Today I had to get my car fixed and while I was waiting, I went to get Sushi from a restaurant across the street. I ordered my favorite roll and began eating. Two pieces away from finishing the plate I stopped. I was feeling satisfied and knew I wanted a miso soup. I was instantly reminded about how in the past that simple act of stopping, especially when I was so close to finishing the entire plate, not to mention that I wanted to order something else, would have been very stressful and mentally consuming for me. ED would normally show up and try to justify why I should finish the plate – because that’s what I should do and because it was only two pieces. I usually always ended up listening to ED, which always caused me to over eat. Listening to ED was also connected to the fact that I was raised to believe that I should eat everything on my plate, not to mention that you shouldn’t waste anything, and that since I spent money on the meal I needed to get my money’s worth by eating the entire portion outlined.
While I sat inside of these lists of rules and excuses as to why I should just finish my plate – essentially while my mind consumed me and tried to convince me what I should be doing, something very important happened.
I can’t remember who or where but someone once told me this thought – that by overeating you are treating your body like a garbage can. It made so much sense to me and made me realize that by eating food that my body truly didn’t need out of the guilt of wasting it or even the fear that if you didn’t eat enough now you could potentially be hungry later, caused me to treat my body as if it was some sort of garbage can that I pollute.
However, when I used to be ruled by ED for all of those years, I never ever looked at it this way. Truthfully because I never thought of my body as anything that I had respect for or even a liking to, thinking about what happened to it when I overate like I did all the time was never looked at as anything other then – potentially weight gain or a knowing that I was a piece of shit who didn’t know how to control herself and stop eating.
That’s how ED manipulated me. That’s how ED continued to allow me to overeat and treat my body like a garbage can.
It was such a screwed up time, but learning this simple way of thinking – such that “Paula, whether you throw the food out or you shove it down your GI track when you are actually full, and knowing it is all going to end up in the same place later!” helped me start to begin to see my body, food and meals in a completely different way.
Learning how to stop eating when you are full – if you tend to be an over eater, as I was – was certainly a difficult thing to change. It took practice, commitment and a type of patience and mindfulness that ED does not permit.
Here are some tips and tricks that helped me no longer overeat and stop treating my body like a garbage can.
I hope this blog has helped you learn some new tips and tricks of how you can begin to stop overeating and no longer treat your body like a garbage can!!!
PS. LEAVE YOUR COMMENTS BELOW – I WOULD LOVE TO HEAR YOUR THOUGHTS ON THIS!
Paula Galli, Hons. BSc. Psych, CNP, RNCP, ROHP
MOTIVATIONAL COACH, NUTRITIONAL COUNSELLOR & EATING DISORDER EXPERT
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