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Re: Weekend Overeating

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Hi Amie:

Please dont avoid a special place or food if you truly enjoy it. You deserve as

much as anyone else to treat yourself and really enjoy the pleasure of it.

When you're sitting there eating something that is sooooooooo satisfying, just

stay with that feeling. It comes from that part of you that has nothing to do

with your mind and dieting and beating yourself up. It is a " higher place. "

That's the part of you that will overcome what your mind thinks you cant. The

mind thinks " surface " when the answer is nowhere close to it. It's sort of like

looking in a mirror and seeing a blemish on your face and trying desparately to

scrub away at the mirror to get rid of it instead of addressing where the

blemish actually is. That is how I look at dieting - fiddling with the effect.

Think about the events that happened around this episode. Sometimes certain

things will " set us off " into old behaviors. It's easy to return to old

behaviors - I'm still freaking out over getting weighed the other day and last

night wondered why I'm stuffing my face.

It's such a learning process to undo years and years of old habits that FEEL

like they cannot be changed. But it is just a feeling. The feeling comes and

the feeling goes. It has nothing to do with who we are.

Go have fun on your holidays! Enjoy the life it brings you.

Warm Hugs,

Deb

>

> My question is how do I recover from an overeating event? Obviously better

> to avoid it . but it happens.

>

> Last weekend, even though I did pretty well, I overate on Saturday night at

> a wonderful restaurant. I didn't feel physically hungry on Sunday at all.

> But when I started to get grumpy and dizzy, I figured eating was required. I

> felt like I ate too much again on Sunday night. I didn't feel physically

> hungry again until Monday afternoon - and no energy either. I feel like

> there is a huge swing in my ability to 'honor my hunger' after a night out.

> With thanksgiving and other events coming up, any suggestions?

>

> Thanks,

>

> Amie

>

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Waiting too long to eat often creates 'over' hunger and thus over eating. Its

sort of a balancing thing? Because our hunger signals have gotten messed with by

dieting or eating to a schedule/clock, tuning back into real hunger can be

difficult at first. I had to actually set a timer to help me check in with

myself at intervals until I got to where I could sense and understand what

hunger was like for me. Considering that eating protein type foods usually take

about 3-4 hours to digest and by used by your body, if you aren't feeling hungry

after 4+ hours, its probably your sensing of hunger that might be questioned?

This all sounds like work, and can be effort for sure, but IE is different than

dieting - you are encouraged to 'play' with your food! Eat something you really

like and see how long it is before you are hungry again. Do that with something

else. It won't be long before you find good information about YOUR abilities and

choices too.

BEST wishes for you and looking forward to more posts as you go along your IE

journey.

Katcha

IEing since March 2007

>

> My question is how do I recover from an overeating event? Obviously better

> to avoid it . but it happens.

>

> Last weekend, even though I did pretty well, I overate on Saturday night at

> a wonderful restaurant. I didn't feel physically hungry on Sunday at all.

> But when I started to get grumpy and dizzy, I figured eating was required. I

> felt like I ate too much again on Sunday night. I didn't feel physically

> hungry again until Monday afternoon - and no energy either. I feel like

> there is a huge swing in my ability to 'honor my hunger' after a night out.

> With thanksgiving and other events coming up, any suggestions?

>

> Thanks,

>

> Amie

>

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Hi Amie,

Grumpy and dizzy sounds extremely hungry to me. It's only possible, though you would know better, that you were concerned about having overeaten Sat. night, and so maybe ignored or missed some eariler signs of hunger on Sunday? And you may had been too hungry by the time you ate Sun. to not eat a bit extra? That's my thought; I could be a bit off base or not, don't know. But it really IS ok!

The way I see it is if you overeat Sat. night, then don't yell or judge; try and be very gentle with yourself and welcome hunger signals the very next time they come as a welcome sign that you can eat to self-nurture, to take care of yourself, and to get back in touch with hunger and intuitive eating.

We all slip up, I'd say try and get rid of judgment and guilt and fear and just be confident that you'll notice you're hunger signals if you're in a mindframe to seek them :.)

Good luck,

Laurie

Subject: Weekend Overeating

My question is how do I recover from an overeating event? Obviously better to avoid it … but it happens.

Last weekend, even though I did pretty well, I overate on Saturday night at a wonderful restaurant. I didn’t feel physically hungry on Sunday at all. But when I started to get grumpy and dizzy, I figured eating was required.

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First step is that you must forgive yourself and honor and do something really

nice for yourself. Stop the beating up of yourself.

Yes, we all do this. I did it too after something very troubling and emotional

happened to me this weekend. I was very grief stricken and decided to take care

of myself by taking the day off of work and stay home and do the things that

feel good to myself. I slept. I read. I did my cross stitching. All the

things that ground me and fill me up. But that evening I decided (yes I

decided) to eat a bit more than I usually do. I cooked a pretty good sized

supper with apetizer, main course and desert. And I ate mindfully. I knew what

I was doing. And when I went to bed I was over full. But because I did it

mindfully and with permission to myself, I did not eat in the quantities I used

to prior to IE 2 years ago, nor did I eat the crappy foods. And what I always

come back to is that eating does not make the emotions go away. I still had to

sit with my sadness, my grief, my anger etc.

So the next step is to figure out what emotionally was going on with you to

cause you to over eat. And as uncomfortable as it is, just be with those

feelings. Don't judge or make wrong or try to push them away. Just breath your

way through them. Eventually you will be able to come to a place of

forgiveness, calm and peace. And the next time you won't over eat as much and

each time it gets easier and easeir.

Hope this helps,

Alana

>

> My question is how do I recover from an overeating event? Obviously better

> to avoid it . but it happens.

>

> Last weekend, even though I did pretty well, I overate on Saturday night at

> a wonderful restaurant. I didn't feel physically hungry on Sunday at all.

> But when I started to get grumpy and dizzy, I figured eating was required. I

> felt like I ate too much again on Sunday night. I didn't feel physically

> hungry again until Monday afternoon - and no energy either. I feel like

> there is a huge swing in my ability to 'honor my hunger' after a night out.

> With thanksgiving and other events coming up, any suggestions?

>

> Thanks,

>

> Amie

>

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dEb, this is such a GREAT post! I especially like your mirror/blemish analogy -

fabulous and so true too. Thank you very much for sharing - its 'frame-able'

really :) :)

ehugs, Katcha

IEing since March 2007

>

> Hi Amie:

> Please dont avoid a special place or food if you truly enjoy it. You deserve

as much as anyone else to treat yourself and really enjoy the pleasure of it.

>

> When you're sitting there eating something that is sooooooooo satisfying, just

stay with that feeling. It comes from that part of you that has nothing to do

with your mind and dieting and beating yourself up. It is a " higher place. "

>

> That's the part of you that will overcome what your mind thinks you cant. The

mind thinks " surface " when the answer is nowhere close to it. It's sort of like

looking in a mirror and seeing a blemish on your face and trying desparately to

scrub away at the mirror to get rid of it instead of addressing where the

blemish actually is. That is how I look at dieting - fiddling with the effect.

>

> Think about the events that happened around this episode. Sometimes certain

things will " set us off " into old behaviors. It's easy to return to old

behaviors - I'm still freaking out over getting weighed the other day and last

night wondered why I'm stuffing my face.

>

> It's such a learning process to undo years and years of old habits that FEEL

like they cannot be changed. But it is just a feeling. The feeling comes and

the feeling goes. It has nothing to do with who we are.

>

> Go have fun on your holidays! Enjoy the life it brings you.

>

> Warm Hugs,

> Deb

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First, be as accepting of the event and as gentle with yourself as possible.

Then if you can relax enough, playing feelings 'detective' could help you

understand the event for future potentially positive changes. And don't overlook

that eating has been a working comfort mechanism for you too. It takes awhile,

and some awareness/thought to find alternatives to replace or remove that

'comforting' need. Back to being gentle. AND some times you just 'havta' EAT, so

giving yourself permission helps keep that from a build up to a (self) 'beat

up'.

BEST wishes and ehugs, Katcha

IEing since March 2007

> My question is how do I recover from an overeating event?  Obviously better

to avoid it … but it happens.

> Last weekend, even though I did pretty well, I overate on Saturday night at a

wonderful restaurant. I didn’t feel physically hungry on Sunday at all. But

when I started to get grumpy and dizzy, I figured eating was required.

>

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