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The Yuck Power Technique for
Overeating
Imagine a dead animal at the side of the road crawling
with thousands of white maggots. The image of maggot-ridden road kill will
effectively stop you from eating a hamburger or anything else you were
thinking of munching on.
Yuck power can shock you back to reality. Overeating
greasy, salty, chemical-laden food is not normal. TV advertisers have
associated toxic food with fun and enjoyment. We are told that we deserve
it. Meanwhile, the followers of this golden message are riddled with
disease from the effect of this modern-day diet. Even in the face of
illness, we still associate salt, sugar and fat-filled foods with a
pleasure that we deserve.
As a cure for emptiness, the pleasure of food can
become drug-like in how it affects our thinking. It becomes distorted. We
become obsessed with pleasure. Like an addict, we become fixed on that
pleasure and forget the harmful effects. Pleasure becomes our god — a
god who trades moments of comfort for control of our lives. We dance to
its urges like puppets on a string. It’s a dance of death. Pimples,
embarrassing gas, obesity, bloating and disease are signs on the road to
oblivion. It is time to turn around.
Stuck on Replay
The closer we are to receiving
pleasure, the more we think of it. We remember the pleasure and we want it
again. We remember the enjoyment, and forget the negative effects.
When we want pleasure, we replay the best part of the
experience. We build anticipation by remembering the pleasure over and
over again, like listening to a favorite song without playing the rest of
the tape. We rarely play the tape to the end. Who wants to see all the
images of depression, sickness, obesity, guilt and all the other fun stuff
that goes with indulgence?
When a drug addict thinks about a drug, he remembers
the rush. Reliving the experience of pleasure builds anticipation. As he
focuses on the rush, the more the anticipation increases the desire for
pleasure. He ignores the loss of money and health, the pain of
withdrawals, jail and all the negative consequences associated with drugs.
Drug addicts and alcoholics have pleasure-centered thinking. If they
forced themselves to look at the entire picture, they would not be using
drugs.
We do the same with food. We become fixed on the
pleasure. Instead, we need to force ourselves to look at the consequences
of overindulging: greasy skin, pimples, cavities, rolls of ugly fat, and
disease-rotted flesh from a body overloaded with food additives. Go ahead,
have another piece of cake.
What Do You Really Want
Do you really want to eat junk
food? An honest answer is ‘no’. But you have come to believe that 30
seconds of taste is really what you want. But that is a lie. Infatuation
is to love an image. Addiction is to love an illusion. It is an illusion
to think that a chocolate bar will satisfy you when, immediately
afterward, you will feel unsatisfied.
Get rid of the illusion. It is 30 seconds of
high-calorie, health-destroying taste pleasure that you don't need. If you
think of the reasons why you hate chocolate bars, you will not eat them.
We try to fight the battle of compulsive eating during
the moments just before eating, but that is the least effective time to
fight. You need to fight the battle when you are walking, sitting or
waiting in line. Ask yourself, what do you really want? Do you really want
to be a chocolate eater? You need to go over the reasons for quitting
chocolate again and again until it enters the subconscious. If you do this
mental work, the next time you are offered a chocolate bar you will say
"NO" without thinking. If you ask yourself why you said
no, you would answer, "I just don't like them."
Revulsion Power
Remember the restaurant vegetable
soup with the 4-inch long hair hanging off it? And what about the pizza?
The black thing with legs didn't taste like an anchovy! Although bugs are
naturally crunchy and high in protein, finding one in your food takes all
the fun out of eating.
The interesting thing about the effect of revulsion is
that it can be created and amplified to the point of nausea at will. Try
it a few times. The first time you may have to think intently of the road
kill or a hair in your soup, but after a few tries you will be able to
create the effect of nausea at will.
The nausea effect is a powerful tool to help you stop
overeating. It will shut off the pleasure tape and give you time to
refocus on what you really want. It will cause you to jump out of the
obsession cycle and give you a chance to look at the importance of your
goals.
You can use the revulsion technique to stop overeating.
Cultivate the feeling of revulsion and say to yourself "I don't
feel like having any more food." Leave the food area and get
moving. No battle of will, no fighting obsession, just one second of
feeling nausea and off you go. Why wrestle with your thoughts when a
simple technique will work? Feeling good about being disciplined will far
outweigh the few seconds of feeling bad.
Here is an example of using revulsion. The church had
decided to have donuts and coffee after the service. Dozens of donuts of
every type were being laid out. During the service, I started thinking of
the chocolate-covered ones with gooey cream filling. Halfway through the
service, I wanted a donut. I can't remember the sermon, but I sure
remembered which tray the chocolate donuts were on. It became a battle of
will. Emotions were escalating. Now I really wanted a donut. "Hey,
I'll try the revulsion thing. I'll just do it and hope it works.
Donuts . . . toxic oil, white flour, salt, sugar, no
nutrition; it’s probably been in a five-gallon bucket for five months
before they made it. Donuts give me headaches and make me feel
awful." Then I created a feeling of revulsion and thought of the
donut. I did it twice, then listened to the sermon. I never ate one donut.
I was amazed that it was so easy.
Creating revulsion is simple. After a while, you will
be able to create the feeling of revulsion quickly and easily. Practice
using it. Open the refrigerator door, create revulsion then do something
else. Use it when you are battling the munchies or getting past the bakery
section of the grocery store. Use it several times a day, for two or three
days and it will become a powerful tool in controlling compulsive eating.
Revulsion can work on bad habits. Repeat the habit,
then create the revulsion. It works on obsessive love. Create the
repulsion as strong as possible, then visualize the person you are
obsessed with. It works on depression caused by loss. For example, you
were to buy an amazing house but the deal fell through. You can become
depressed for days because you lost something special to you or erase the
desire from your mind by thinking about the house, ridden with termites,
with a leaky roof caving in. The feeling of loss will evaporate as you
visualize the dilapidated house while creating a feeling of revulsion and
thinking of all the negatives about the house. Becoming thankful that you
didn't buy it is to put the loss behind you.
When to Use Repulsion
Exceptionally-Revolting
Thoughts:
Donuts: Fat, salt, white flour and sugar. The hole is
the most nutritious part.
French fries: Sponges dripping with 14-day-old grease.
Cereal: Styrofoam with artificial flavor.
Margarine: Spreadable plastic.
White bread: Great for colon cancer.
Bacon: Pig fat to human fat.
Coke: Teeth-dissolving and stomach-dissolving fluid.
Milk: A glass of animal fat sucked from a cow udder.
(50% of its calories are fat.)
Use revulsion to reaffirm your desire to eat healthier.
Imagine yourself in the chair watching TV and gorging on junk food. See
yourself getting fatter and fatter. You are getting sick. A tumor is
developing. Your arteries are clogging with fat and sticky cholesterol.
You have diabetes from eating too much sugar. Your colon has a tumor
bulging from it, and you need a colostomy. Imagine a fat, wrinkled, sick
person on his deathbed. It is you. After that, be thankful that you have
made the decision to eat nutritiously. Feel good about what you have
accomplished. Imagine yourself eating healthy and feeling great.
How
to be content with eating less food
The
above was an excerpt from Eating in Freedom! The only
book you will ever need on weight loss and food addiction.
Learn how to fight cravings. Lose weight through self-encouragement, overcome obsessive thinking and
rebuild self-discipline to form resolute unshakable decisions. Written
by a former overeater!
Click
here to download it immediately!
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