Guest guest Posted April 20, 2008 Report Share Posted April 20, 2008 Where I'm at right now is really reframing exercise at the same time that I'm desperately trying to reframe food. I think it is vital for me to do both. I'm not even sure which I place more emphasis on. Like Xanadu once said, I tend to spend a lot of time 'doing and undoing'. Food and exercise are so intrinsically related in my mind that one is always compensating for the other. So last week I put parameters on my exercise- something I have done before and benefitted greatly from. Now, it's a daily battle to eat according to my hunger and bodily desires w/o considering first - was my workout hard enough. Mainly, b/c my parameters are set so that nothing is going to be excruciating - and I got rid of all my measuring tools. I had been given a GPS system that calculated calories burned, miles run etc. Now, I'm choosing activities that I don't know the calorie burn for and I'm doing my exercise based on a time limit and doing the activity I feel like that day instead of operating on a week long or month long plan, preparing for a race or running a certain number of miles. a couple other things I've determined for my own health: 1. I am NOT a runner (calling myself that causes me to feel like I HAVE to run or HAVE to prove something) 2. I will not explain or justify my hunger or lack there of based on activity I read this old post somewhere in NE and I really needed it. Right now I'm learning so much just from reading what others have gone through and 'proven to themselves' and using it as a starting place for myself. Just knowing that 'someone has done it. " And separate eating from activity. Although we have had it drummed into our heads that activity ( " exercise " ) burns calories, I think it's best to keep them separate. Eat when you are hungry, regardless of your level of activity. Your body will let you know. Sometimes after a 10-mile run I am not at all hungry. Often the next day, or later that evening, I'll get hungry. Your hunger has a lot of different sources, and " exercise " (GOD how I hate that word) is only one of them. Hormones, work, weather, what you've eaten the past few days, etc. can all determine how hungry you are. " Adding on to this discussion from way back in May... I find that even at Stage 4, I'm somewhat troubled by the belief that my current level of exercise is all that's keeping me thin. More to the point: Any diversion from my current level (say, being sick with the flu, missing a day, having to walk outside instead of at the gym) creates anxiety that I will put on weight almost instantly. This is not surprising; I've thought about exercise in these rigid terms my whole adult life. Now, I am really eager to address this head-on; it's a vestige of all our culture's sicknesses about food and weight that I soaked in during my eating disorder. Any suggestions? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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