Guest guest Posted February 17, 2010 Report Share Posted February 17, 2010 Hi Jeanne: I often 'tuned out' fullness when I allowed myelf to binge eat what I really wanted after long periods of restriction. After feeling deprived for too long, I just wanted to enjoy the taste and not think about how uncomfortable my stomach felt. I suspect I feared that I wouldn't let myself have those favorite foods for awhile after that binge. For a long time I was caught up in restrict/binge cycles. However, I also tuned out fullness when I feared stopping at 'just enough' would make me feel too hungry before my next planned meal. I didn't know how to 'snack' on foods that could satisfy hungry for awhile, but not destroy my appetite for the next meal (which I planned to eat with someone else). So I ate until I was obviously full, rather than comfortably full, in order to 'last' until the next meal. ' So fears that I couldn't trust myself to feed myself when, what and how much I wanted, influenced my choice to tune out the physical sensations which could teach me exactly when, what and how much I needed. Of course the diet industry also taught me that I couldn't trust myself or my own body to tell me when, what and how much to eat. So learning to trust myself and my body cues required me to risk believing that my body cues were trustworthy, despite what the diet gurus claimed. SUE > > One of my real struggles with the IE process has been determining what comfortable fullness feels like for me. Guess I can attribute that to being so tuned out with myself for so many years. It has been a real education reading your posts! > > Thanks! > Jeanne > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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