I know I overeat for many many reasons and it started as a child and continued long into adulthood. Childhood while on the surface looked good I spent lots of time trying to be a peacemaker at home , hated confrontation, tried to stop others confrontation . Also as I was the bigger build child in the family I got picked on although not to be unkind but it all stuck but my bad eating started when I was perhsps 13 . Then whenever things went bad over the last 30 years food would be my comfort .
Marsia I don't feel bad about not losing weight but there are I suppose some thoughts there why is everyone else so disciplined and I can't an to get on with it . But I know I have had a really tough few months and I know that the fact I still come here and I am still trying and I'm not burying my head in tubs of peanut butter Ben and jerrys is a massive achievement for me . I will get it off in time .
These forums are a great support and source of info and inspiration x
I know I've said this before, but kicking the sugar habit is one of the hardest things ever, and I think you are doing amazing at it. That requires a lot of discipline, self care, and for me anyway, was a lot of failed attempts. But I considered that part of the process of getting off something so addictive:
"Eric Stice, Ph.D., a neuroscientist at the Oregon Research Institute who has used fMRI scans to conclude that sugar activates the same
brain regions that are activated when a person consumes
drugs like
cocaine. In addition, he found that heavy users of sugar develop tolerance (needing more and more to feel the same effect), which is a symptom of substance dependence. Nora Volkow, M.D., a psychiatrist at the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, has done similar research using brain imaging techniques to show similarities between the brains of people who are obese and people who abuse drugs and alcohol (
Sugar Addiction)."
When I was getting off of sugar, I didn't worry about what I weighed as much, I just concentrated on getting rid of the sugar addiction first, because that was hard enough by itself. As we have all said, it isn't just the physiological addiction, it is also emotional, so we have to find healthy ways of helping ourselves emotionally instead of turning to sugar for the comfort. And then there is the pull to eat things that are "off limits" and say screw it, I am going to indulge. The article I quoted said that if you do indulge, eat whatever you are indulging in mindfully and you will see that it doesn't really satisfy you like all your images of anticipating eating it say it will. So I think you are doing amazing. If we are comparing, it took me years to get off sugar, I just wasn't on this forum all those years, so you don't see all my struggle with it!