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Food addiction and weight gain
Health, News
BY FITZ-GEORGE RATTRAY  
January 13, 2019

Food addiction and weight gain

Fuelling Your Body

ADDICTION was once seen as a disease restricted to the weak in society. Sadly, this perception persists and continues to be fuel for denial and a type of social occlusion, blocking the realisations, dialogue, support, and solutions necessary for dealing with many of the unnecessary factors, leading to endless suffering and allowing those who would consciously capitalise on the addictions to thrive.

Understand that you do not have to be a deplorable on the fringe of society to be addicted. Common every day, functioning and even successful people suffer from addiction.

Food addiction has been a part of society for centuries, tracing back to the ancient Greeks. More recently we see the evidence of this in George Cheyne’s milk and vegetable diet and his 1742 publication, An Essay of Health and Long Life, and William Banting’s 1863 pamphlet, Letter on Corpulence, and his Banting low carb, low calorie diet.

Even the causes of food addiction are the same as any other: Biological; psychological; environmental.

And the signs of addiction have always been there:

• Stop taking care of oneself;

• Difficulty in stopping the habit even when the dangers are identified;

• Regularly thinking about the substance;

• Difficulty maintaining limits;

• Functionally accepting the life changes it brings;

• Disrupted sleep patterns and more.

Sadly, refined food based companies and industries have successfully deflected the argument away from their products and profits for centuries. Sugar blaming fats and fats blaming sugar, and both implying that “laziness” is at fault, leaving us confused, doubtful and diseased.

Food addictions are very likely the cause of many fatal diseases than most common narcotics.

The dopamine, habituation, stress-driven motivation to comfort eat, easily falls with the parameters of addictive behaviour.

Studies have shown the high rate of people who, after successfully losing weight, regain most or more of the weight lost from months to five years after. This weight rebounding occurs regardless of the type of diet, and especially among gastric modification surgery recipients. There seems to be little escape from this, or is there?

If this is your first time endeavouring to lose weight, or you have lost and regained before, and oh so many of us have, understanding the reinforcing factors of this rebounding and addressing them is of primary importance.

Changing your eating but not your mindset

Most people still don’t understand the level of food habituation or/and addiction they experience daily. It becomes their driving force, something to look forward to, their de-stressor and comfort.

So, regardless of their understanding of their physical state and risks, even in trying to make a healthier change they persist in saving compartments for the dangerous habits by:

• Grabbing at quick fads and the diet of the day, only losing weight for the sake of losing weight with all intention to “balance” the addictions once they have reached their goal. You will often hear these individuals anxiously asking, “When can I eat ‘normally’ again?” But remember, flour, sugar, processed foods in large quantities may be common but they are in no way normal.

• Choosing an unsustainable diet, because deep down they know that the dietary changes are temporary, they are willing to try diets which are against natural balanced nutrition. Of course, short-term goals yield short-term results.

• Depending on diets which conveniently provide prepared foods, the convenience and ease is seductive, however we cannot possibly expect to purchase the same foods from the same source wherever you go in the world and for the rest of your life, eventually you will begin to desire variety.

The preferred solution is to change your relationship with foods, allowing you to shop, prepare and eat any cuisine anywhere you are at any stage of your life and still maintain your healthy lifestyle.

• Adopting placeholders as a tool to tolerate dietary changes by choosing the low sugar, low fat, dieter’s version of their addicted foods of choice will not work. Diet soda is still soda (plus it has its own dangers), sugar-free cookies are still cookies, eating these regularly simply hold the place for the regular versions of the addiction of choice.

• Only depending on willpower and self-discipline. They are essential and virtuous and should be strengthened, but they are connected to emotions and are affected by distractions and fatigue, as such they are not reliable.

Accepting change is practised and learned, do not ride yourself over your failures, failure is natural and learning from them is essential to change.

I have seen people use dietary adjustment to survive cancer, reverse type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, aches and pains and more (always consult your physician), and still, some, and their and family members question how sustainable a natural diet of clean proteins, vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds, and gut-friendly non inflammatory foods is.

They constantly question how long someone can go without having “normal” amounts of flour and sugar in their lives. Yes, intelligent, well thinking people. This is the dreadful strength of habituation and addiction.

You have a solution

Change your mindset to change. Learn the enjoyment of healthy foods. Make it your life not just a goal. Get support and answerability, and embrace a healthy way of living, release the thought of dieting. Instead, building your healthy mindset, simply learn to separate the world into toxic, unnatural, processed, addictive empty foods and healthy pro-natural nutritious foods and learn to crave a mostly natural diet. See your lifestyle as a vegan sees theirs, it’s not a struggle, it’s a belief system, a lifestyle. Increase your activity, simply, live well. As your lifestyle changes, so will your body, your mental states and your chances for a healthy future. Never see what makes you better, as a struggle.

Meet two ITK members who have embraced their lifestyle and continue to thrive and maintain their weight by overcoming food addiction. Congratulations to Ava, who has lost 27 pounds, and Michael, who lost over 35 pounds on the ITK Wave System.

Fitz-George Rattray is the director of Intekai Academy, which is focused on helping people live a healthy lifestyle through nutrition and weight management. If you are interested in losing weight or living a healthier lifestyle, give them a call at 876-863-5923, or visit their website at intekaiacademy.org

Learn to enjoy healthy food.
Change your mindset.
Ava afterlosing 27pounds

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