > maybe not, but still > I have this desire to lose a few kg. *****Hi Tami ~ I think 's earlier post points out the conflict succinctly: there are two desires, one to lose weight, one to continue eating in the manner that you have been up to now. Apparently the latter is more powerful. At the moment. It may change in the next moment. Perhaps part of the difficulty lies in an unclarity about *why* the weight " should " come off. The thoughts you express remind me of my story. I too lusted after a good body (if not the perfect one). Why? For health reasons? No. In order to fill an emptiness that was felt throughout my life. I'll elaborate. For 25 years I maintained a " chucky " (but muscular) bodyweight of 188- 194 lb, and had a body image which wanted to be 155-160 lb. (and still keep most of the muscle, of course! Hahaha!!!) I was continually lusting after the lower body weight, all the while eating excessive amounts of calories. I exercised addictively to keep the weight at a ceiling of 195 lb...otherwise, with my eating habits I would have balloned up over 200, easily! As I said above, for me, losing the weight, attaining the body that I desired, had nothing to do with health issues. There was an underlying belief that worked something like this: " if Andy looks like this, then Andy will get love, approval, respect, admiration [in a word: chicks!]. " Empowering the relentless desire to lose weight was this unclear, fuzzy, but persistent sense that by LOOKING a certain way, a particular kind of lifestyle and emotional environment would be engendered. It was subtle and resisted being looked at, confronted, directly. The closer I attempted to SEE it, the more unclear and distorted it became. Very frustrating! For 25 years this powerful tale continued. It drove much of my life, not just the eating part, but the exercise aspect too. And the choice of a partner. And a whole host of other life choices which I am probably not conscious of as well. I knew all the " right " reasons to lose weight: health, longevity, vitality, etc. I had read dozens of sane, reasonable books about the dangers of eating the amount of junk food that I was daily consuming. And still, because of the pull of that story, I was absolutely helpless to change anything. Even coming down with cancer didn't alter my diet. Throughout my chemotheraphy treatment I ate voluminous amounts of junk food (on top of a very healthy diet). Unlike many cancer patients, I actually put ON weight during treatment. It seems that to change the eating pattern, the story had to end, the investment in the myth had to cease. And that did happen. Quite on its own. In May of last year, the turnaround occurred. No work was *specifically* done to achieve it. But in the fairness of " full disclosure, " I shoudl add that at the time I had been doing [for more than three years at that point] serious inquiry into the nature of thought. It was not focused at all on eating habits or even specific underlying belief structures. But it was a daily and ongoing investigation that involved meditation and something similar, but not identical, to The Work. No special training or diet exercises were followed. There was no forced effort. So had did the eating habits change? What happened? It (the underlying tape which 'held' the belief surrounding the self image) just ceased to function. I awoke one morning and the decision HAD BEEN MADE. (Notice I didn't say that " I " had " made " it. It just happened.) The rest proceeded smoothly...the eating habits changed, virtually all the junk food was eliminated, and the weight came off, effortless, without hunger or a sense of deprivation. But this alteration in behavior happened without any neurotic drive to achieve or get something (other than the immediate benefits of eating without compulsion...in a word, sanity). Nine months later and 33 lb light, the weight is still coming off, more slowly perhaps, but I'm still " shrinking. " :-))) I thus invite you to investigate the stories, myths, beliefs, that underlie you desire to lose weight. How do you think your life will change for the better? What is lacking in it now (other than the peace you would have if you weren't in contention with yourself to lose the weight)? Are you (like I was) operating out of a belief that IF you look a particular way, you will GET something from someone (s) outside yourself that will be dependent on your looking or weighing a specific weight, having a certain type of body? Are any of these thoughts valid? Good luck! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 > > Apparently you have a commitment to eat less. You also have another > conflicting commitment that has you eating as much as you do. ******What do you mean ? I have one will which is to eat less and another is to eat the way I do (because that is what happening) Please explain what do you mean by saying: Honoring what > is means being aware of both of those. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 * Apparently you have a commitment to eat less. You also have another > conflicting commitment that has you eating as much as you do. ******What do you mean ? I have one will which is to eat less and another is to eat the way I do (because that is what happening) * Yes, exactly. If you really want to eat less, what happened? Are you suggesting that something/someone forced you to eat against your will? Please explain what do you mean by saying: Honoring what > is means being aware of both of those. [FB] Honoring " What Is " means being aware of both. You appear to be aware of the voice which says " I want to eat less " and unaware of the voice that, for whatever reason, says " I desire to eat. " The first step to addressing this conflict is to recognize that it is there. By distinguishing the " voice " which wants to eat you can get to know it, look for what it thinks eating will provide for it, see if eating will actually provide those things, look for how you can gain it's cooperation or satisfaction. It's a place to inquire. - _____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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