This article will help you to understand a very important piece of what stops you from achieving your goals with food and weight loss and provides you with some specific examples of what to do to change that once and for all.

As I enjoy the peace, the safety, the trust and confidence I feel in my body and in my world, the warmth and love I share with my colleagues and friends, and the time I have to just sit and relax.....yes, the time, it seems so long ago, that there was a time when I truly felt like I had no time.

I wasn’t on death’s door by any means, but I sure lived as though a demon was chasing me. Before my own recovery from emotional eating (some may prefer to call it binge eating disorder or overeating, whatever you call it - that's what I did - 24/7!), I lived in a state of chronic, high-level anxiety.I also felt so fat and ugly that I believed that if someone, anyone, saw me eating anything, they would judge me as fat and gross and bad, and they would be right.

Of course, when I examine that story now, it's just silly. What did I think?

Did I think that because I had extra weight on my body I wasn't allowed or entitled or needing of any food whatsoever?

Well, actually, yeah. I did believe that I should just starve myself until I was "good enough" and then I could eat something.Of course I couldn't actually sustain my self-imposed hunger strike for very long. It always ended, as it would for any human on the planet as studies have shown, with a great big binge.

This is where my insecurity and low self-esteem turned into a full blown eating disorder with me trying to control my anxiety and insecurity through restricting food in the hopes that I would one day be thin enough to be acceptable and lovable and to never, ever, no matter what, be abandoned or rejected or judged by anyone.Of course, being thin was going to bring me the love and security and accolades that I so desperately sought. Everything would be better when I was thin. Right?

Not exactly.For starters, my restriction kept triggering binges in faster succession to the point where I was starting a new diet every morning and ending it by coffee break then spending the rest of my day beating the crap out of myself verbally and feeling fat and gross and insecure and like the day was totally ruined, and I just had to wait for 8 am tomorrow to start again.

Somewhere in there the brilliant idea struck me that if I had already screwed up my day, I could just binge all day and start again tomorrow. And so it went, for years.

Throw some excessive exercise in there in fits and starts, and you have my life, every day, for most of my teens and early 20's. The thought of making a lunch for myself would have overwhelmed me in so many ways back then. My all-or-nothing thinking was so rampant, there would have been countless barriers for me to overcome just to figure out what to put in my lunch.

The dialogue in my head would have sounded something like this:

I’m trying to lose weight so maybe if I don’t bring a lunch,

I won’t eat lunch and then I will lose weight, right?

I can’t have “that” it’s too fattening, and if I can’t have what I really want, why bother packing anything?;

That won’t be filling enough, I’m going to need more but I don’t have any more, so I won’t bring any;

What if I don’t feel like having that when the time comes?

Then I won’t enjoy my lunch and I’ll be obsessing about eating something else but I’ll be full and then I won’t get to have what I really want, so I better not take anything!

What if it got mushy or squished? I have to bring a bunch of containers to keep it separate and then I have to carry them and wash them, and that’s too much of a pain in the ass, so why bother?

What if other people think that it’s weird to bring “that” in my lunch? They’ll judge me and I’ll feel embarrassed, so it’s better not to bring “that” even if it’s my favourite and what I really want – and a relatively healthy choice to boot!

What if someone was going to ask me out for lunch but they see I have a lunch? Then they won’t ask me, and I’ll miss out on the chance to hang out with them.

I could probably go on for another page about all of the worries and all-or-nothing thinking that the simple act of packing my lunch would trigger in me.

Is it any wonder I used to feel anxious as soon as my eyes opened every morning? Not a shocker.

Let’s take a look at these silly stories that used to have me stymied (say that 5 times fast!) and expose the all-or-nothing thinking clearly for you so you can challenge any similar thoughts in your own noggin.

1. I’m trying to lose weight so maybe if I don’t bring a lunch, I won’t eat lunch and then I will lose weight, right?

Okee dokee, then – sure Michelle – here I’m completely forgetting that every day, for who knows how long, I’ve been trying to restrict, and ending up binging. It’s very all-or-nothing to assume that something is going to be different today just because I say so, when I’ve been saying so for years and have not been able to stick to my “plan.” I’m setting myself up for total failure here, and then my good old inner critic (I call this voice the Drill Sgt.) will jump in with his well-intentioned shaming and beratement, and I’m off and binging.

2. I can’t have “that” it’s too fattening, and if I can’t have what I really want why bother packing anything?

Here I’m telling myself (again without rational respect to what I’ve been doing and eating for the past years) that I can’t have certain foods. The reality of my life experience at that time was that any attempts at restriction only ever triggered me to binge.

In story #2 I’m also saying there’s no point in bringing any food at all if I can’t have what I want. So, what? I’m going to starve myself completely until I’m “thin enough” (who knows when that actually will be) and then eat junk? That makes good sense – a true recipe for success, no? Not!

3. That won’t be filling enough, I’m going to need more but I don’t have any more so I won’t bring any.

Ummmm. Yeah. Sure, that makes sense. I’m going to be hungry because I don’t have enough (for starters how do I know that for sure until I’m there and finished and still hungry – all-or-nothing…), so I won’t take anything. How’s that for all-or-nothing thinking?

4. What if I don’t feel like having that when the time comes? Then I won’t enjoy my lunch and I’ll be obsessing about eating something else but I’ll be full and then I won’t get to have what I really want so I better not take anything!

Really? Why can’t I take a bunch of different things and let myself decide when the time comes what I feel like having and have that? Problem solved. In fact, that’s what I do now if I’m not sure what I want – I bring a bunch of things, as I did in the car, and just choose from them when I get hungry.

Of course, my all-or-nothing thinking back in the day would have been very hooked in telling me that I was going to eat it all and so I couldn’t bring more than I was “allowed” to have on the diet du jour. It would also tell me that people would judge me as weird and piggy if I brought a bunch of food that day for lunch. I don’t care now what others think of my eating and food choices but back then, any judgement from anyone was crushing, so I just didn’t take care of myself if I thought others might judge me. Sad, but true, and a very all-or-nothing perspective.

Why should I care more for them and their perspective of me than for my own needs and feelings? That’s just the old co-dependent training and has no place in a life where I feel confident and secure in myself and treat myself with respect and good self-care. (Visit my blog for more articles on Co-dependence and its impact on our eating and weight http://www.cedriccentre.com/blog/)

5. What if it got mushy or squished, I have to bring a bunch of containers to keep it separate and then I have to carry them and wash them and that’s too much of a pain in the ass, so why bother?

It might not get squished. I might be able to consolidate and use fewer containers. Wouldn’t it be better in the long run for me to bring the dishes and accept that I have to carry and wash them than to set myself up not to have good choices and to binge as a result? Yes.

But those options didn’t pop into my mind because of my all-or-nothing worst-case scenario brain.

6. What if other people think that it’s weird to bring “that” in my lunch? They’ll judge me and I’ll feel embarrassed, so it’s better not to bring “that” even if it’s my favourite and what I really want – and a relatively healthy choice to boot! Co-dependent, all-or-nothing me.

“Their” approval (and when I say 'their' I mean pretty much every one on the planet) was everything, and I would sacrifice and contort my own needs and feelings to do what I thought would generate the greatest approval, even if that meant me binging later because I didn’t eat enough or eat what I really wanted.

My priorities were not just somewhat skewed – they were downright screwed.

Now I just eat whatever I really want, when I’m hungry for it, and my body has been exactly the same natural healthy weight since my mid 20's, regardless of whether I exercise or not.

7. What if someone was going to ask me out for lunch but they see I have a lunch? Then they won’t ask me, and I’ll miss out on the chance to hang out with them.

Awww. Here again, I’m so in that co-dependent all-or-nothing mind that I am planning to compromise myself just in case, on the offffff chance that someone might want to spend time with me.

Was I lonely? Yes.
Did I have needs for connection? Yes.
Did I need to compromise myself in order to get them met? No.

In fact, any time I did compromise my needs physically or emotionally in the hopes of having connection with someone, I always ended up binging and feeling more insecure and beating myself.

This is simply because any time you, or anyone else, dishonors your authentic needs and feelings, you have undermined your trust in yourself and your sense of safety in yourself, and you will feel more vulnerable, less safe and trusting in the world.

In essence, you’ve just told yourself – "I’m going to abandon you if someone else comes along".

Imagine your boyfriend or girlfriend saying that and how safe and secure you’d feel in that relationship. And then remember that you often eat to manage your anxiety levels, and you will see very clearly that the quickest path to not using food to cope and to feeling happy in life and in your body overall, is to identify and meet your own needs first and then meet the needs of others, if, and only if, it really feels right for you and doesn’t compromise you in any way.

Invite yourself to be aware of your own thoughts and behaviours the next few days and see what you can come up with for your own list of all-or-nothing thoughts around eating and meal preparation in general.

Then give yourself the gift of calling a spade a space – all-or-nothing thinking is just co-dependency and will only ever create more anxiety – never less. Let yourself get some support to change this pattern of thinking once and for all. You'll be amazed how simple and speedy change can be.

Michelle
mmorand@cedriccentre.com
www.cedriccentre.com

Author's Bio: 

Michelle Morand, MA, RCC, is a long-recovered binge eater with over 20 years’ experience as a specialist in the field of binge eating, emotional eating, eating disorders and addictions. She is also the founder and director of The CEDRIC Centre, originator of the highly effective and simple CEDRIC Method and author of the ground breaking book, “Food is not the Problem: Deal With What Is.” She has appeared as an expert speaker frequently on TV, radio and in print media. Since its creation in 1995, The CEDRIC Method has helped thousands of men and women worldwide to free themselves completely from the behaviours that are causing them stress. www.cedriccentre.com