AmandaJayne
Trainee Maintainer
I was on this section of minis recently (it usually has good advice and information for people struggling) and read a few comments about Gillian Riley's book "Eating less: say goodbye to overeating".
I had a look at her website www.eatingless.com and read the free chapter from this book (here it is if you want to have a look yourself) http://www.eatingless.com/downloads/eatingless-free-sample.pdf
This chapter really resonated with me and I found myself nodding along while I read. Here's a bit from chapter 1 that I particularly liked...
Gillian points out that "your weight is not your problem. It’s one of the effects of
your problem. Your problem is you eat more food than your body needs" and that the consequences of seeing 'losing weight' as a focus can lead to a number of problems, not least the harmful effects of Yo-Yo dieting and a poor relationship with food. Both which I have in abundance.
I had actually come to realise this myself earlier this year when I wanted desperately to start losing all the weight I had put back on after my last diet :cry:, but was totally afraid of returning to a diet again. Mainly because I had been here so many times before and had failed every time to mainain any loss, each failure leaving me more depressed than before (if possible).
At one point I had achieved every dieter's goal - size 10/12 BMI 24! :sigh:
I had a look at her website www.eatingless.com and read the free chapter from this book (here it is if you want to have a look yourself) http://www.eatingless.com/downloads/eatingless-free-sample.pdf
This chapter really resonated with me and I found myself nodding along while I read. Here's a bit from chapter 1 that I particularly liked...
Quote "...Imagine a smoker who says ‘I’m fed up with coughing so much. What can I do to stop my coughing?’ Someone points out that it’s the smoking that’s doing it, but the smoker says ‘Yes, I know, but what I really want is some good cough medicine.’
Imagine a problem drinker who says ‘My driving is terrible. I
keep having accidents. Where can I get some good driving lessons?’ Someone suggests it’s because he’s driving drunk, so he keeps drinking and takes the bus.
Now, you may know that smokers and drinkers go through
periods when they do think like this. It’s a kind of denial because they are denying what their problem really is. The difference, though, is that when they finally admit they do have a problem, they tend to see it for what it is. Smokers set out to take control of their smoking, not their
coughing. And problem drinkers set out to take control of their drinking, not their driving.
When it comes to eating, though, this step is often not taken, or not taken fully. People who have an addiction to food set out to change a symptom: their weight. They keep their sights set on the effect, not the cause, which is eating too much.
The typical overeater says ‘I’m two stone overweight, none of my clothes fit properly and I hate how I look. How can I lose weight?’ So if someone says: ‘What you need to do is eat less food’ they reply ‘I know. I’ll join a slimming club.’ ..."
Imagine a problem drinker who says ‘My driving is terrible. I
keep having accidents. Where can I get some good driving lessons?’ Someone suggests it’s because he’s driving drunk, so he keeps drinking and takes the bus.
Now, you may know that smokers and drinkers go through
periods when they do think like this. It’s a kind of denial because they are denying what their problem really is. The difference, though, is that when they finally admit they do have a problem, they tend to see it for what it is. Smokers set out to take control of their smoking, not their
coughing. And problem drinkers set out to take control of their drinking, not their driving.
When it comes to eating, though, this step is often not taken, or not taken fully. People who have an addiction to food set out to change a symptom: their weight. They keep their sights set on the effect, not the cause, which is eating too much.
The typical overeater says ‘I’m two stone overweight, none of my clothes fit properly and I hate how I look. How can I lose weight?’ So if someone says: ‘What you need to do is eat less food’ they reply ‘I know. I’ll join a slimming club.’ ..."
Gillian points out that "your weight is not your problem. It’s one of the effects of
your problem. Your problem is you eat more food than your body needs" and that the consequences of seeing 'losing weight' as a focus can lead to a number of problems, not least the harmful effects of Yo-Yo dieting and a poor relationship with food. Both which I have in abundance.
I had actually come to realise this myself earlier this year when I wanted desperately to start losing all the weight I had put back on after my last diet :cry:, but was totally afraid of returning to a diet again. Mainly because I had been here so many times before and had failed every time to mainain any loss, each failure leaving me more depressed than before (if possible).
At one point I had achieved every dieter's goal - size 10/12 BMI 24! :sigh:
Gillian's advice is, in a nutshell "you need to make your body size less important to you and make dealing with your addictive eating your main goal. This requires a change in your thinking, a shifting of priorities".
It certainly does. For example don't bother weighing yourself because that focuses on the losing weight issue.
It certainly does. For example don't bother weighing yourself because that focuses on the losing weight issue.
Quote from chapter 1 "...the process of dealing with addictive eating is the path - quite possibly the only path - towards a more confident, peaceful, happier and more fulfilled you. Making positive eating choices for the right reasons can lead you directly towards becoming the person you want to be and living your life the way you
really want to live it...losing weight becomes a bonus but not the focus..."
I have bought a copy of her other book "Beating Overeating" a small, handbag sized book which summarises the main book and have printed out her monthly newsletters (from the website) which are excellent and thought-provoking.
Additionally, I noticed that she does workshops and there is one in Edinburgh in April, so I have got a place on it (anyone else done one of Gillian's workshops?).
Whilst I would 'like' the usual quick fix of a diet, I am going to try doing it backwards instead, focusing on stopping the addictive eating behaviour and watching for a gradual weightloss and improved health - with no weighing, just (hopefully) buying smaller clothes when necessary .
Hope this thread can help anyone else feeling desperate or confused or frustrated.
I have bought a copy of her other book "Beating Overeating" a small, handbag sized book which summarises the main book and have printed out her monthly newsletters (from the website) which are excellent and thought-provoking.
Additionally, I noticed that she does workshops and there is one in Edinburgh in April, so I have got a place on it (anyone else done one of Gillian's workshops?).
Whilst I would 'like' the usual quick fix of a diet, I am going to try doing it backwards instead, focusing on stopping the addictive eating behaviour and watching for a gradual weightloss and improved health - with no weighing, just (hopefully) buying smaller clothes when necessary .
Hope this thread can help anyone else feeling desperate or confused or frustrated.