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See, I think you are the one who doesn't get it, SOME OF US don't feel the hunger feelings normally or the full signals normally. I wish I did, I reallllllly do. My mom said she saw it in me as a kid, I just had this insatiable appetite and she worried I would get overweight, even though as a kid I was not overweight at all. My way to combat it is to eat the most saturating foods I can to try to feed the hunger to the best I can, eating starchy carbs just leads me to feeling famished and is disaster for me. That obviously isn't true for you and I understand that and appreciate that. But when I say I cannot eat for hunger, I truly mean it. |
Ah, the perpetual IE discussion...interesting how it crops up on virtually every diet thread. It reminds me of the religion folks who ring my doorbell. As if they need to convert others to validate their own choice.
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BBB, my mom has been trying to explain that to me for years - she just never feels satisfied, no matter how much she eats. Put that together with some carb addictions, and yeah, I see the problem. Me, I have all the right signals but I need to listen with absolute full attention (shiny! tasty!). :D
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I don't need to convert you or anyone, I wouldn't expect anyone here to try IE if their only goal is to lose weight. But if someone asks for help with trying to rid themselves of obsessive resentful thoughts of food, or is looking for some kind of sanity around food or has questions about hunger etc, then those are issues that are dealt with really well with IE. Why is my way of eating any less valid than someone elses? |
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You say that "Intuitive eating is designed to be a "common sense, hunger-based approach to eating," where participants are encouraged to eat when and only when their body tells them it is hungry." Not sure where you got this definition from but it's an insufficient definition and not at all indicative of the process that goes into it. It's a simplistic statement that gives no indication of the benefits of understanding hunger. It's more or less also a final result, not the process. If you gained a 100lbs it's not because of intuitive eating. All of us gained weight because we ate more than our body needed. |
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It absolutely DOES NOT KNOW that we live in times of plenty and that there is about zero chance there will be lean times/famine. There has been millions of years of evolution to tell my genes/DNA otherwise. |
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All I'm trying to say is that your husband behavior is not unexplainable. There is a lot of logic in it, and I think something that we're all capable of. He's not a freak of nature, he doesn't like food less than you do, and he's not an anomaly. There's no voodoo behind it. He just understands his needs more than a dieter does - I'm willing to bet he'd never consider a diet, right? Because someone who is in tune with what their body needs would never subscribe to having someone else tell them when/what/how much to eat. When the machine is broken, what does it matter what type of fuel you put in it? It's broken. I'm fixing the machine and testing out different fuels - of COURSE some fuels are better than others but once the machine is fixed it becomes easier to pick out the good fuels. |
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Would he diet? No... why would he when he doesn't need to? Does he understand that I'm different from him and I need to eat differently from him? Absolutely. He knows that we are different and that how we deal with many things in life - not just food, is different. He fully supports my low carb, high fat/moderate protein diet as he sees I'm happier, healthier and it's easier for me to be moderate in my eating. And I don't force my way of eating on him (or anyone else in the family) because they are different. |
Unfortunately both my fiance and I eat irresponsibly. He's still healthier, weight-wise, but I feel like I'm eating more veggies by far. He'll have coffee at work, eat a doughnut or something, drink soda. I'm sipping water and eating carrots... And lately, I've been the one cutting him off saying it's too late to eat or you aren't even hungry, etc.
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A baby who is breastfed eats and behaves much differently than a baby who is formula fed. Sure, it would have been nice to do a feeding every 3-4hrs. But my son ate around the clock, sometimes feeding up to 4 times an hour. All night long even, I think the longest we went without feeding in the first 3 months was maybe 2hrs, day or night. It calmed down a bit after that but I continued to feed "on demand" until he weaned himself. How could your doctor possibly know how much you needed to eat? Some people need to eat more, some people need to eat less. I can't speculate on what he meant but eating is not a prescription - your mom did the right thing and gave you more. if she hadn't that would've been like putting you on a diet. How many moms ignore their baby's cry and give them what the doctor tells them to? I have a serious distrust of doctors because of how much they encouraged formula and discouraged me from breast feeding. One even told me that my milk isn't good enough nutrition. Very bizarre archaic stuff. Anyway, gosh I'm rambling, one of the IE books I read has referred to the initial stages of IE as demand-feeding, feeding ourselves on demand the same way we feed babies on demand. There are corrolations made between babies and how they get their needs met by crying out for food and learning to trust and that it's a similar process for us to relearn how to meet our own needs. I kind of buy into it after seeing some of my friends who formula feed - the baby cries and they say "I'm not going to feed her again until it's time for the next prescribed feeding" - what anguish it must be for a baby who's hungry now and doesn't understand that it's it's only 3:15pm. |
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She was AGHAST when I did as you described -feeding on demand (and I too was a co-sleeping, baby wearing, breast feeding, don't cry it out mom). And both my babies nursed ALL THE TIME too. Water in a bottle? How could that ever make sense? "Medical advice"... huh |
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However this misinformation needs addressing. WannaB, you need to do a little reading on human biology or maybe evolution. It is not within our "natural" instinct to eat only when hungry then stop when comfortably satisfied. That's one of the reasons it is my opinion the IE is misleading. We have been designed through evolution to eat as often and as much as we can when food is available, because for much of our human history, starvation was a real threat to our existence. There are reasons with why so much enjoy sweet and fatty tastes. These foods (sweet being fruit in our human history) provided excellent sources of energy and fat (think animal fat) was loaded with valuable calories. Understand that these calories, like from saturated fat really fill us up and keep us full longer AND there was a time when our caloric expenditure to find and hunt this food needed to be accounted for. If you want to talk primal, then primal is we are made to eat, eat often and eat a lot. Our body's design has not caught up with a world of highly processed foods loaded with junk calories that don't give us the satiety of the diet we evolved on, or a world were all we have to do is drive to the store and buy our next meal. Yes, some people do not have the drive to eat as much, and those people would have died out throughout our earlier evolution. But in today's world, they will actually prosper because now they are not going to be the ones that are obese and having many illness as a result of. Please, do not fool yourself into thinking IE is primal or natural. |
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