keenercam
Loves Mickey!
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2001
- Messages
- 10,466
I have really started paying attention to what triggers my overeating. I have helped myself do the analysis by doing a couple of things.
First, I moved all of the non-functional food out of my desk drawer at work. I spend most of my day at a desk and always had pretzels, 100 calorie snack bags, granola bars, etc. in the credenza drawer. Usually, by mid-afternoon, I'd be reaching in that drawer. Now, there is no non-functional foods (just lunch stuff like canned tuna & chicken, canned geen beans) and nothing that is easily eaten (the only snack food is microwave popcorn). This has helped to delay how quickly I can get food to my mouth.
It forces me to think before I eat a snack food and it helps me to focus on using food for fuel. I have now substituted the "grab and shovel and swallow" behavior with reaching for sugarless gum or getting up for fresh water from the cooler. I find that the stronger and sweeter the flavor of the gum, the more easily I am appeased, rather than just deferring any kind of snacking.
What I have done at home is gotten rid of most of the foods I considered a trigger for late night snacking, like pretzels and light chips. It is much harder at home because DH and DS14 have their food choices within my reach and I really have to assert some will to NOT eat the snack foods that are at hand. While it has been almost impossible to do flawlessly, I'm really working on substituting the late night snacking behavior with working out behavior -- I fill my Disney Cruise Line Castaway Cay cup with ice water and go up to my bedroom where I have excercise DVDs, my exercise ball, and now some resistance bands.
By buying msyelf some time to reflect on the fact that I almost just mindlessly ate hundreds of calories, I have also forced myself to analyze what triggers the negative diet behaviors. The answers are the same for many of us, I'm sure. But, mostly, if I am unhappy (whether it is because of stress or anger or genuine sadness), my first instinct is to eat. I have jokingly referred to this as "self-medicating with food" but the reality is that that is exactly what these behaviors are.
So, I am trying to recognize the real emotion, acknowledge that it is something other than hunger, and deal with the emotion, rather than eating through it. I am finding that these behavior modifications are so outrageously difficult for me. The habits are not easily broken and it is SOOOO easy to fall right back into the old behaviors.
So, I am looking for some feedback and some company here. What are your "negative" behaviors and what have you found that you can do to substitute for them? Please reassure me that there will come a time when I don't think about food all the time and I am not constantly wanting to put food in my mouth as a remedy to every little stress or sadness in any given day.
First, I moved all of the non-functional food out of my desk drawer at work. I spend most of my day at a desk and always had pretzels, 100 calorie snack bags, granola bars, etc. in the credenza drawer. Usually, by mid-afternoon, I'd be reaching in that drawer. Now, there is no non-functional foods (just lunch stuff like canned tuna & chicken, canned geen beans) and nothing that is easily eaten (the only snack food is microwave popcorn). This has helped to delay how quickly I can get food to my mouth.
It forces me to think before I eat a snack food and it helps me to focus on using food for fuel. I have now substituted the "grab and shovel and swallow" behavior with reaching for sugarless gum or getting up for fresh water from the cooler. I find that the stronger and sweeter the flavor of the gum, the more easily I am appeased, rather than just deferring any kind of snacking.What I have done at home is gotten rid of most of the foods I considered a trigger for late night snacking, like pretzels and light chips. It is much harder at home because DH and DS14 have their food choices within my reach and I really have to assert some will to NOT eat the snack foods that are at hand. While it has been almost impossible to do flawlessly, I'm really working on substituting the late night snacking behavior with working out behavior -- I fill my Disney Cruise Line Castaway Cay cup with ice water and go up to my bedroom where I have excercise DVDs, my exercise ball, and now some resistance bands.
By buying msyelf some time to reflect on the fact that I almost just mindlessly ate hundreds of calories, I have also forced myself to analyze what triggers the negative diet behaviors. The answers are the same for many of us, I'm sure. But, mostly, if I am unhappy (whether it is because of stress or anger or genuine sadness), my first instinct is to eat. I have jokingly referred to this as "self-medicating with food" but the reality is that that is exactly what these behaviors are.
So, I am trying to recognize the real emotion, acknowledge that it is something other than hunger, and deal with the emotion, rather than eating through it. I am finding that these behavior modifications are so outrageously difficult for me. The habits are not easily broken and it is SOOOO easy to fall right back into the old behaviors.
So, I am looking for some feedback and some company here. What are your "negative" behaviors and what have you found that you can do to substitute for them? Please reassure me that there will come a time when I don't think about food all the time and I am not constantly wanting to put food in my mouth as a remedy to every little stress or sadness in any given day.

