Quote:
Originally Posted by Rapunzel
As a child, I was always denied the delicious yummy (bad) food while my older brother and sister were allowed to have all they wanted. I was fat and they were not.
Because of this, I've never really freely allowed myself to have a stupid cookie when I wanted, or the whole package. Or a bag of chips. Sometimes I'd treat myself, but it wasn't without severe guilt associated with it. A relationship with food isn't supposed to be like that. It's made me obsessive about food in a way, and I hate it. I can't just have a little bit at a time because I'll not be able to stop thinking about it until the package is empty and the food is out of reach. Instead, I keep foods around me that I hardly even like in an effort to not eat too much, and it really sucks. I need to fix myself. A psychiatrist would probably help! (half lol/half serious!)
This is similar to how I feel. When I was younger, my brother hadn't been born yet, so I was an only child. Because of my weight, my dad made a limit to the junk food I was allowed to have (2 slices of pizza, 2 freshly baked chocolate chip cookies, 2 cinnamon rolls ect), and I would obsess over it, and eat too fast, which left me still feeling hungry and unsatisfied. When it came to my favorite foods it was like I was bottomless and could just keep eating and eating. However, on canned foods and more homemade foods I got full faster but never felt satisfied.
Once I became a teen, I started skipping my mom's dinners, staying up late and making my own dinners later at night when no one was awake to comment on how much/what I was eating. I would load my plate with deli meat sandwiches with all the trimmings, chips, cookies, snack cakes, pizza, tuna salad, hot pockets ... ect, bring them to my room and eat as I played video games, watched tv/movies, played on the internet, or talked on the phone. This was my time to relax, because there was no pressures on me, because I was the only one awake, so I liked to savor the moment (which usually resulted in me sleeping through school and flunking my classes). I still like to kind of "Save" my "fun meals" for when I have something fun to do.
My husband came from a huge, poor family, so once we got married, the first few years we went a bit overboard on eating. There was a time when we'd buy a huge bag of taco bell and eat it over 2-3 days, make homemade pizzas almost every night, load up on junk food during the day and evenings. It was pretty bad. We've just now started incorporating healthier options, but we're still not perfect. We still have a couple "cheat days" through the month, and I'm lucky if I stay below 2000 calories most days, but we're learning.