If you've been trying to figure out the
weight-loss game for as long as I've been coaching people twenty
five years you've most likely been trying to avoid food, even
though that point of view has not worked. What you need to do is
to look at the ritual leading up to the part where you finish
everything on your plate.
For many years I had either a radio
show or a public access television cable show named Changing
Habits. The opening of both shows state: we cover eating,
smoking, gambling, drinking, shopping, spending, and negative
thinking. There was also discussion about low wage earning, debt
accumulation, messy apartments, and procrastination. All of
these things have something in common: they can be ritualized.
I, too, was seduced by the mesmerizing
effect I felt when I was in the mindless, automatic state of a
ritual. When in that state of mind, you're comfortable without
having to think or feel anything else. I smoked cigarettes,
spent too much, drank too much, and went into debt as if I were
in a trance. Writing this book became a behavioral ritual; there
was always another chapter to write or re-write or edit or type.
I'm in the middle of construction in my apartment. What began as
re-doing a bathroom and kitchen floor has turned into buying new
furniture and designing built-ins.
One tiny part of the redecorating
process was looking for knobs for cabinet doors. There were
hundreds of styles and shapes and colors and prices from which
to choose. I don't even want to tell you how many choices I had
to make when it came to selecting a couch.
Whether gambling or drugging or eating,
or writing a book, there is a ritual of things we do, and say,
and think, before, during, and after the actual using of the
drug. And I use the word drug here because a behavioral ritual
is just as much a drug on your system as is food, or cigarettes,
or alcohol.


The gambler knows the phone number of
off-track betting or his/her bookie by heart; a bartender
remembers your usual drink; you shop whenever you're bored. The
drinker has a favorite drink with a specific amount of ice or
mixer or water. He/she might sip the drink rhythmically, with or
without others at specific times of the day or week or year, and
many people only drink in particular places, i.e., it never
occurs to me to order alcohol in a Chinese restaurant. Whereas
my friend Tom always orders a beer and friend Sara orders one
large and one small sake when in a Japanese restaurant. Each
part of a ritual knits with the other parts to tighten the
behavior more and more effectively. Add to your list the way you
lock, and unlock, the door to your home or office, answer your
phone, call a friend, get ready for bed, set your hair, or comb
your moustache.
When I smoked, there was the buying and
smoking of the cigarettes. But there was also my cigarette-case
collection, a Dunhill lighter, and I used a Lalique ashtray, for
goodness sake. I added additional behaviors to my ritual, too: I
needed to shop for and have on hand, lighter fluid for the
lighter and extra mouth spray and mouth wash to use after I
smoked each cigarette.
The ritual paraphernalia is just as
much a part of your eating- or smoking- or drinking-habit as the
lighting-up and inhaling of a cigarette, or the swallowing of a
bite of food. Each habit has its own ritual actions and
reactions.
Think about other rituals and habits
you mindlessly perform each day: You brush your teeth, shower,
shave, or put on makeup. Checking on mail or retrieving
telephone answering-machine messages may be a part of your
repertoire. I've recently added to my ritual, the periodic
checking of my email to see if I've got mail.
Getting dressed in the morning is
ritualized, too. You might comb your hair and put on makeup,
then put on clothes. Some others put their clothes on first, and
then comb their hair and put on makeup. I eat breakfast and take
my one-a-day, two-a-day, three-a-day vitamins, minerals, and
calcium pills. I even arrange them on a paper plate in four
little piles for easy access later. That's a ritual, too. That's
what we do:
We organize, and ritualize, so we can
narcotize.
All this busy work distracts you, at
least for the moment, from feelings or thoughts with which you
don't want to deal.
I've practiced and perfected many
constructive rituals into my life. After doing them consistently
for many years, they are now automatic, and mindless and serve
my needs. They help make my day run smoothly, like using a
pencil when I write in my appointment book. There is comfort in
the familiar.
It is the ritual of the first thought
or word or action that leads to the next thought or word or
action to the next, and the next, and the next. Eventually, you
succumb to what you think is the allure of the taste or smell or
even sight of food. But it is really the tail end of a ritual
where you might be tired or bored and just used to surrendering
to whatever is set before you. Some of us eat as an excuse to
take a break, or to rest. It is hard to say no because it is all
knitted together from the first thought of a ritual to the first
feelings of remorse. There's always remorse. That's part of the
ritual, too. This cycle of behavioral ritual needs to be
interrupted and unraveled. Identifying these patterns, even
acknowledging you have patterns, is a wonderful first step in
changing habits.


As you become more aware of your
patterns of thought, word, and action, you can begin the process
of rearranging or omitting the automatic next steps and to
create new constructive patterns for yourself. Eventually,
you'll learn to be comfortable thinking, saying, and doing,
something else instead of putting food into your mouth, just
because it's there.
This unraveling of the ritual of food
addiction helps you to make pro-active choices so you can become
the person you want to be. Sometimes, the new way is quite
different from what you've accumulated in the way of behavior.
Your old way was built over a lifetime of unconscious actions
and reactions. You now have the opportunity to create something
new and wonderful that better serves your present need to weigh
__________ pounds.
Bobby F. danced the "I can go all day
without eating, but once I start, I can't stop" tango, a remnant
from a previous weight-loss plan. Since evening activities
weren't as stimulating as the daytime ones, he was without
things to occupy his mind; old feelings and thoughts bubbled up.
With no place to go and no one to talk to, he incorporated going
into the kitchen into his usual evening activity of killing
time. One trip to the kitchen yielded a piece of candy, another
trip yielded a nibble of leftover salad, another trip two
grapes. The once- or twice-a-night ritual became more and more
frequent. It really took off when he had a phone installed in
the kitchen. He found himself sitting on a chair with wheels
while speaking on the phone and rolling over to the refrigerator
where he'd open the door and window-shop the shelves.
When he worked on breaking that ritual,
I had him put a little tick mark on a piece of paper whenever he
thought of putting something into his mouth. Between 9 p.m. and
midnight, he found himself thinking about food forty-two times!
That is approximately one episode every five minutes.
Forty-two times in three hours he had
gotten in the habit of putting something in his mouth, even
though he wasn't hungry. Forty-two times he nibbled a bite of
this and a swallow of that, just because he was bored. Whether
eating one item, or one bite from many items, it all adds up. It
doesn't matter if it is salad or soda. You're eating when you're
not hungry. If you practice this habit every day of the week,
you've got a behavioral addiction that becomes a weight gain.
Keep doing the same thing and it becomes a part of the evening's
entertainment. When Herman moved the phone out of the kitchen,
the picture changed. His weight changed. His habits changed.
This was just one of many patterns he discovered as a result of
being mindful. There were even more to find.


He realized how he always ordered a
glass of wine when he took clients to dinner; or how each meal
ended with a cup of coffee. Every visit to a theater to see a
movie seemed to be bonded to eating a bag of popcorn or buying a
soda. The buying I call it a compulsion to spend is a ritual,
too.
When I talked about rituals with
another person I teach, she commented that keeping the logbook,
in which she enters her daily weights and what she eats, was a
ritual. I agreed. Some rituals help us to become mindful of what
it is we are doing and enable us to see, in writing, the
patterns we've created. Some rituals are better than others.
Barbara J. had difficult times at 4
p.m. each day. It was clear that her desire to eat wasn't about
hunger; her lunch was usually only a few hours before. It was
connected to her children arriving home from school. When she
had to prepare food for them, she mindlessly nibbled on the food
herself. She also had a phone in the kitchen and practiced some
version of talking on the phone and browsing amongst the
bratwurst. You may be thinking: "But I only pick at the
broccoli." If you're eating when you're not hungry, it doesn't
matter what it is. It all adds up.
In an office, an eating ritual might
begin at the onset of a coffee-wagon bell ringing at 10 a.m. and
3 p.m. Rachel S. told me of a mindless habit she had when she
commuted from Manhattan to her home in New Jersey. Every trip,
five days a week for a year, she'd eat a candy bar. Just that
one candy bar habit could add up to approximately twenty pounds
by year's end.
I used to have a habit of buying a
large bottle of fruit juice and would sip it a few swallows at a
time it's only juice I used to think until all 64 ounces were
sipped away and I'd buy another bottle. When I realized how
often I repeated this behavior, I began buying juice in
individual bottles of 4 ounces each, put the bottles on a
different shelf than the top one in the refrigerator. If I
didn't see it, I didn't think about it. If I didn't think about
it, I didn't drink it. The habit started to collapse on its own.
Sometimes, changing just one part of a
ritual whether thought word or action loosens the entire knot of
behavior without much effort. Sometimes it takes more thought.
In this case, changing the size of the container did the trick
(a physical action). I also thought (mental re-patterning), that
I'd gone years without drinking juice so many times during a day
and it had always been okay. It could be okay again. You get
used to anything.
What are some of your rituals and
habits?
This article is an excerpt from the
book Conquer Your Food Addiction published by Simon and
Schuster. Caryl Ehrlich, the author, also teaches The Caryl
Ehrlich Program, a one-on-one behavioral approach to weight
loss in New York City. Visit her at
ConquerFood.com
to know more about weight loss and keep it off without diet,
deprivation, props, or pills.
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