Bucking the system to bring more pleasure and spirituality into your life
Are you eating enough?
For this day before Thanksgiving, I'm sharing the number one question I ask my clients.
What is Intuitive Eating Really?
This is a year of trying new things for me so in that spirit, please enjoy this first YouTube video of what I hope will be a rich and growing collection. Your requests are welcome for future topics! And if you like what you see...you know what they say: like, subscribe, and share!
Need a speaker for your event or workplace?
I have some exciting news I’d like to share with you. I’m shifting my business to do more writing and speaking in order to reach more people with the messages of meditation, recovery from disordered eating, and imbuing your life with gentleness, compassion, and love.
Asking for help to learn more self-regulation skills
Asking for help may look different at different times. Who and how you ask for help has everything to do with your specific needs at the time. Consider the list below as a starting point because going into adequate detail is beyond the scope of this book. Contemplate your needs or discuss them with someone you trust to determine what steps you can take to care for your tender heart.
How to approach personal exploration as a self-regulation technique
Noticeably different from distracting and soothing, personal exploration involves moving toward your discomfort in accessible ways. You might choose behaviors from this list when you feel safe and stable enough to directly engage with what is happening in your life but perhaps not yet ready to ask for help. Many of the options normalize what you are experiencing, which may allow shame to dissipate so that you can reach out to others for support.
How to sooth yourself mindfully
As you learned, your nervous system is constantly seeking safety. When in a dysregulated state of sympathetic or dorsal activation, certain practices can bring you back up to the regulated ventral state. Mindful soothing includes food. There will be times when using food to soothe is the right choice at the right moment. What is different about this approach from emotional overeating is the conscious choice to eat, the mindful attention paid while eating, and the freedom from guilt or shame.
Using nondestructive distractions skillfully
Nondestructive distraction is just what you might imagine: temporarily removing yourself from what you experience as painful without increasing your suffering. It can be absorbing, entertaining, or just different from what you don’t want to focus on.
Caring for yourself…mindfully, compassionately, directly
The name of the game is self-care. True self-care. Not the kind you can buy in a bottle or at a store. Not the kind that requires self-improvement. True self-care is subtler and woven into how you live your life day to day rather than something that happens in broad strokes occasionally.
Get Clear on Your True Need Right Now
What did you learn by first assessing your basic physical and emotional needs? Does this shed any light on how you are feeling right now? Is it possible your current experience, for example, is being influenced by a lack of sleep or feelings of isolation?
Tending precisely to your emotional hunger
Any time you experience emotional turmoil, review the biological basics. One constant is your need for adequate quality and quantity of sleep, proper hydration, and regular meals consisting of a balance of protein, carbohydrate, and fat.
Double check you’re getting the “biological basics”
Any time you experience emotional turmoil, review the biological basics. One constant is your need for adequate quality and quantity of sleep, proper hydration, and regular meals consisting of a balance of protein, carbohydrate, and fat.
Tending precisely to your emotional hunger
In her book Mindful Eating, pediatrician and Zen Buddhist teacher Jan
Chozen Bays writes about the different kinds of hunger. This includes heart hunger, the emotional hunger you feel when you have unmet needs, experience internal turmoil, and struggle with difficult feelings.
Using food and eating to numb out to our experience
When we eat to numb out, perhaps bombarding our senses with simultaneous Netflix, social media, and Chunky Monkey ice cream, our goal is to feel everything—and therefore nothing. When we eat out of ignorance, one approach to returning to our true experience is to simplify.
Using food and eating to resist discomfort
When we eat to resist or change painful or uncomfortable emotions, we try to substitute the pleasure of eating for what we deem undesirable.
Using food and eating to grasp onto pleasure
Whether we are eating a favorite food that no longer tastes so good as we become satisfied, or we have reached the point of comfortable fullness during a meal, eating to grasp onto pleasure is chasing pleasure that is dissolving or has already dissolved, and no longer responding to what our bodies are communicating.