Binge Eating Help Book 11
Binge Eating Help Book 11
Binge Eating Help Book 11
by
Michael Collins
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ..................................................... 2
5. Abstinence ...................................................... 36
6. Withdrawals .................................................... 43
1
Introduction
2
pain worldwide.
You’ve already taken the first step by seeking out help. This
e-book is intended to give you an understanding of BED and
walk you through the process of recovery. We want you to
live a happy and fulfilled life, free from the physical and
emotional chains of binge eating, and we can help you
achieve this goal.
My Story
3
relative as to amount. The people with the largest habits had
the darkest circles under their eyes.
4
Addiction professionals will tell you about “substituting one
drug for another,” and it seemed very obvious to me that
everyone was substituting sugar and caffeine for their drugs
of choice. The obvious also happened, and that is the
freshman 15 got much larger for many, many folks. When I
would talk about sugar, flour, wheat, and caffeine, people
took to calling me the “weird addiction” specialist.
5
allow them to eat it at other people’s birthdays but never at
home. Yes, it was crazy hard convincing and educating
family members, school officials, and babysitters, but I
believe with all my heart that it created much healthier
children.
6
I believe that one day, in the advancement of human history,
200 years from now we will look back and say things like
“Did you know they used to give sugar to children?” Much
like we say now “Did you know they used to put cocaine in
Coca cola?” If you want to read all about the science behind
it, check out Dr. Lustig’s YouTube video, Sugar: The Bitter
Truth or his book Fat Chance.
7
“…episodes of binge eating in which [the person]
consume[s] very large quantities of food in a brief
period and feel out of control during the binge.
Unlike people with bulimia nervosa, they do not
try to get rid of the food by inducing vomiting or
by using other unsafe practices such as fasting or
laxative abuse. The binge eating is chronic and
can lead to serious health complications,
particularly severe obesity, diabetes,
hypertension, and cardiovascular disease.”
8
on the same page, so to speak, when diagnosing and treating
BED.
9
Is This You? Common Scenarios of the Binge Eater
10
cookies, or feel resentful of people who can stop eating after
one piece, handful, or bite.
This cycle repeats itself again and again, with vicious bouts of
guilt, self-hatred, despair, and hopelessness. The binge eater
may or may not promise herself that this time will really be
the last time, but because of her powerlessness over this
condition, it never is—even as she gains weight, suffers from
health problems, or damages relationships.
11
1. Overwhelming feelings that you cannot control what you
are eating or how much you are eating
2. Recurring incidents of eating very large amounts of food in
one sitting
3. Eating much faster than you normally would (in front of
other people)
4. Eating to the point where you are uncomfortably full
5. Eating an excessive amount of food even though you don’t
feel hungry physically
6. Recurring incidents of eating alone due to embarrassment
at the amount of food you are eating
7. Overwhelming feelings of shame, guilt, disgust or
depression because of what you have just done
8. Massive variations in your weight
9. Low or no self-esteem
10. Noticeable decrease in sexual energy/desire
11. The desire to try various diets
12
of symptoms, so go easy on yourself as you continue reading
this book. Compassion for yourself is just as important as
courage; in fact, they are synonymous.
13
humiliates them. That inner voice causes them to binge eat
just to shut it up, but that moment of relief is fleeting—and
the pleasure in eating usually has more to do with quieting
the internal monologue than the food itself. Most, if not all,
of what this inner critic is telling you is a big pack of lies.
Here are the most common lies that binge eaters tell
themselves:
14
As long as I only binge eat on the weekends, it’s not out
of control.
I just did XYZ—I deserve to celebrate!
I’ll start that diet/exercise program tomorrow.
I’ll exercise for two hours to compensate for the box of
donuts I just ate.
I am only loveable at a certain weight/nobody loves
me/I’m completely unlovable.
If I can’t have a perfect relationship with food then it’s
not worth even trying.
Since I don’t binge eat all the time, my eating disorder
isn’t really that bad.
I just need to have stronger will power.
Something is very wrong with me.
I’m a failure.
I have a successful career, so this means that I don’t
have a real problem.
15
problems. According to the National Eating Disorders
Association (NEDA), some of the physical consequences of
binge eating are:
The good news is that the sooner you get help, the better
your chances of recovery.
16
Easy Does It…But Do It
The thing to keep in mind is that you didn't get here in one
day and you won't walk out of here tomorrow. But if you
make a personal commitment to caring for yourself first and
foremost, then you stand a
much better chance of
recovering than if you
constantly berate yourself.
17
Binge Eaters Are Extremely Hard on Themselves
18
You can do it, too! You’ll have to do the work, and it won’t
always be easy, but it is possible and it is imperative for your
health—physically and emotionally.
19
Why Beating Yourself Up Doesn’t Work
20
Believe it or not, this inner critic is just doing what it believes
is necessary to protect us and ensure that we are safe. It
comes down to basic survival skills in the face of danger—or
in many cases, perceived danger. The biological “fight or
flight” response that we feel when threatened (whether the
threat is real or imaginary) is designed to ignore the pain,
danger or risk of death and do what is necessary to motivate
us into surviving at any costs.
Beating yourself
up never works.
21
Contrary Action: Being Easy on Yourself
22
making healthy choices will become second nature to you
and feel more comfortable.
23
Being easy on yourself just means that you are human, you
deserve to be loved, and you get to practice compassion for
this vastly serious disorder from which you are suffering.
Chances are, if you have tried to stop binge eating and were
unsuccessful at it, it’s because you attempted to jump
straight to the solution. You may have thrown out all the
tempting food in your kitchen. You likely went on a diet. You
might have even tried socializing only with people for whom
food wasn’t a problem. You bribed yourself with a reward if
you managed to not binge eat for a week.
But before you even think about the solution, you must be
truly and fully aware of the problem. Otherwise you’re just in
denial, and being in denial makes you susceptible to being
sucked back into the problem again. Being fully aware of the
issue means understanding how you came to binge eat in the
first place, what’s going on at a deeper level (binge eating is
not really about food), and truly grasping the consequences
of your disorder.
24
Only when we’ve become sincerely aware of our situation can
we move on to acceptance. This concept is often a difficult
one to embrace because, as we mentioned earlier, most
people mistake accepting a situation for condoning it. Let’s
clear this up right now. To condone is to approve of
something that is considered wrong and allow it to continue.
To accept something is simply to agree with reality. All we’re
asking you to do is to agree with reality, which may sound
something like: “I am a binge eater” or “I have an unhealthy
relationship to food.”
Acceptance
Always Precedes
Change
A final word on
acceptance. It is a fundamental truth that acceptance always
precedes change. Being able to accept yourself, your
struggles, your past, your emotions, and your setbacks—not
25
to mention your successes, your future, your self-worth, and
your happiness—is the key that unlocks the door to recovery.
Stop fighting yourself. Stop fighting reality. Accept and love
yourself just the way you are, even when it seems ridiculous,
uncomfortable, and counter-intuitive. In fact, especially
when it seems ridiculous, uncomfortable, and counter-
intuitive.
26
Addiction and Craving and Willpower, Oh My!
27
cravings, mental obsession, and a distortion of basic instincts
and will.
With this idea of the addict, it’s easy to see why no one would
want to admit to being one themselves. But addiction covers
a much greater spectrum of addictive substances and
behaviors. According to the American Society of Addiction
Medicine:
28
Addiction is characterized by inability to
consistently abstain, impairment in behavioral
control, craving, diminished recognition of
significant problems with one’s behaviors and
interpersonal relationships, and a dysfunctional
emotional response. Like other chronic diseases,
addiction often involves cycles of relapse and
remission. Without treatment or engagement in
recovery activities, addiction is progressive and
can result in disability or premature death.
You can be
addicted to food,
alcohol, drugs,
people, work,
exercise, sex,
gambling,
shopping, social
media—and so on.
In short,
addiction simply refers to a behavior over which you have no
control.
29
The Power of Sugar, Flour, and Wheat
30
There is plenty of research, like that done at the University of
Florida, showing that certain foods, such as those that
contain sugar, create the same responses in the brain’s
dopamine receptors as alcohol and other addictive
substances. In addition, it states that sugar actually
surpasses cocaine as a reward.
Does that give you an idea of just how powerful the draw is to
use these substances?
Just know that it’s not your fault. Sugar, flour, and wheat
have been in our food system long before you were even
born. But armed with the information in this e-book, on our
website, or any other source of help, now that you’re aware of
31
the power of these substances, you need to take steps to help
yourself.
Cravings
People who are not binge eaters may tell you that your
cravings are all in your head, but in fact cravings are very
real, biological responses. Three regions in the brain—the
hippocampus, insula, and caudate—are responsible for
cravings and
tend to be
stronger than
the brain’s
reward center.
When you’re
stressed or
anxious or otherwise upset, this is the moment when your
craving for emotionally-satisfying foods kicks in. During
32
your food binge your anxiety and stress seem to melt away—
hence the strong “reward” factor.
Consuming sugar, flour, and wheat raises serotonin, one of
our body’s natural chemicals that maintains mood balance
and has a calming effect.
Volume As a Trigger
33
The Myth of Willpower
Many people who suffer from BED (or any other form of
addiction) have probably bemoaned the fact that if only they
had more willpower, they could overcome their dependency
on food.
34
catch-22: in order to not eat, you need willpower. But in
order to have willpower you need to eat.”
Since willpower is a
finite resource that
inevitably becomes
depleted, when we
put all our
addiction-stopping
eggs into the
willpower basket, we
are just setting ourselves up to fail. And no amount of
willpower can make you put the carton of ice cream down if
you are getting something out of it—which everyone with an
addiction is.
35
and then the binge eating itself serves as a distraction from
examining and dealing with the feelings.
Abstinence
36
turkey and give up all trigger foods. We at BingeEating.com
subscribe to the second model of abstinence, because we
believe that giving up only some foods will still trigger
cravings and cause you to either binge on another food or
increase the volume of your remaining trigger foods. If you
don’t cut out all your addictive foods you won’t be able to
sustain abstinence from any of them.
What To Expect
37
and shame—a sugar-, flour-, and wheat-free life won’t seem
as scary.
38
Decreased health risks – Abstaining from sugar, flour,
and wheat will lower your risk of health problems, such as
diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, and a host of other health problems as listed in
the earlier section The Long-Term Risks of Binge Eating.
39
Self-control – Binge eating, as we’ve mentioned before, is
not really about the food; it’s about our self-worth. Practicing
abstinence will help you become more patient with yourself
as you learn not to act out with food, but rather deal with
whatever is really going on in that moment.
40
a friend or go for a walk after your evening meal. If you
always go to the movies with friends who “have to have”
sweets, try going with
other friends who can
support your sugar-,
flour-, and wheat-free
commitment.
41
The Importance of Beginning, Nurturing, Guarding,
and Loving Abstinence
42
Withdrawals
But once you get over the initial hump through abstinence,
you will begin to feel so much better and you will be on your
way to having your BED under control.
43
Binge eating will no longer control you.
44
cold or flu-like symptoms such as chills, sweating,
runny nose, watery eyes
Why is that?
45
Most people can’t do that simple exercise because of
cravings. What are sugar cravings? Simple. Sugar
withdrawals. It’s
your body
wanting to re-
ingest its poison.
I know this is going to scare some people off and I’m okay
with that. You’ll be back when you’re ready.
46
have a period of abstinence from sugar, flour, and wheat in
order for the compulsion to use it again to be released.
Words like “compulsion” might be difficult to accept at first,
but if you’re reading this e-book then you’re clearly ready
and open-minded enough to face it.
47
As we stated at the beginning of this e-book, we take BED
very seriously and strive to provide the very best information
and support for this disorder that is causing immense pain
worldwide, and to help people like you to gain control over
binge eating and thus your life. We’ve been there ourselves,
so we know exactly how you feel.
48
documented throughout history. We humans are a social
bunch. We need each other and we act and react better when
we are in a group setting.
49
A quick note about caffeine before we get started. Anything
with caffeine in it is just going to trigger you. About 99% of
caffeinated products also have sugar in it (or used with it). So
I would suggest that you take one week to quit caffeine
before you attempt quitting sugar, flour, and wheat.
50
you can eat on hand, and have lots of them. While I do
believe that some people are triggered by volume of food,
eating a little more of non-sugar/flour/wheat items during
withdrawals is fine.
Days 2-7: I’m not going to lie to you. These days will likely
be tough. You are going to feel depressed. But remember—
for the majority of folks this is a physical, and not
psychological, reaction to not eating sugar/flour/wheat as
your adrenals and serotonin uptake mechanisms rest and
begin to heal.
Flu symptoms: It’s going to feel like you have the flu. You
do not have the flu and please do not take any flu medicine.
It will only prolong the withdrawals. Drink plenty of water.
51
Night sweats: Not all folks have night sweats but if you do,
just know that it is purely physical and not a sign of some
dire illness. It will pass.
52
This is a critical time for you and your recovery.
I personally believe that sugar, flour, and wheat are not foods
at all but very powerful psychoactive drugs. Where I see the
biggest failure rate is the inability to accept the idea that we
have been using these substances to manage our emotions
our whole lives
and that without it
we need to learn
new methods.
We need to find new ways to deal with the ups and downs of
life. As you’ll see in the exercise section, exercise is not for
weight loss, it’s a positive method to deal with stress.
53
Weeks 3 and 4: Physically you’ll feel much better, but
many folks have a tough time emotionally. Stick to your and
start working on building your support system. You are going
feel overwhelmed. Please don’t use these feelings as an
excuse to find another substitute for chemically managing
your emotions.
The third and fourth weeks are very, very important because
while the main physical withdrawal symptoms are gone, the
re-learning of emotional sobriety is ever present. These
weeks will be modeling your life moving forward.
54
food plan is the
most important
step in obtaining
abstinence, and it
is imperative that
we follow our plan
for the amounts we
eat and how often,
which we will get to in a bit.
Eating healthy foods and cutting out toxic ones affects the
mind in a positive way, meaning that sound nutritional
habits will aid you in gaining control over the insanity of this
disease.
55
Benefits of Following the Food Plan
For us it means changing the foods that we eat, the way that
we eat them, and the amount that we eat. The guidelines for
men, women and children vary, so there is no one, across-
the-board plan for everyone to follow.
These are just some of the benefits you’ll discover when you
follow the food plan:
56
6. Stabilize blood sugar levels and metabolism to prevent
triggering cravings and binges
7. Gain self-confidence, which lowers our desire to
sabotage ourselves
Ok, you now know that you need to abstain from sugar, flour,
and wheat, but what does that mean exactly?
Ace-K
Acesulfame-k (Sunette, Sweet and Safe, Sweet One)
Aguamiel
Alcohol
Alitame
Amasake
Artificial Sweeteners such as Equal, Sweet ‘n Low,
Splenda, etc. (Please note: All diet sodas have artificial
sweeteners, which are now known to create cravings
similar to sugar.)
57
Artificial flavors (some)
Aspartame/Nutrasweet
Barley malt
Cane juice/Evaporated cane juice
Caramel coloring
Concentrated fruit juice
Corn sweetener
Cyclamates
Date paste/syrup
Dextrin
Dried/dehydrated fruit
Extracts
Fat substitutes made from concentrated fruit paste
Fructooligosaccharides (FOS)
Fruit flavorings (some)
Glucoamine/glucosamine
Glycerine
Honey
Jaggery
Licorice root powder
Light, lite or low sugar products
Malted barley
58
Maltodextrins
Malts
Molasses/black strap molasses
“Natural” flavors (some)
“Natural” sweeteners
Nectars
Neotame
Olestra (made from sucrose)
Raisin juice, paste or syrup
Rice malt, sugar or syrup
Rice sweeteners
Saccharin
Sorghum
Stevia
Sucanat (evaporated cane juice)
Sucraryl
Sugars: apple sugar, Barbados sugar, bark sugar, beet
sugar, brown sugar, cane sugar, caramel sugars,
confectioner’s sugar, date sugar, grape sugar, invert
sugar, milled sugar, “natural” sugar, powdered sugar,
raw sugar, turbinado sugar, unrefined sugar, etc.
Syrups: agave, barley, brown rice, corn, date, high-
fructose corn, maple, raising, yinnie (rice), etc.
59
Vanillin
Whey (as an additive)
Xantham gum
60
Wheat. This is a cereal plant that is ground up to make
flour.
It’s a really good idea to get into the habit of checking labels
for lists of ingredients, as you may find other names for
sugar, flour, and wheat. Please be aware that some products
61
contain sugar naturally, so make sure you’re checking the
ingredients list and not the nutrition facts, which will list
sugars naturally contained in such ingredients as fruits and
vegetables. The more informed you are about what you need
to avoid, the easier it will be to know what to look for.
62
1 protein 1 protein 1 protein 1 dairy or 2
oz. protein
1 dairy 1 cooked 1 cooked 1 fruit
vegetable vegetable
1 fruit 1 fresh 1 fresh
vegetable vegetable
1 grain or ½ daily oil 1 grain or
starchy starchy
vegetable vegetable
Men: add 1 ½ daily oil
fruit or 1
grain or 1
starchy
vegetable
Protein:
beef 4 oz.
chicken 4 oz.
dried beans 1 c.
63
cooked
2
eggs
medium
fish 4 oz.
hot dogs(not sugar
4 oz.
cured)
lamb 4 oz.
pork 4 oz.
shellfish 4 oz.
turkey 4 oz.
veal 4 oz.
Vegetables - 1 cup of any of
vegetarian protein
6 oz.
(tofu, tempeh) the following:
artichoke mushroom
asparagus okra
bamboo shoots onions
beans (yellow
peppers
or green)
bok choy pimentos
beets radishes
broccoli rhubarb
Brussels
romaine
sprouts
cabbage rutabaga
carrots sauerkraut
snow pea
cauliflower
pods
celery spinach
summer
chicory
squash
64
Chinese
Swiss chard
cabbage
cucumber tomatoes
dill pickles turnips
vegetable
eggplant
juice
endive water cress
escarole
greens *
Fruits:
apple 1 medium
apple juice 1/2 c.
applesauce 1/2 c.
apricots 3 medium
berries 1 c.
citrus juice 1 c.
cantaloupe 1/2 (6" dia.)
cherries 1 c.
cranberry juice 1 c.
fruit cocktail 1 c.
grapefruit 1/2 large
grapes 1 c.
65
honeydew 1/4 (7" dia.)
Kiwi 3 small
2 small/
lemons, limes
1 large
2 small/
nectarines
1 large
orange 1 large
peach 1 large
pear 1 large
pineapple 1 c.
pineapple juice 1/2 c.
plums 3 med.
prune juice 1/2 c.
tangerine 2 small
watermelon 1 c.
Starches:
baked potato 1 small (6
(white) oz.)
Beans (lima, navy, 1/2 c.
all dried beans) cooked
corn 1 med.
1/2 c.
corn (kernel)
cooked
mashed potatoes
1/2 c.
(white)
mashed yams 1/2 c.
parsnips 1/2 c.
peas, dried 1/2 c.
66
peas, green 1/2 c.
pumpkin 1/2 c.
1 small (6
sweet potato
oz.)
squash* 1/2 c.
Dairy:
buttermilk 1 c.
low-fat or non-fat
1/2 c.
ricotta cheese
milk (skim or 1 %) 1 c.
low-fat cottage cheese 1/2 c.
low or non-fat yogurt 1 c.
unsweetened soy
1 c.
beverage
67
recipes or no more than 1 teaspoon per day of any one spice
and no more than two tablespoons per day of any one sauce.
Fat - Women choose one and men choose two from the
following:
oil (olive,
1 tablespoon
coconut)
butter 1 tablespoon
mayonnaise 1 tablespoon
salad
dressing
(without
sugar,
2 tablespoons
artificial
sweetener,
or corn
syrup)
68
3 rice
puffed cakes
brown rice =1
serving
cream of
puffed corn
rye
puffed
rye
millet
69
Journaling: A Tool For Success
70
outlet for stress, increasing accountability, and reminding
yourself how far you’ve come.
“Felt down and anxious before three slices of cake, but after
and during—just for a few minutes—I felt right with the
world. Then I crashed again and it was even worse.”
“Ate 8oz broiled salmon and 8oz broccoli, felt the same
before and after.”
71
“I can’t believe I ate a one pound bag of M&Ms, but the stress
of work melted away.”
Journal like this for one month and then review it. I think
you will find that, without a shadow of a doubt, you use food
(and particularly sugar) to manage your emotions, if only for
a few brief moments.
72
This task requires that you be very honest with yourself.
Remember that no one but you ever needs to read what you
wrote, so if you
find yourself
being anything
less than honest
in your notebook,
ask yourself who
you are trying to
fool.
73
will not only be easier, but more pleasant, too, if you
surround yourself with people who are traveling the same
path. Just the sheer act of talking to a like-minded fellow on
the phone or meeting them for coffee will provide relief, even
if only for that moment, from your thoughts of shame or self
criticism of your body.
Here are some external forces that can cause negative body
image and BED:
74
Being bullied and/or teased as a child or mistreated as
an adult
Loneliness
Experiencing prejudice or discrimination because of
your weight, body size or lifestyle
Being shamed by others
Being stared at or teased for your weight (whether too
heavy or too thin)
Getting bypassed for a promotion and/or raise because
of your weight
Media and societal pressure regarding obesity and
placing too much value on being thin
Part of the recovery process, and what we will help you with,
is learning to love the body you are in, no matter what size
or shape you are. We are all beautiful beings and we are all
okay/lovable/acceptable just as we are.
75
Self-Care and Exercise: Working Out and Working
Within
Self-Care
76
imperative that you balance your work with a little play,
a.k.a. self-care. Since the effects of this disorder tend to be in
the realm of self-loathing, being kind to yourself—even if it
seems frivolous—is an important part of the plan. And bear
this in mind: what might feel like a frivolity to you is usually
a necessity to someone without BED, so perhaps a change in
your perspective about yourself is in order. There are a lot of
different ways you can take care of yourself and some of
them may surprise you, but, trust us, they really work.
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Your entire being is saying: I don't need a massage, I need to
lose X amount of weight, or I need to stop binging!
Examples of Self-Care
78
Take a walk on the beach with a friend you haven’t seen
in a long time
Join a dance class
Learn how to play an instrument
Take an art class
Spend the afternoon at a museum
Join a gym and set attainable goals for yourself to get in
shape (works physically and mentally)
Tackle a project you’ve been putting off, such as
organizing a closet, cleaning out the garage, or donating
old clothes to Goodwill
If you can spend just 50% of the day saying kind things like
"It's been a good day, I've stayed on my food plan and I went
in the pool with the kids" instead of "I'm such a loser, I'll
never be able to quit sugar," then you are well on your way to
recovering from BED.
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What the heck does that mean?
Exercise does not just affect the body, it affects your mental
and emotional state, too. Regular exercise can relieve stress,
decrease depression and anxiety, improve your sleep, and
boost your mood.
80
ways the body feels good naturally. After years of abuse and
artificial activation, these mechanisms are simply beat to
hell. They can’t function as God or nature intended.
81
your sense of self-worth as you feel a sense of
achievement.
Improves sleep – It doesn’t take much exercise to
start improving your sleep. If you exercise at night,
choose moderate, stretching exercises such as walking
or yoga.
Increases energy – To give yourself a boost of
energy, start your morning off with even a few minutes
of exercise. Daily exercise also strengthens your
immune system.
Allows you to cope better – Exercise is helpful in
dealing with life’s stresses in a healthy way, instead of
resorting to binge eating (or any other addiction), which
makes you feel worse.
82
If you’re new to exercise or it’s been a while, start with 5- or
10-minute period and then slowly increase your time. It may
feel as though you don’t have the energy to do anything, but
here’s the catch-22: the more you exercise, the more energy
it’ll give you. So the key, as we’ve said before, is to just do it
as best you can. We promise you that if you keep at it on a
regular schedule, you will feel the benefits as listed above.
83
Some suggestions for moderate exercise:
walking
yoga
swimming
cycling
dancing (in the privacy of your home!)
low-impact aerobics
rebounding (on a mini trampoline)
tennis or badminton
playing catch with a friend or your dog
Frisbee
household chores like raking leaves/mowing the
lawn/vacuuming/washing the car
84
We think the tiny shift in the way you view the exercise and
the reasons you are doing it in the first place can really
launch your recovery from binge eating. Exercise is more
important than you think and much more important for
recovery from binge eating disorder than for burning
calories.
Meditation
85
Benefits of Meditation
86
a calmness that I feel, even in the face of what seems
impossible.
If it’s time to change your life by changing the way you eat,
then it’s time to work on the mind and the thoughts that got
you here. A solid meditation practice can get you to your
goals quicker.
How To Meditate
Meditation is very simple: you just sit quietly and focus your
attention away from your thoughts, generally on your
breathing. There are many different ways to meditate, such
as:
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breathing. When thoughts or emotions come up, you
simply acknowledge them and let them go.
Transcendental meditation – where you repeat a
personally assigned mantra, such as a word, sound or
phrase, in a specific way by a certified teacher. This
usually costs a fee.
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You Can’t Do This Alone: Support Groups
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it. You have to be honest with this person and honest with
yourself.
Family and friends are great, but they’ve been around you for
awhile and know you as you are; they’re used to you that way
and, quite frankly, most people don’t like change. They might
not be as supportive as you’d like them to be, or need them to
be. And that’s not something to blame them for; it’s just the
nature of most relationships. You also might not be as open
to being honest with them.
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and Donald Trump. That’s how they get to the top of their
game. They built a team of experts, advisors, and others with
whom they can get guidance, advice, feedback, and
encouragement. Richard Branson, entrepreneur and founder
of Virgin Group, has said that the reason he’s successful is
because of his team.
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largest of these programs. OA does not have a defined eating
plan and its members get to “name their own abstinence.”
Many people in OA define their abstinence as we do and we
believe abstinence as we have defined it is critical to your
success.
The thing I like about these two groups (and OA) are the
telephone meetings. Around the clock you can just pick up
the phone and listen. You don't have to say anything, just
listen and see if you can relate.
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Conclusion
I’ve been asked what I hope you, the reader, will get from
this e-book. The answer is two things. One is hope. I hope
that I have been able to shine the light on this issue just
enough for you to feel that there is a possibility that you, too,
can be successful in ending your binge eating, and that you
can see a clear path to serenity and peace around food, a
path that others have taken successfully and one you can also
travel.
The second thing, and the one I take most seriously as the
steward of the site BingeEating.com, is that I want you know,
deep in your being, that you are not alone. It is well known
that folks like us are “isolators” and that we tend to hide our
eating and so we tend to hide ourselves. Until now our entire
life has been spent in a prison of isolation and the cure is
simply to reverse that pattern of isolation. We were not born
with it. Humans are herd animals. We thrive and grow, live
and love with others.
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It is also well known that one of the cures, if not the primary
one, for these types of maladies are mutual aid societies.
Groups of like-kind, like-minded people banding together to
support each other on the journey. I want you to know that
you have that here. As we grow this site many more
resources will be set into place for you to meet with others on
this same journey.
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Tell me what you need or would like to see. We are in this
together and I see this site as yours with me as the steward.
If you’ve ever thought that you could or would want to help
others once you’ve begun to heal from binge eating, then
you’ve come to the right place. Honestly, that’s what we’re all
about. Send me your comments to Michael (at) BingeEating.com
Be well,
Michael
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