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> I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work

well with the principles of IE.

I am with you on this one, Vicki. I think it takes an extraordinary

amount of progress with IE before one can view a food journal as a

learning tool rather than a diet hangover. How does everyone else

feel? I think keeping a journal would be backward progress for me at

this point.

~Kami

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At first I really resisted keeping a food journal cause it really felt diet-y. Once I identified h/f cues though, I found it was helpful to log my hunger before eating and after eating, as well as my thoughts, emotions, moods surrounding meals, which made me eat much more consciously. I never put down portions, just a basic idea of what I ate and maybe a reference to small, medium, large or a number of portions so I could look back and see the difference in what I was eating a month ago compared to now. I never look at nutritional info on foods unless I'm checking that it doesn't have any additives/preservatives/dyes, that type of thing, as I like eating whole, unprocessed, primarily organic foods cause they make me feel much healthier, strong and vibrant. I definitely NEVER add up calories or carb grams or anything like that because that sucks me back into the whole dieting mentality.

-----Original Message-----From: IntuitiveEating_Support [mailto:IntuitiveEating_Support ]On Behalf Of diet_rebelSent: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 10:44 AMTo: IntuitiveEating_Support Subject: Re: Journaling

> I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work well with the principles of IE. I am with you on this one, Vicki. I think it takes an extraordinary amount of progress with IE before one can view a food journal as a learning tool rather than a diet hangover. How does everyone else feel? I think keeping a journal would be backward progress for me at this point.~Kami

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Ditto, for me, at this point, it's a diet hangover.

V

>

> > I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work

> well with the principles of IE.

>

> I am with you on this one, Vicki. I think it takes an extraordinary

> amount of progress with IE before one can view a food journal as a

> learning tool rather than a diet hangover. How does everyone else

> feel? I think keeping a journal would be backward progress for me at

> this point.

>

> ~Kami

>

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That's the same thing that some of the ladies in my TW_Support group said after I'd been posting my food log to the group as accountability.

I post on my blog now so that I can continue, and those who don't want to read it don't have to, but those who were helped by it can still read it.

I journal my food because...

1) I've been breaking out in hives since January, and I've not yet discovered the reason. My doctor told me to keep track of what I eat for several months before she'll send me to an allergist.

2) I like the accountability -- if I know that someone else is going to be knowing of what I'm eating, it helps me not to just eat for emotional reasons. I go to eat outside of hunger, and I pause and think, "Do I really want <<???>> to read that I ate this?" -- diety or not, it helps *me*.... And, I'm a big believer in the "take what you love & leave the rest" method of personalizing your weight-loss journey.

3) I like being able to put my hunger/fullness numbers beside my eating, and *observe* where I may have overeaten, and *correct* the next time through ... this is a "tool" used in Thin Within ... "Observe & Correct". It's, so far, been quite helpful. But, again, this is *me*... what works for me may not work for others. That's okay.

SO, different strokes for different folks. I don't *feel* like it's diet-behavior, so for me it's still an okay thing to do. It helps, so I'll keep doing it. And, if I ever feel like it's something I *have* to do, rather than something I *want* to do, I'll probably stop doing it. ;o)

Jenn

<><

-----Original Message-----

I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work well with the principles of IE. I am not being critical. As I see it, it causes a person to look at what they ate and how much they ate and say inside “oh no, I think I ate too much”, or berate themselves, “now why did I eat that!” It may keep a person constantly thinking about food. I don’t food journal but I have to watch myself closely or I find myself mentally adding it up or going back and saying (inside my head), “let’s see what you ate today”. I can’t do that to myself and have true peace and satisfaction with IE.

http://mizbooksreads.blogspot.com

http://intuitive-eating.blogspot.com

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/IntuitiveEating_Support

* NEVER DIET AGAIN! *

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That's the same thing that some of the ladies in my TW_Support group said after I'd been posting my food log to the group as accountability.

I post on my blog now so that I can continue, and those who don't want to read it don't have to, but those who were helped by it can still read it.

I journal my food because...

1) I've been breaking out in hives since January, and I've not yet discovered the reason. My doctor told me to keep track of what I eat for several months before she'll send me to an allergist.

2) I like the accountability -- if I know that someone else is going to be knowing of what I'm eating, it helps me not to just eat for emotional reasons. I go to eat outside of hunger, and I pause and think, "Do I really want <<???>> to read that I ate this?" -- diety or not, it helps *me*.... And, I'm a big believer in the "take what you love & leave the rest" method of personalizing your weight-loss journey.

3) I like being able to put my hunger/fullness numbers beside my eating, and *observe* where I may have overeaten, and *correct* the next time through ... this is a "tool" used in Thin Within ... "Observe & Correct". It's, so far, been quite helpful. But, again, this is *me*... what works for me may not work for others. That's okay.

SO, different strokes for different folks. I don't *feel* like it's diet-behavior, so for me it's still an okay thing to do. It helps, so I'll keep doing it. And, if I ever feel like it's something I *have* to do, rather than something I *want* to do, I'll probably stop doing it. ;o)

Jenn

<><

-----Original Message-----

I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work well with the principles of IE. I am not being critical. As I see it, it causes a person to look at what they ate and how much they ate and say inside “oh no, I think I ate too much”, or berate themselves, “now why did I eat that!” It may keep a person constantly thinking about food. I don’t food journal but I have to watch myself closely or I find myself mentally adding it up or going back and saying (inside my head), “let’s see what you ate today”. I can’t do that to myself and have true peace and satisfaction with IE.

http://mizbooksreads.blogspot.com

http://intuitive-eating.blogspot.com

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/IntuitiveEating_Support

* NEVER DIET AGAIN! *

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Yeah, it took me about a year to get to where journaling is a " tool " rather than

a " chore " . I couldn't do it when I first started IE. I only started journalling

my food in ... June? I think? But, my one-year IE anniversary was July 4th. So,

there you have it... took a year. :o)

Jenn

<><

-----Kami wrote:

>I think it takes an extraordinary amount of progress with IE before one can

view a food journal as a

>learning tool rather than a diet hangover. How does everyone else

>feel?

http://mizbooksreads.blogspot.com

http://intuitive-eating.blogspot.com

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/IntuitiveEating_Support

* NEVER DIET AGAIN! *

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Yeah, it took me about a year to get to where journaling is a " tool " rather than

a " chore " . I couldn't do it when I first started IE. I only started journalling

my food in ... June? I think? But, my one-year IE anniversary was July 4th. So,

there you have it... took a year. :o)

Jenn

<><

-----Kami wrote:

>I think it takes an extraordinary amount of progress with IE before one can

view a food journal as a

>learning tool rather than a diet hangover. How does everyone else

>feel?

http://mizbooksreads.blogspot.com

http://intuitive-eating.blogspot.com

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/IntuitiveEating_Support

* NEVER DIET AGAIN! *

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Now see, that's probably why a lot of people think of my food journal as "diety"... because I put how much of the food I ate (1/2 cup... 1/4 cup.... etc). I guess I do that because it helps me see how much I've eaten, and if/when that changes I'll have something to gauge how far I've come in changing into an intuitive eater! :o)

I don't count calories, and I don't tell myself that I have to have only *so much*. I can have what I like, and I write it down later.

I am like April, too, in that I don't read the package unless I"m concerned about color dyes... I'm sensitive/allergic to Yellow #5 (aka: "Tartrazine"). It's in an unbelievable amount of foods! :-?

Jenn

<><

-----Original Message----- I never put down portions, just a basic idea of what I ate and maybe a reference to small, medium, large or a number of portions so I could look back and see the difference in what I was eating a month ago compared to now. I never look at nutritional info on foods unless I'm checking that it doesn't have any additives/preservatives/dyes, that type of thing

http://mizbooksreads.blogspot.com

http://intuitive-eating.blogspot.com

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/IntuitiveEating_Support

* NEVER DIET AGAIN! *

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Hi!I do the journalling on peertrainer.com to be mindful of the levels... and I have gotten a lot better at judgementless assessments of my hunger levels... or is that emotionless. Where I think about a food or eating... asess if I am hungry and quickly sense, no... not yet... and confirm and reaffirm that when I am hungry I can eat whatever I want.

LJ

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Hey, is that free? I need to check that out.

V

>

> Hi!

> I do the journalling on peertrainer.com to be mindful of the levels...

> and I have gotten a lot better at judgementless assessments of my

hunger

> levels... or is that emotionless. Where I think about a food or

> eating... asess if I am hungry and quickly sense, no... not yet... and

> confirm and reaffirm that when I am hungry I can eat whatever I want.

> LJ

>

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> I believe that food journaling is a diet thing and may not work well with the principles of IE.

I'm with y'all on this one! I do not want to be thinking about food(or writing about it) at all unless I am eating because I am truly hungry. But what works for one, may not be right for another.

--Jodi

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