bloodyrosemccoy (
bloodyrosemccoy) wrote2007-04-10 06:19 pm
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Somethin' Ain't Right
I have discovered an interesting psychological phenomenon of diets.
I’m eating pretty well. I’m not sure I’m eating enough. I’m cooking and having salads and having some pretty tasty food and also V8, and overall the diet’s doing okay.
Normally when I eat, I don’t miss the things I don’t have. But just knowing I’m on a diet has made my brain go into overdrive. In the background of all my consciousness over the last few days has been a running slideshow of cans of frosting, éclairs, Reese’s pieces, Snickers bars, Godiva truffles, doughnuts, and even bread and granola and Pasta Roni. “LOOK!” my hypothalamus is shouting. “LOOK AT ALL THIS FOOD THAT YOU’RE NOT ALLOWING YOURSELF TO HAVE! IT SURE WOULD BE GOOD RIGHT NOW!”
“I don’t even like doughnuts,” I point out.
“I feel empty inside,” mopes the stomach.
I may have to alter this a bit and have a few more carbs, just to shut it up. Screw Phase One. Phase Two it is.
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I'm on the "eat less, move more" plan. It works, when I actually manage to do it. :)
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I read somewhere that you can get the benefits of a reasonable diet plan by letting yourself cheat on it at a maximum of three meals out of the course of a week. I tried that for a while, and it did help! I should go back to doing something like that, but not with four weeks to go on the semester!
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South Beach only cuts things out for the first few weeks, so that you get used to fewer refined carbs. (That's what Phase One is. I've already given up on that.) Those are apparently the Weight Loss phases, which isn't really what I'm going for--I'm just going for the Healthy Eating phase.
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Yeah, I'm kind of embarrassed that my mom went and wrote a diet book. People tend to scoff. But having looked at the research and discussed it with her while she was writing it, I know that there's some really good stuff in there. It's really not about what to eat or what exercises to do and when, it's really about the psychological stuff.
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But I now know EXACTLY what you mean by the scoffing. "I'm working on my diet" makes you sound like some sort of patsy who is following some crazy fad. No wonder Americans are loath to change their lousy eating habits--everyone is convinced that trying to change them by following a "dietary plan" is just foolish.
I may repost this as an entry tomorrow, as a follow up to my rant. But for now, there you go.
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But one cannot live by ice cream alone. Even though one sometimes wants to.