BelovedHeather
Cathlete
Victory Not Perfection
Gayle:
I have been where you are. After years of defeat, I finally learned to see perfectionism as an enemy to true freedom. Based on what you shared, it seems that you are an all-or-nothing girl too. I will share one practical tool that has really set me free in this area--enjoying a free day once a week. Not a reckless binge or an all-you-can-eat feeding frenzy, but a time to relax and live without being restrained by calories, fat grams, ratios, or points in your case. It is a time to simply enjoy food. And my eating still ends up being relatively clean even then. Chemically laden junk is repulsive to me. Even when I eat something like pizza, I choose a whole wheat crust because I prefer the taste of whole grains now. It might help to have some boundaries in the beginning or just enjoy a free meal instead of a free day. When I was trying to eat super clean all the time, any slip caused me to start thinking I might as well taste all the forbidden stuff while I was down on the ground and wallowing around in the dirt. I climbed back on the wagon when the “right” moment arrived, and the cycle started over again. I am free now but very much a work in progress. I still have a tendency to go to extremes at times. Cathe recently helped me discover a place of balance with my exercise rotation. This year for me is all about balance and moderation.
Aside from my one free day every week, planning a week of menus every Saturday and packing my meals and snacks every night for the following day ensures that I can stay on track with clean eating the rest of the week without obsessing over food or spending too much time thinking about what I will eat.
Breaking destructive patterns sometimes involves trying something radically different. Enjoying a free day once a week helps me practice self-control without perfection. It also develops the gift of delayed gratification. When I crave something like chocolate during the week, I eat what I planned to eat for that day and just tell myself that I can wait until the weekend to enjoy some good dark chocolate. I am also one who rebels against too much control. I love to live free! It is much more beneficial for me to have a general style of eating that blesses my body as opposed to a rigid diet, but your personality may thrive with a more structured approach. Weight Watchers would drive me nuts, but I encourage you to stick with what works for you. Finding your personal style of eating takes a lot of trial and error, but the journey is a great adventure if you choose to look at it that way.
Food is not inherently good or bad. It just is. Some of it blesses your body. Some of it just tastes good. And some it is not worth the temporary pleasure or the price you have to pay. Eating something that is not on your program does not make you bad. Please do not define yourself by your performance or behavior.
Dust yourself off and get back in the race. Learn to see every slip as an opportunity to strengthen your determination and resolve. Before you know it, you will catch yourself when you stumble before you fall off the wagon and before a lapse turns into a total collapse. Remember too that you (and everyone else who is struggling) can have a fresh start right now. You do not need to wait for tomorrow or Monday. I am praying for you.
I did not have time to read the responses to this thread, so please forgive me if I just repeated what everyone else has already shared with you. I composed this in WordPerfect during my lunch hour yesterday and just realized this morning that I never posted it. I almost deleted it since you already have so many responses, but I decided to share my thoughts anyway.
Blessings,
Heather B.
“So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31 NIV).
Gayle:
I have been where you are. After years of defeat, I finally learned to see perfectionism as an enemy to true freedom. Based on what you shared, it seems that you are an all-or-nothing girl too. I will share one practical tool that has really set me free in this area--enjoying a free day once a week. Not a reckless binge or an all-you-can-eat feeding frenzy, but a time to relax and live without being restrained by calories, fat grams, ratios, or points in your case. It is a time to simply enjoy food. And my eating still ends up being relatively clean even then. Chemically laden junk is repulsive to me. Even when I eat something like pizza, I choose a whole wheat crust because I prefer the taste of whole grains now. It might help to have some boundaries in the beginning or just enjoy a free meal instead of a free day. When I was trying to eat super clean all the time, any slip caused me to start thinking I might as well taste all the forbidden stuff while I was down on the ground and wallowing around in the dirt. I climbed back on the wagon when the “right” moment arrived, and the cycle started over again. I am free now but very much a work in progress. I still have a tendency to go to extremes at times. Cathe recently helped me discover a place of balance with my exercise rotation. This year for me is all about balance and moderation.
Aside from my one free day every week, planning a week of menus every Saturday and packing my meals and snacks every night for the following day ensures that I can stay on track with clean eating the rest of the week without obsessing over food or spending too much time thinking about what I will eat.
Breaking destructive patterns sometimes involves trying something radically different. Enjoying a free day once a week helps me practice self-control without perfection. It also develops the gift of delayed gratification. When I crave something like chocolate during the week, I eat what I planned to eat for that day and just tell myself that I can wait until the weekend to enjoy some good dark chocolate. I am also one who rebels against too much control. I love to live free! It is much more beneficial for me to have a general style of eating that blesses my body as opposed to a rigid diet, but your personality may thrive with a more structured approach. Weight Watchers would drive me nuts, but I encourage you to stick with what works for you. Finding your personal style of eating takes a lot of trial and error, but the journey is a great adventure if you choose to look at it that way.
Food is not inherently good or bad. It just is. Some of it blesses your body. Some of it just tastes good. And some it is not worth the temporary pleasure or the price you have to pay. Eating something that is not on your program does not make you bad. Please do not define yourself by your performance or behavior.
Dust yourself off and get back in the race. Learn to see every slip as an opportunity to strengthen your determination and resolve. Before you know it, you will catch yourself when you stumble before you fall off the wagon and before a lapse turns into a total collapse. Remember too that you (and everyone else who is struggling) can have a fresh start right now. You do not need to wait for tomorrow or Monday. I am praying for you.
I did not have time to read the responses to this thread, so please forgive me if I just repeated what everyone else has already shared with you. I composed this in WordPerfect during my lunch hour yesterday and just realized this morning that I never posted it. I almost deleted it since you already have so many responses, but I decided to share my thoughts anyway.
Blessings,
Heather B.
“So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31 NIV).