Guest guest Posted April 6, 2012 Report Share Posted April 6, 2012 I hear you Kelley. I think our mothers pass on all their issues to us. It's good to find your triggers though, then you can start to move past them. I found that confrontation is my biggest one. I spent most of my life trying to please everyone in fear of confrontation. I thought I wouldn't be liked any more if I didn't do what they wanted. I am finally learning to move past it. Good luck with your journey. Kris > ** > > > At age 52 who would think an argument with my mother could be the catalyst > for hitting the biscuit jar. > It bugs me so much that my emotions can change me from a positive person > trying to release weight to a big fatso in the corner munching on biscuits. > Ughhh i hate this > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2012 Report Share Posted April 6, 2012 I absolutely hear you! Mothers have a way of pushing buttons you didn't even know you had ... and I say this as both a daughter and a mother myself. At one point after my daughter was born I had the thought that I should keep a journal of all the times I did or said something that would challenge her so she'd have a guide book for later in life ... maybe it's not to late to start! :-) Seriously though, the great news is that you recognize that you were triggered. That in and of itself is huge. Now you can be thankful that you recognized it, and start asking yourself what the trigger is trying to tell you. Also, you can ask yourself what positive intention do you have in eating the biscuits after talking to your mom ... it must give you something good ... what is is? For me, stressful conversations with family members make me want comfort and reassurance. Lately I've been trying (mind you trying is the key word here) to explicitly give myself comfort with sweatpants, a good book, and a hot cup of tea. Usually I feel better over the course of a couple of hours with that set up then the box of cookies that beacons me. Sometimes like you I still go for the cookies. You're not alone! -Amy > > At age 52 who would think an argument with my mother could be the catalyst for hitting the biscuit jar. > It bugs me so much that my emotions can change me from a positive person trying to release weight to a big fatso in the corner munching on biscuits. Ughhh i hate this > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 8, 2012 Report Share Posted April 8, 2012 I had the same thing happen this week due to stress from some hurtful things my son said. Onward! ________________________________ To: insideoutweightloss Sent: Thursday, April 5, 2012 8:21 PM Subject: Mothers vs Eating  At age 52 who would think an argument with my mother could be the catalyst for hitting the biscuit jar. It bugs me so much that my emotions can change me from a positive person trying to release weight to a big fatso in the corner munching on biscuits. Ughhh i hate this Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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