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Hello, dear readers! Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!

The Holidays and the Food

The holidays are a wonderful and tumultuous time that can bring up a lot of, well, shall we say, stuff. For some, it’s a joyous time of friends, fun, and delicious food. For others, it’s difficult and even traumatic. And of course, for many people, the experience of the holidays falls somewhere in between.

The messages we get about food around the holidays can be confronting as well as contradictory. You might have one relative who feels insulted when you don’t have seconds of their candied yams, and another relative who admonishes you for how much you’re eating.  Even if you’re now an adult and family members don’t feel comfortable actually telling you what to eat, the holidays can bring up those feelings and experiences from childhood and cause you to relive them all over again.

I’m going to share a tip with you that is great to use at the holidays or any time when you’re getting contradictory information about what to eat, whether that information is external (friends or relatives talking about what you should eat) and sometimes it’s internal (diet rules from that cabbage diet you did five years ago getting in the way of what you need now).

A New Way to Think about The Holidays and the Food

This Thanksgiving, I want you to talk to yourself and treat yourself as a kindly parent would. This means that you ask yourself what you want to do in any given situation, and then follow through and take care of it.

As an example, imagine you’re at Thanksgiving dinner. Your Aunt Sally is pushing you to try her pumpkin pie and your father is shooting you a "you had too much food already" glance. Aside from telling them both to shove it, what can you do?

Using this tip, take a moment to ask yourself, in a kindly voice, if you would like more pie. Listen to the answer. It might be that you don’t want more pumpkin pie, but want more cake. It might be that you’re not hungry anymore. Or, it might be something else. Listen to the answer and act upon it, knowing that you are doing what you want to do and that you’ve made the best choice for you.

Why A New Way to Think about the Holidays and the Food

The goal of using this technique is to listen in to what you want to do by treating yourself with love. The point is not to pressure yourself into a decision. In fact, in the example above, you could tell your aunt that you’re not sure if you want more pie and that you’d like to take some time to see if you do.

This tip is also great to use if you have food allergies or other health concerns where eating what you think you want can be difficult.

For example, when I eat wheat, my stomach gets upset and my skin gets itchy. One might think that that would be enough to keep me away from wheat, but I love bagels and bread with a love so fierce that I am loathe to speak of it. About 95% of the time, I’m able to avoid wheat by enjoying other foods and having the occasional gluten free English muffin. But it ain’t easy. So I use this technique often and recommend it to my clients. For food allergies, I recommend using a loving voice and reminding yourself of why that food is problematic for you. In my case, I would think something like this, "Honey, I know you love bagels, but remember how you feel when you eat them? You don’t want your stomach to hurt when you’re on the phone with your clients. What would you like to have instead?" And then I act on my internal response. Again, the point of this is to treat yourself with love. This technique reminds you that your health is important and that you are loved. You ask yourself lovingly what you need and then give it to yourself just as lovingly.

When you treat yourself with love by talking to yourself lovingly and acting lovingly, you’re able to stay better attuned to your true needs and treat yourself in a healing manner.

As always, try this tip and let me know how it goes!

For other ways of getting through the holidays, check out these other tips on blessing your food, intuitive eating at parties, and taking in the sweetness of life.

By the way, we have lots of new and exciting offers at Body Love Wellness! Starting in less than 2 weeks, I’m teaching a 3 week teleclass to support you in your intuitive eating and body love journey. It’s only $60 for 3 classes!

 

Golda is a certified holistic health counselor and founder of Body Love Wellness. She counsels women and men throughout the country on how to get off the dieting roller coaster, give their bodies what they really crave, and love their bodies and themselves. Golda's counseling and activism work have been featured on CBS's The Early Show, ABC's Nightline and Time Out New York. For more support with healing your relationship with food and your body, sign up for the Body Love Wellness Newsletter and receive your free download — Golda’s Top Ten Tips For Divine Dining.

Comments

  • This is a great article, but I didn’t like the intro blurb that links to it.  That “feel thankful for avoiding food coma” line sounds a lot like “whatever you do, don’t overeat on fracking THANKSGIVING” which is, like, not very fat-positive.  If there is one day you should have permission to overeat it is Thanksgiving, provided you celebrate Thanksgiving in the first place.  Maybe I just don’t understand how insistent people can be that you eat more pie?  My relatives will take no for an answer, the second or third time at least.  But if it’s pie, I probably want it, as we never had more pie than we could eat between us in reasonable comfort.  (And ironically, it can be the same relative offering you more pie and thinking you ate too much pie.)

  • Golda Poretsky, H.H.C.'s avatar

    Hi Disgruntled Penguin!

    Thanks for the comment.  You know, sometimes when I write these blogs, I have different people in mind.  Someone who’s already conscious of fat acceptance and intuitive eating, like you, would likely have the reaction you have, which is great.  Sometimes I’m trying to grab the newbies too with something that sounds a little “diety”.

    I just loved your parenthetical “ironically, it can be the same relative offering you more pie and thinking you ate too much pie.”  Very true! 

    Anyway, have a great Thanksgiving!

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