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Who
chose your lunch -
your body or your self-esteem?
Do you struggle with weight problems?
Do you console yourself with food?
Are you aware of your inner food programming
and just how easily those buttons are pushed?
Read on to discover how they got there
in the first place and what you can do to "re-program" your
food responses.
Firstly, how did it happen?
This goes way back to how we were "trained"
as babies, toddlers and children. The reward and punishment program
worked well to produce boys and girls that did what they were told and
got an ice-cream or who didn't and got a smack!
It is a well known fact that rewarding
"good" behaviour and punishing "bad" behaviour will
quickly train your pet to act exactly how you want it to - perform tricks,
use the litter tray, salivate in response to the food bell! This system
works because the actions are programmed behaviours in response to a
particular stimulus. And, what is mostly used for the reward is a food
treat.
Even if we didn't deliberately set out
to do so, we use very similar techniques on children - "eat up
all your greens and you can have an ice-cream", "you can have
a lolly only if you're a good boy". Or maybe it's a grazed knee
which prompts "there, there, don't cry - here's a sweetie to make
you better".
Growing up we learn an association between
certain foods and a reward or treat. We learn that we get these things
when we are "good" or if we're feeling unhappy in order to
make us better again.
Now in animals where you have control over
the food source, there is generally no problem. But, babies and toddlers
soon grow up to be able to reach the cookie jar for themselves, or go
to the shop with their pocket money or have their own wage and decide
for themselves when they "deserve" a treat or not.
Perhaps I didn't get a good grade in the
maths test, so I'll buy myself a bar of chocolate as a consolation prize
instead. Maybe, I'm just feeling down because it's "that time of
the month" so I'll cuddle up in front of the TV with a tub of ice-cream
or chips. Or, maybe I just cleaned out the spare room and all of it's
junk and so I feel I deserve a reward of a triple helping of chocolate
fudge cake with lashings of cream and caramel ice-cream.
In all these scenarios we use food as a
reward or substitute. And all these habits, these "buttons"
are put in place as we grow up and are "trained" with the
reward and punishment program.
Sales people know all about these little
buttons, which is why a lot of food adverts feature words like "treat",
"deserve", "reward", "indulge".
Well, what do we do about it?
Firstly, we can stop reinforcing these
habits in children, which will help them in future years, NOT to become
a "food addict" and to enable them to make food choices
based on their body's needs and not their self-esteem's.
- Stop using food as a reward for good
behaviour or to placate.
- Don't bribe a child to do something
with the expectation of a food treat.
- Bring sweet foods down from the pedestal
- they are just a food item, don't put special emphasis on them as
"for special occasions only". They have to be managed along
with the rest of a child's food intake, to make sure that a child
gets enough nutrients, but don't make them "special".
- Reduce children's exposure to adverts
- sales companies have a vested interest in establishing "buttons"
in order to trigger sales now and in the future.
- Feed children when they are hungry,
so they get used to recognising and responding to their own body signals
rather than external stimulus. As a baby, they cry to tell you when
they want their next feed - they are responding to their body's need.
As they grow and move to solid food, don't confuse their body signals
with snacks in order to train them to someone else's "meal times".
Now, for the hard part, what to do for
those of us who have already been "pre-programmed".
Habits that have been built up over many
years will not disappear overnight, so be prepared for a gradual process.
It will take some time and effort, but it is possible to change your
programming.
Firstly by being aware that something just
pushed your buttons and then by responding with a better choice, you
can gradually change your habits.
Here are 10 ways to help in your re-programming:
- Reduce exposure to adverts - if you
don't see it, it can't push your button.
- Don't buy foods that you find hard to
resist - if you don't see it, it can't push your button.
- Avoid shops selling those things you
find hard to resist - if you don't see it, it can't push your button.
- Stop reinforcing your old programming
- avoid using words like "treat", "reward", "indulge"
etc in the same sentence as anything related to food (the same goes
for drink too!)
- Eat a balanced meal when you are hungry
- learn to listen to your body and respond to it's signals rather
than external stimulus. Avoid snacks - if you are hungry your body
is telling you that you are ready for your next meal.
- Find a different "reward"
that you can replace "food rewards" with - be careful what
you choose though so that you don't reinforce another habit that you
later want to release - avoid shopping "treats" as well
as cigarettes, alcohol etc. How about a "time" reward -
allow yourself some time to do something you enjoy doing (not eating!)
- Start a Book of Achievements - you can
record all the things that you did well, won, achieved something from
and then in any "low" moments you can look through it again
and remind yourself. No need to bury yourself in a food indulgence
to "feel good" again.
- If you're feeling low, give someone
a hug - what you give out, you'll get back! And, there are no calories
in hugs.
- A balanced diet includes all food types.
Don't deny yourself something you enjoy, but keep it in perspective
of all the rest of the food that you eat. If you are actively trying
to lose weight then planning is important to keep control over how
many calories you take in versus their nutrient value. Try not to
treat any food as special - it is all food, but you decide what is
appropriate for YOUR body.
- Recognise patterns and associations
relating to food - such as do the snacks and ice-cream come out when
you sit down to an evening's TV viewing? or at the Cinema, do you
need popcorn in order to enjoy the movie? Try some of these activities
without the food additives for a while and see if you still enjoy
them just the same!
Being aware is the only way that we ultimately
make our best choices.
If we are responding to something with
pre-programmed behaviours then we are not making our own choices, we
are acting out someone else's.
So who decides for you - you or your
habits?
(J Hargreaves - 3rd June 2003)

Who chose your lunch - your body or your self-esteem? - article from Hark.net.au
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