The Magic Answer to Your Weight Struggle is Closer Than You Think
March 5, 2010 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Intuitive Eating
It seems every time I turn on the TV, there’s news of some celebrity, personality or public figure and their battle of the bulge and war on losing weight and KEEPING it off.
Many of us can relate. Even Oprah. Yes, Oprah
What the heck is going on?
For one thing, we keep looking to external factors to determine what and how much to eat. We’ve spent years listening to others to tell us what to eat, so we’ve been disconnected from our bodies.
If we listen to our bodies correctly, it tells us what to eat. The problem is, we’ve been listening to the “diet gurus” and other people for so long that we no longer know what to eat or even trust ourselves around food.
When I first lived in France, I was amazed how people just “knew” what to eat. There wasn’t this constant talk about calories, portion size or fat grams. They just knew.
But how did they know?
Well, for one thing, they listen to their INTERNAL cues. They listen to their bodies and trust their bodies to tell them what to do. They listen to their hunger and fullness cues, and to what their body is craving.
So how to listen to our own internal cues?
Be Mindful When Eating
In order to get back in touch with our internal hunger and fullness cues, it is important to be mindful when eating. Using our senses when eating is a great way to get back in touch with our bodies. With today’s hectic lifestyles, we’re too busy rushing around and eating food on the run. So slow down a bit and start to become more mindful when eating.
Don’t Restrict Foods
When people go on diets, they start eliminating certain foods or a food group — like carbs, for example. Once you go off the diet it’s normal to over-indulge in foods high in carbs. This is because the body has been missing the nutrients and craves them intensely. It’s the same for any foods. The more and longer a food is restricted, the more intense the craving.
At first, one might feel out of control and that they cant be trusted around the food. But over time the craving will subside and return to normal.
So stop looking for the magic answer to your weight loss. The answer is actually inside you — you just need to look inward and bring it out.
Do You Know How to Listen to Your Hunger?
February 18, 2010 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Emotional Eating
You’ve probably heard over and over again “eat when you are hungry and stop when you are full.”
Good advice, but often people tell me that they don’t even know what hungry feels like. They either feel hungry all to time, or can’t decipher if their “hunger” is true hunger or emotional hunger. Many people on their weight-loss journey have lost their ability to even know what real (ie biological) hunger feels like.
And it’s more common than you think.
The Clock Strikes 12
For some people it’s simply because they’ve never allowed themselves to be hungry. They eat all the time. Or they eat simply because it’s meal-time. The clock say’s 12 noon so they just eat. They’re not really hungry, but they’ve been eating at this time for so long they actually think they’re hungry. But their body isn’t giving them the signals. They have just been on autopilot for so long, that they believe they are hungry but in reality their body is not.
Food, Food Everywhere
We live in a society today where food is around all of the time. Any time of day, any day of the week, you can easily get food. So we can eat at all hours of the day. And there’s no longer eating ‘hours’ for breakfast, lunch and dinner. It is completely acceptable to “eat” at all hours of the day.
This was something different I experienced living in France. If I wanted to eat lunch, whether it be in my office at work, or on the weekends while strolling around town – cafeteria’s, restaurants, canteens, etc where only open during lunch hours. And I would be hard pressed to find a vending machine anywhere.
Other Voices
There are other ‘voices’ of hunger like eating to fill emotions. And emotional eating is one of the top reasons diets fail. But when you divert your attention from whatever is causing you angst (like a bad day at the office) by eating, you’re often just making the problem even worse.
And the food can act like a drug. Eating can take the edge off what ever is going on, similar to the way a drink does for alcoholics, but unfortunately this tactic is a temporary fix at best. After you’re done eating, you still have to deal with the original problem.
Tuning In
But know that the first step to “finding your biological hunger” is to listen to it.
Now it sounds/feels different for different people. Remember, we are all unique so just like eating patterns, biological hunger varies for everyone.
In the beginning, you might be able to recognize ravenous hunger (when you’re so hungry you could literally eat anything), but have difficulty recognizing gentle hunger pains.
So here are some tips to help you recognize when you are hungry:
- mild (or loud!) rumbling in the stomach
- light-headedness
- headache
- very low energy, feel a bit faint
- uncomfortable stomach pain. It feels really empty
- irritability
- difficulty concentrating
Another tool to use is the Hunger Scale. It’s a way to help you identify your hunger and get in touch you’re your body’s inner signals.
If you’re not familiar with the hunger scale, it a scale of 1 to 10. With 1 being extreme hunger (you feel so hungry you could literally pass out) to 10 being beyond full (like after eating Thanksgiving Dinner). The neutral point is five. At 5, your body has enough fuel to keep it going and you’re more or less satisfied. You could eat a bit more, but physically your body is fine.
Every time you eat, check your hunger level. Ideally, for you to be truly hungry, you should be at a 3 or 4. If you’re 5 or above, you’re not biologically hungry.
So begin to really listen to your stomach, and not what the clock says, not what your ‘head’ is telling you, and not because you’re feeling some type of emotion.
It’s all a part of what’s called intuitive eating. Eating when you’re really hungry, stopping when you are full, and listening to your body. If you can start listening to your true hunger signals and eat because you are physically hungry, then you are slowly on your way to honoring your hunger and
Part of eating intuitively is knowing what hunger feels like, honoring it, and giving it (and your body) the proper nutrition it needs.
Want to learn more about listening and honoring your hunger, how to stop when you’re full, and how the heck to really listen to your body and give it what it needs? Want more insight into knowing when you’re truly hungry? Then be sure to register for my upcoming f.r.e.e. call where I’ll be covering this and MORE. Learn how YOU can listen to your hunger and your body and lose weight in the process. Get all the details here.
A Powerful First Step to Ending Comfort Eating
September 2, 2009 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Emotional Eating
Many of us at one time or another have eaten for comfort. It’s common to reach for food when we are bored, stressed, unhappy with life, upset, or depressed. So we eat in an attempt to feel better, get rid of the boredom, de-stress, or cheer up.If you have relied too much on comfort eating to get rid of stress or cheer you up, you may now be carrying the effects of that comfort eating in the form of extra weight. So the first thing people often do is go on some type of diet plan.
But while following the diet plan, eating becomes a set of rules and not a pleasant, sensory relationship. For instance, your focus shifts on how many calories, points, carbohydrates or fat grams you can have. So your comfort foods, like pizza, macaroni & cheese, chocolate, or cake are now considered “bad” or guilty foods. So you’re even more tempted to treat yourself to these forbidden foods. Hey, we all want what we can’t have, right?
If now you’re thinking “I DO enjoy food — I just enjoy it too much” you’re not looking deep enough. The enjoyment of food is not just the moment it’s in your mouth. It’s the whole experience: picking out the food, cutting it up and preparing it, setting the table, having good conversation with friends and family.
Decide today to take one meal a week and turn it into a pleasure, full sensory, enjoyable experience. Choose a meal that would be enjoyable for you and fun to cook. Get the family involved, turn off the tv and put some music on. Or even invite some friends over. There’s no better way to get reconnected with friends than by sharing something you’ve made. And it doesn’t have to be fancy. Just something simple that you enjoy. Be focused on the food and the time you’re spending on doing something good for you and your family.
You can even place flowers on the table and make a nice setting. As you eat, let your taste buds truly experience the food. But also relax, talk and enjoy the company of others. As you take in the experience of eating and digesting, you’ll notice there is less a need to stuff your stomach. We eat with more than just our stomach — all of our senses are involved and we should allow them to experience the meal to it’s fullest.
Are You On the Roller Coaster Ride of Eating?
March 12, 2009 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Emotional Eating
Q: I feel like my day is a constant roller coaster ride of eating based on EMOTIONS, so I feel it’s hard for me to listen to my body like I so often hear we should do.
A: Let me tell you, I used to be first in line on the roller coaster ride! I’ve had almost every emotion imaginable when it comes to food.
It seemed my day would be a “good” day or “bad” day based upon what I ate. Think about it, basing your day solely what you eat should not be how we live our lives. But I did that. Even within a day I would have these highs & lows around food — so I get that.
A few months ago I had lunch with Dr. Paul Rozin, a psychology professor at the University of Pennsylvania and renowned researcher who studies the psychological, cultural and biological factors that affect human food choice.
We talked about how what and WHY we eat is determined by our biology, our culture and our individual experiences — it’s not just a matter of eating the right foods. So many other strong forces affect our eating decisions.
It takes looking deeper than just the food — because anyone who has struggled with his or her weight, just like I have, knows it’s not just about the food. There is so much more to it and these forces are powerful, but knowing how to deal with them is key.
This is why when I work with clients, we don’t just look at the scale. We look at many other factors that affect one’s eating: emotions, peer pressure, social stigma, family values, etc. There are many factors that go into losing weight and keeping it off other than “counting calories or points.”
Are You a Food Victim?
March 2, 2009 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Emotional Eating
This article was written by yours truly, Dinneen Diette, and previously posted as a guest post on Mizfitonline.com
It received such amazing feedback that we decided to post it here. We hope it will help inspire you too:
“Dinneen’s main focus is helping women make peace with food and, if they lose weight in the process, then it’s the full fat icing on the proverbial protein cake (get it? everything in moderation? treats are good? no? oh, ok.)
As this week is National Eating Disorders Awareness Week**, I asked Dinneen to stop by and tell us what that means to her.” –MizFit
(**Note: Eating Disorders Awareness Week was last week, but the information & insight here is valuable any week of the year!)
As a weight loss coach and mentor, I help many women lose weight, look better AND feel better, and I’m constantly meeting women who struggle with food and their weight. And I get it, as I’ve been there myself.
For years I struggled to lose weight, and even when I was finally “thin,” I spent many more years eating low-fat, low-calorie, and low-tasting foods. Food and eating was not an enjoyment for me. Any food I ate that was remotely decadent or a “bad” food, left me feeling guilty and eventually lead me to overeat. And so started a vicious cycle of dieting, losing weight, putting it back on, dieting again, and on and on.
What I ate either helped me lose weight, or gain weight, or so I thought. It wasn’t until a trip to Italy, and then a few years later living & working in France, did I learn that I could enjoy foods without guilt, lose weight and stay slim.
My world was literally turned upside down. And so was my life.
And so began a journey of education, self-awareness, and self-growth that led me to the extraordinary life I live today. I can eat the foods I love, and still stay healthy, and yes, slim.
As a weight-loss coach and mentor I help women and men lose weight, get healthy, and feel good about themselves. And part of that is helping them with their relationship with food.
You see, it wasn’t’ until I changed my relationship with food was I able to lose weight and keep if off, and without deprivation.
Even Oprah Winfrey has had ups & downs with her weight and, in my opinion, she will not keep it off until she has a healthy relationship with food. (for more about my thoughts about Oprah and her weight, visit my blog post from earlier this year).
In my business I’ve come across women (and young girls) who suffer from an eating disorder. Eating disorders arise from a variety of physical, emotional, and social issues, all of which need to be addressed for effective prevention and treatment.
This week, February 22-28, 2009, is the National Eating Disorders Awareness Week. If you suspect, or know, someone suffering from the disease please visit the website of the National Eating Disorders Association. There you will find an abundance of information and resources to help support those affected by eating disorders. It is there to help a friend, family member, colleague, or loved one get help.
In the United States alone, over 11 million people suffer from an eating disorder, and millions more suffer with a binge eating disorder. More people die every year from an eating disorder than any other mental illness. Yes, it’s that bad and that prevalent.
Also, statistics say that more than one in three ‘normal’ dieters progress to pathological dieting (that is, it becomes a very unhealthy obsession with food & weight).
So help spread the word.
I see too many women, of all ages, obsessed with their weight and their bodies – and they look fine! In my mission to help women lose weight and be HEALTHY, it is also my mission help women feel good in their body, no matter what the scale says. Now that is something to be proud of. I sure am.
What Kids Can Teach You About Weight Loss
January 27, 2009 by Dinneen
Filed under Blog, Emotional Eating, Weight Loss
I watched one of the most powerful Oprah’s shows yesterday. The subject was an epidemic that is affecting the health of America’s children, and what’s also affecting too many adults. It’s not what we usually associate with adolescents: drug addiction, alcohol abuse, or smoking. It’s something more powerful and affecting more kids (AND adults) than ever before: obesity.
The children on the show show took part in a day-long intervention, just like what is often needed when children (or adults) abuse drugs or alcohol. But for these kids their drug of choice was food.
The intervention was to get to the real reason why these kids ate. And like Oprah said on the show, the reason they got overweight “goes way beyond junk food.”
On the show we got an inside look of these children’s lives. They spend their days in shame, guilt, depression, discomfort, stress or pain. In one way or another, they were hurting inside and ate for comfort, in search of acceptance, or to cover up emotions.
These kids also have to deal with the pressures and mistreatment from society. As one of the children said,
“People look at my outer layers and not my inner beauty, and don’t recognize what’s on my inside and automatically judge me because of my weight.”
People talk behind these kid’s backs, treat them differently than other “normal” children, and judge them by what’s on the outside instead of what’s on the inside.
The intervention was a way to look beyond the food, and for the parents (and society) to understand what is really going on. It’s not just about eating right and exercising. And it’s not just about food. Food is only a part of the issue.
The real issue is the emptiness many people feel inside.
As one of the leaders of the intervention said:
“Today what we are intentionally doing is inviting a conversation around food, around weight, about the emotions behind the weight — because it’s not about our weight. It’s ‘What is the hunger for? What are we hungry for?’”
As I watched the show I couldn’t help think of the parallel with adults. So many adults are hungry for more than just food, they’re hungry for something more in their lives — they’re hungry for acceptance, love, comfort, a satisfying job, or a caring relationship.
The counselors on the show then explained that before anyone (children OR adults) can begin to work on the larger issue – health – they need to tap inside and find the place where they hide feelings they cannot express or don’t express:
“If anger is not expressed, it goes inside the body and we start to eat or numb it out,” they said.
So many people today have built-up emotions, anger, or feelings inside that they’re not letting out. We also have many stresses. We’re juggling work, career, family, social life, and other everyday pressures. But instead of expressing our feelings, we’re keeping them inside and many of us turn to food to make us feel better.
On Oprah’s website, the counselors give tips for overweight teens, but they are just as useful for adults, and most of them I use with my own clients. The counselors stress the importance of getting support and being proactive about your health. They suggest seeing a nutrition specialist, and taking fitness or nutrition classes, as they are “great ways to empower yourself, keep you motivated, and change your life.”
I suggest you read the tips and while doing so, think about your own situation: Why do you sometimes overeat or not eat healthy? What feelings are you not expressing and using food to treat instead? What’s holding you back from empowering yourself and your family?
I’d love to hear your thoughts, so please comment below.







