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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Think Healthy
What you need to know about the metabolic power of thought.
By Marc David |
October 2009 |
Why
you eat might be just as important as
what you eat, says nutritional psychologist Marc David,
MA. Our thoughts about eating literally shape our bodies’ chemistry and
metabolic power. “The most powerful chemicals that we experience are the ones we
self-produce inside of our bodies,” says David. “Whenever we think a thought,
positive or negative, we phone in a prescription to our inner pharmacy, and that
pharmacy is always active, always powerful.” The key to producing chemicals that
support rather than harm your vitality, he explains, is to practice inspired
eating. In
writing about the influence of thought on our metabolism, you make a distinction
between motivation and inspiration in eating. What’s the
difference? Motivation often comes from fear — “I’d better eat the
right food because otherwise I’ll get sick or fat” — rather than a place of
centeredness and balance. Motivation is like a single target, and if I don’t hit
that target, I’m bad and I fail, whereas inspiration creates rejuvenation every
step of the way. When we are inspired, we are not looking for a reward like
simply looking good. I feel inspired to eat good food because it feels so good
or because I know that if it is consciously, sustainably grown, I’m eating in a
way that’s consistent with my values.
How
does our metabolism respond to thoughts, feelings and
expectations? Basically, if the thinking behind my good actions is,
“I’d better do this, otherwise I’ll be sick and fat and unattractive,” I am
creating the chemistry of stress, which invariably works against me and will
create, generally speaking, the opposite physiology of what I’m looking for.
Occasionally, we can motivate with stress and get stuff done on a short-term
basis, but if my so-called healthy lifestyle is motivated by negative or
stressful thoughts, I am producing excess insulin and excess cortisol, both of
which signal the body to store fat and not build muscle. So
how do we identify metabolism-lowering thoughts and shift them in a healthier
direction? I
like to use a very simple formula called The Three A’s: awareness, acceptance
and adjustment. To change
any negative habit, step one is to be aware that you even have that bad habit.
It’s important to witness
yourself without judgment, which is the second step — acceptance. Sometimes
people are aware that they have a chain-smoking habit, for example, but they
immediately go into judgment: “I’m so terrible.” Acceptance of who we are, by
itself, creates a relaxation response, which starts to interfere with the normal
stress pattern. Acceptance is us breathing, relaxing, saying, “OK, I’m
human.”
Once we start to accept
ourselves, then the adjustment phase can begin. I find the most basic adjustment
is to replace a negative thought with a positive one. That sounds so simplistic,
and yet it’s one of the most powerful strategies for change.
We’ve been taught that if you
want to get rid of a bad habit, you should attack it: Attack your junk-food
habit. Attack your body weight. However, if we’re constantly in attack state,
then we are in a stress state — a fight-or-flight state, which creates stress
chemistry.
The
opposite of that is simply to replace a bad habit with a positive one. So, I
tell people who are addicted to sugar, “Don’t worry about cutting down on sugar;
let’s start simply to include healthy foods in your diet.” We are not actually
attacking the sugar habit; we are introducing all these healthy habits that
naturally crowd out the negative ones. So, along the same lines, instead of
attacking my negative thinking, I’m just introducing a positive thought and
trying it on. It’s about loving yourself and having compassion for yourself
instead of having the boot-camp attitude of “no pain, no gain” that is so
pervasive. How
can we eat for better energy? Most nutritionists would give
a laundry list of foods to eat, such as blueberries or coconut oil. Yes, food is
important, but the food is not necessarily as important as the amount of food.
If you eat too much food, your energy level starts to go down simply because the
more food that is in the gut, the more metabolic energy — e.g., blood flow,
oxygen — is needed to digest, metabolize and assimilate that food. If you want
to have the greatest amount of physical and mental energy, notice the point at
which you can walk away from a meal just maybe a tiny bit hungry but with more
energy. Instead of eating to the point of fullness, eat to the point of being
filled with energy. t
Marc David, MA, is author of
The
Slow Down Diet (Healing Arts Press, 2005)
and the founder of the Institute for the Psychology of Eating
(www.psychologyofeating.com) in Boulder, Colo.
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Think Healthy
What you need to know about the metabolic power of thought.
By Marc David | The Nourished Self Department, October 2009 |
Why
you eat might be just as important as
what you eat, says nutritional psychologist Marc David,
MA. Our thoughts about eating literally shape our bodies’ chemistry and
metabolic power. “The most powerful chemicals that we experience are the ones we
self-produce inside of our bodies,” says David. “Whenever we think a thought,
positive or negative, we phone in a prescription to our inner pharmacy, and that
pharmacy is always active, always powerful.” The key to producing chemicals that
support rather than harm your vitality, he explains, is to practice inspired
eating. In
writing about the influence of thought on our metabolism, you make a distinction
between motivation and inspiration in eating. What’s the
difference? Motivation often comes from fear — “I’d better eat the
right food because otherwise I’ll get sick or fat” — rather than a place of
centeredness and balance. Motivation is like a single target, and if I don’t hit
that target, I’m bad and I fail, whereas inspiration creates rejuvenation every
step of the way. When we are inspired, we are not looking for a reward like
simply looking good. I feel inspired to eat good food because it feels so good
or because I know that if it is consciously, sustainably grown, I’m eating in a
way that’s consistent with my values.
How
does our metabolism respond to thoughts, feelings and
expectations? Basically, if the thinking behind my good actions is,
“I’d better do this, otherwise I’ll be sick and fat and unattractive,” I am
creating the chemistry of stress, which invariably works against me and will
create, generally speaking, the opposite physiology of what I’m looking for.
Occasionally, we can motivate with stress and get stuff done on a short-term
basis, but if my so-called healthy lifestyle is motivated by negative or
stressful thoughts, I am producing excess insulin and excess cortisol, both of
which signal the body to store fat and not build muscle. So
how do we identify metabolism-lowering thoughts and shift them in a healthier
direction? I
like to use a very simple formula called The Three A’s: awareness, acceptance
and adjustment. To change
any negative habit, step one is to be aware that you even have that bad habit.
It’s important to witness
yourself without judgment, which is the second step — acceptance. Sometimes
people are aware that they have a chain-smoking habit, for example, but they
immediately go into judgment: “I’m so terrible.” Acceptance of who we are, by
itself, creates a relaxation response, which starts to interfere with the normal
stress pattern. Acceptance is us breathing, relaxing, saying, “OK, I’m
human.”
Once we start to accept
ourselves, then the adjustment phase can begin. I find the most basic adjustment
is to replace a negative thought with a positive one. That sounds so simplistic,
and yet it’s one of the most powerful strategies for change.
We’ve been taught that if you
want to get rid of a bad habit, you should attack it: Attack your junk-food
habit. Attack your body weight. However, if we’re constantly in attack state,
then we are in a stress state — a fight-or-flight state, which creates stress
chemistry.
The
opposite of that is simply to replace a bad habit with a positive one. So, I
tell people who are addicted to sugar, “Don’t worry about cutting down on sugar;
let’s start simply to include healthy foods in your diet.” We are not actually
attacking the sugar habit; we are introducing all these healthy habits that
naturally crowd out the negative ones. So, along the same lines, instead of
attacking my negative thinking, I’m just introducing a positive thought and
trying it on. It’s about loving yourself and having compassion for yourself
instead of having the boot-camp attitude of “no pain, no gain” that is so
pervasive. How
can we eat for better energy? Most nutritionists would give
a laundry list of foods to eat, such as blueberries or coconut oil. Yes, food is
important, but the food is not necessarily as important as the amount of food.
If you eat too much food, your energy level starts to go down simply because the
more food that is in the gut, the more metabolic energy — e.g., blood flow,
oxygen — is needed to digest, metabolize and assimilate that food. If you want
to have the greatest amount of physical and mental energy, notice the point at
which you can walk away from a meal just maybe a tiny bit hungry but with more
energy. Instead of eating to the point of fullness, eat to the point of being
filled with energy. t
Marc David, MA, is author of
The
Slow Down Diet (Healing Arts Press, 2005)
and the founder of the Institute for the Psychology of Eating
(www.psychologyofeating.com) in Boulder, Colo.
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