I received two very different, and very interesting, e-mails from
friends a while back. Both friends were on the 5&1 program
and both had a lot of weight to lose. They live on opposite ends of
the country and don't know each other, but they share a common struggle
not only with weight, but with emotional eating. Both have been on the
program before and lost weight (without reaching their goal), went off
plan and regained much of the weight they lost, and were back on with
a resolve to reach their goal.
The first friend shared her
experience facing down both pizza and cherry cheesecake at a family
gathering. She planned ahead and made sure that she had
on-plan food with her. While it wasn't easy saying no to what everybody
else was eating, she did it and was so excited as she shared with me
how victorious she felt.
The other friend also got together with
family members, but her story had a different ending. She
told me that she ended up eating "whatever she wanted" and what she
wanted was definitely not on plan. Her e-mail was one of sadness and a
sense of defeat because she had once again let herself down.
The
contrast between the two e-mails was striking and I couldn't help but
notice the difference. The friend who said "no" to the off-plan foods
left the gathering feeling happy and victorious and the friend who said
"yes" to those things left her get-together feeling defeated.
When
we say "no" to off-plan food, we are really saying "YES!" to what we
really want - getting to a healthy weight. That's why my friend felt so
good about the choice she made. It's not that she didn't want the
off-plan food or that it didn't look good to her, but she wanted
something more than she wanted the food. Her reaction as she left the
family get-together confirmed that she made the right decision for
herself.
No one likes to feel deprived - me included! So the
next time you face down an off-plan temptation, instead of focusing on
saying "no" to the food, remind yourself that you are saying "yes" to
what you really want. We can not only choose what to eat or not eat,
but we can also choose how we view that choice. Choose wisely :-)
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