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Old 07-06-2011, 03:25 PM   #1  
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Default New ways of viewing and dealing with food

I copied this from Linda Spangle's website promoting her book 100 Days of Weight Loss. These ideas or ways of thinking really impacted me.

Picture your favorite dessert on the table in front of you.
Maybe it’s a piece of your mom’s homemade apple pie, a
slice of turtle cheesecake or a bowl of rocky road ice cream.
As you take the first bite, you swoon with pleasure. Wow, is
this ever good! Excited to have more, you reach for another
bite, marveling at how great it tastes.
More bites, then still more, and soon it’s gone. But did you
really notice the rest of the food? Initially, you appreciated
its flavor and texture, but then you stopped paying attention
and simply ate until you finished it off.
Power of the first two bites
You may not realize it, but the first two bites of any food will
always have the most flavor. If you keep eating after that,
you’re just “feeding.” Of course, if you’re physically hungry,
eating more of the food serves a purpose.
But if you’re wanting to appreciate the flavor, no matter how
much you eat, the taste won’t get any more wonderful than
those first two bites. Instead of always taking in lots of extra
calories, why not take advantage of the way your taste buds
actually work?
With any food that you love, eat the first two bites very slowly,
noticing details such as the cinnamon in the apple pie or the
soft caramel swirl in the cheesecake. Close your eyes and
delight in the taste. Allow yourself to completely absorb the
texture and flavor of the food.
Is it worth eating more?
After you finish those two bites, decide if you truly need more.
In most cases, you don’t. Once in a while, a food will taste so
phenomenal that it’s worth the mountain of calories and fat
grams it contains. But in reality, very few types of candy,
cookies or even cheesecake fit into that category.
Suppose you’re eating one of your favorite desserts such as
a chocolate brownie. When you really pay close attention to
the taste, you may decide this one isn’t as special as you’d
anticipated. If that’s the case, stop eating. Tell yourself you’ve
gotten what you needed from it. Then either toss or give
away the rest so you aren’t tempted to eat something that
just isn’t all that great.
• Choose one of your favorite foods such carrot cake,
then focus on all the details and tastes of the first
two bites. Let yourself appreciate the flavors.
• After the first two bites, stop eating and get rid of
the rest of the food. In your notebook, write down
the details about this experience.
• With each food you eat today, pay close attention
to the first two bites. Notice how they taste in
comparison to the rest of the food.

When you’re feeling stressed or sad or lonely, food does
seem to make you feel better. At least initially, it calms
your anger or anxiety and lifts your spirits. But how long
does food keep working?
As you know, the first two bites of any food have the most
impact on your taste buds. But they’re also the only ones
that have any emotional power! Once you finish those first
bites, you’ll have received whatever benefits the food can do
for you. Eating more of it simply won’t bring you additional
satisfaction or make you feel any better.
You’re done!
After a long, stressful day, Kathy grabbed a pint of chocolate
cherry ice cream from the freezer, then sank into her couch.
As she ate the ice cream straight from the carton, she kept
thinking, “Maybe this is the bite that will do it.” Of course, it
never worked. She just felt worse.
If you’re eating as a way to feel nurtured or calmed, you’ll
usually experience some level of those feelings right away.
But continuing to eat won’t bring any more satisfaction or
make you feel better and better. In fact, at some point, you’ll
probably start to feel frustrated and disappointed with your
behavior instead of being healed by the food.
Once you understand that eating more won’t continue to
improve your emotional state, you can actually use this in
your favor. With a little effort, you can train yourself to feel
better after eating only a small amount of nurturing food.

Do you tend to always clean your plate? As a child, were
you told you should never waste food? Unfortunately,
old rules about eating all of your food can ruin your diet plan.
Think about where you first heard those clean-your-plate
messages. When you were growing up, did people around
you cringe if food was wasted? Were you praised for eating it
all? Maybe you were taught that leaving food behind wasn’t
fair to the starving children in the world.
Of course, not wasting food makes total sense. In some cases,
you can prevent having too much food in the first place by
cooking smaller amounts or sharing meals at restaurants.
But even with careful planning, sometimes you’ll be stuck
with extra food you don’t need. Eventually, you have to learn
to manage leftovers without eating all of them.
It’s wasted anyway
The eat-it-all rule is one of the hardest ones for most people
to break. But when you fill your car with gas, you don’t keep
pumping after the tank is full, spilling the fuel on the ground.
So why would you do this with your body?
Here’s a new way to look at those old rules around cleaning
your plate:
Every time you eat food your body doesn’t need,
you are wasting it!
So now you have a choice. You can get rid of leftover food by
throwing it away or by eating it. Either way, it’s wasted.
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Old 07-06-2011, 06:43 PM   #2  
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Interesting points. I must say that so much of it is psychological. Regardless of how good something is, if I have someone who will share it with me (split it), I am very satisfied with half. However, if I am eating it alone, I have a very hard time stopping at half. Even if I say I'll wrap it up and put it in the refridgerator, in my mind I'm thinking, "But it won't taste as good tomorrow as it tastes right now!" I'm trying to train myself to have an internal "dialogue." So, I would "answer" the previous comment with, "So? If it's not good tomorrow, I'll throw it out!"

Last edited by lin43; 07-06-2011 at 06:43 PM. Reason: typo
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Old 07-07-2011, 11:48 PM   #3  
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Thank you for sharing that. I really enjoyed reading it.
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Old 07-08-2011, 10:12 AM   #4  
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That's a good way of looking at it. I did have that education of never wasting food.
My strategy for dealing with desserts (and cakes, breads or whatever I know I'll want to eat when I shouldn't) is to separate them into individual portions and calculate the calories beforehand. This way, I'm able to eat smaller portions without overthinking it. This makes eating it fell more like an afordable luxury and less like a sin, and its psycologicaly more satisfactory for me.
I know I would go crazy anytime I went to a bakery or a restaurant that had those ridiculously high calorie desserts if I wasn't allowed anything like that. This works for me because I like to cook and I take the time to measure the calories of what I'm making. When I'm able to cook a lower calorie but great tasting dessert and fit it into my plan, I'm a lot less likely to eat a ton of it when I go out.
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Old 07-08-2011, 05:39 PM   #5  
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Quote:
Every time you eat food your body doesn’t need,
you are wasting it!
So now you have a choice. You can get rid of leftover food by
throwing it away or by eating it. Either way, it’s wasted.
I love that! Great article, thank you for sharing!
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Old 07-08-2011, 07:19 PM   #6  
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swansong56 View Post
I copied this from Linda Spangle's website promoting her book 100 Days of Weight Loss. These ideas or ways of thinking really impacted me.

Picture your favorite dessert on the table in front of you.
Maybe it’s a piece of your mom’s homemade apple pie, a
slice of turtle cheesecake or a bowl of rocky road ice cream.
As you take the first bite, you swoon with pleasure. Wow, is
this ever good! Excited to have more, you reach for another
bite, marveling at how great it tastes.
More bites, then still more, and soon it’s gone. But did you
really notice the rest of the food? Initially, you appreciated
its flavor and texture, but then you stopped paying attention
and simply ate until you finished it off.
Power of the first two bites
You may not realize it, but the first two bites of any food will
always have the most flavor. If you keep eating after that,
you’re just “feeding.” Of course, if you’re physically hungry,
eating more of the food serves a purpose.
But if you’re wanting to appreciate the flavor, no matter how
much you eat, the taste won’t get any more wonderful than
those first two bites. Instead of always taking in lots of extra
calories, why not take advantage of the way your taste buds
actually work?
With any food that you love, eat the first two bites very slowly,
noticing details such as the cinnamon in the apple pie or the
soft caramel swirl in the cheesecake. Close your eyes and
delight in the taste. Allow yourself to completely absorb the
texture and flavor of the food.
Is it worth eating more?
After you finish those two bites, decide if you truly need more.
In most cases, you don’t. Once in a while, a food will taste so
phenomenal that it’s worth the mountain of calories and fat
grams it contains. But in reality, very few types of candy,
cookies or even cheesecake fit into that category.
Suppose you’re eating one of your favorite desserts such as
a chocolate brownie. When you really pay close attention to
the taste, you may decide this one isn’t as special as you’d
anticipated. If that’s the case, stop eating. Tell yourself you’ve
gotten what you needed from it. Then either toss or give
away the rest so you aren’t tempted to eat something that
just isn’t all that great.
• Choose one of your favorite foods such carrot cake,
then focus on all the details and tastes of the first
two bites. Let yourself appreciate the flavors.
• After the first two bites, stop eating and get rid of
the rest of the food. In your notebook, write down
the details about this experience.
• With each food you eat today, pay close attention
to the first two bites. Notice how they taste in
comparison to the rest of the food.

When you’re feeling stressed or sad or lonely, food does
seem to make you feel better. At least initially, it calms
your anger or anxiety and lifts your spirits. But how long
does food keep working?
As you know, the first two bites of any food have the most
impact on your taste buds. But they’re also the only ones
that have any emotional power! Once you finish those first
bites, you’ll have received whatever benefits the food can do
for you. Eating more of it simply won’t bring you additional
satisfaction or make you feel any better.
You’re done!
After a long, stressful day, Kathy grabbed a pint of chocolate
cherry ice cream from the freezer, then sank into her couch.
As she ate the ice cream straight from the carton, she kept
thinking, “Maybe this is the bite that will do it.” Of course, it
never worked. She just felt worse.
If you’re eating as a way to feel nurtured or calmed, you’ll
usually experience some level of those feelings right away.
But continuing to eat won’t bring any more satisfaction or
make you feel better and better. In fact, at some point, you’ll
probably start to feel frustrated and disappointed with your
behavior instead of being healed by the food.
Once you understand that eating more won’t continue to
improve your emotional state, you can actually use this in
your favor. With a little effort, you can train yourself to feel
better after eating only a small amount of nurturing food.

Do you tend to always clean your plate? As a child, were
you told you should never waste food? Unfortunately,
old rules about eating all of your food can ruin your diet plan.
Think about where you first heard those clean-your-plate
messages. When you were growing up, did people around
you cringe if food was wasted? Were you praised for eating it
all? Maybe you were taught that leaving food behind wasn’t
fair to the starving children in the world.
Of course, not wasting food makes total sense. In some cases,
you can prevent having too much food in the first place by
cooking smaller amounts or sharing meals at restaurants.
But even with careful planning, sometimes you’ll be stuck
with extra food you don’t need. Eventually, you have to learn
to manage leftovers without eating all of them.
It’s wasted anyway
The eat-it-all rule is one of the hardest ones for most people
to break. But when you fill your car with gas, you don’t keep
pumping after the tank is full, spilling the fuel on the ground.
So why would you do this with your body?
Here’s a new way to look at those old rules around cleaning
your plate:
Every time you eat food your body doesn’t need,
you are wasting it!
So now you have a choice. You can get rid of leftover food by
throwing it away or by eating it. Either way, it’s wasted.
This is great!
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Old 07-08-2011, 07:32 PM   #7  
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Great post! It's definitely a great way to look at it!
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Old 07-08-2011, 09:55 PM   #8  
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[QUOo TE=October Joy;3927161]I love that! Great article, thank you for sharing![/QUOTE]

I have said this too, for years; you "throw it in or you throw it out". It helps, especialaly when you realize food is to nurture and heal, not to cure emotional issues. Or lonliness. Or boredom. The side effect of clutter on the body isn't worth it.
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Old 07-09-2011, 08:44 PM   #9  
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I discovered this effect on my own. I used to eat a pint, (sometimes a QUART) of ice cream after dinner. Then I realized... I really only enjoyed the *flavor* of it for the first 3 spoonfuls. After that, it's just the coolness and texture of it.

I have not bought any in a while now, but the last time I had a pint in the freezer, I made it last a week. 3 spoonfuls, and put it back. Wait for the next day.

Nurse the flavor, don't devour! Think of it as "getting your money's worth". Heh

Last edited by darway; 07-09-2011 at 08:46 PM.
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