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How to Overcome When
You Fail and Overeat
Expect your resolve to be challenged by emotional ups
and downs. Temptation, getting depressed, becoming frustrated or
disinterested can knock you off the path. If you are prepared in advance
for the fight, you will be able to get back on the path as quickly as
possible.
Prepare for failure by learning visualization skills,
self-encouragement, creative relaxation, avoiding ‘should’ statements,
making resolute decisions and reaffirming your commitments. With these
skills you will escape the failure cycle. When you do, life will be a lot
more fun. The little things won't bother you so much. You will take the
ups and downs of life in stride. You may stumble, but you won't fall.
Overcoming the Failure Effect
So you blew it. If you accomplish only a few of these
steps, you will start to feel better. Discouragement due to failure is
hard to fight; you will want to give up. So just try as best you can. If
you can get started, your emotions will come in line and it will get
easier. You will win over donuts, joints, cigarettes, beer, burgers and
coffee. It is a matter of using the skills. Make it a brain workout. Get
focused, get determined, pump your lungs with oxygen, and say it with
determination. Do five sets of "I am not a failure." Do
six sets of "I don't have to be perfect. I can make mistakes."
Do 12 reps of "I have nothing to prove to this world."
Put energy behind the message; it has to get all the way to the heart.
Here are seven steps to break you from the habit of
feeling like a failure.
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Start by putting the emphasis on what you have accomplished . "I
have done really well so far on my diet. I am becoming better
disciplined. This is just a minor setback. I can overcome this."
Let it build as a feeling. This is the hardest part because guilt causes
tunnel vision.
Get rid of guilt. "I can make mistakes. I don't have to
be perfect." This only proves that you are human.
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See the failure as a bad decision. "It would have been
better if I had not____________." Regret blowing your diet.
Feel bad about the decision. Let the feeling build. This is not guilt,
this is the desire to change. See what you have lost by choosing to
indulge. Let your sadness build your desire to get back on track.
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Get angry. You are not going to be pushed around. This is it.
You've had enough. No more Mr. Nice Guy. Get storming mad at what
tempted you.
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Visualize the two pictures in your mind: you are blowing it and
feeling bad. Let it build as a feeling of regret. Then visualize you
being successful and feeling good about it. Visualize what you wished
you had done. Visualize you are doing the right thing and feeling good
about it. Let it build as a desire.
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Think of all the reasons why you do not want to eat. For
example: Donuts are full of fat, white flour, salt, sugar and food
additives. They just taste good and that is it. Let it build as a
feeling of determination that you will not eat them any more.
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Why do you want to eat nutritiously? Remind yourself of those
reasons. It is your heart's desire to eat healthy, so you can enjoy a
vibrant life. Let it build as a feeling of desire.
-
You are forgiven. You have forgiven yourself. Refuse to
be down. It is in the past. Time to get on with life. Shake yourself up.
Create good emotions: "I feel joy. I feel peace. I feel
love." You are a fighter, not a quitter.
Rebuild Determination
Rebuilding Determination
Failure can challenge us to try again or smash our
self-worth. It can create determination or erode what resolve we have. We
can use the failure to dig into our character and pull out strength, or
lose all hope. The easy way is to give up. We stop trying so we won't get
hurt again. All of your energy is sapped. We feel hopeless. But it is at
this very point where victory is won. This is the point of faith. When all
hope is gone, we can draw on the deepest strength and use it to build the
determination to try again.
The effect of failure distorts our thinking. It is like
entering a dark tunnel. We can't see our goals or even remember why they
were important. We tell ourselves, "so what, it never really
mattered." But, we are lying to ourselves. Don't let yourself get
away with it. Remind yourself of the value of your goals. Build desire and
enthusiasm. Tell yourself why it is important. Don't get mad at you,
get mad at the behavior. Where is your fighting spirit? Are you going to
sit back and take it? Are you going to let a stupid little failure push
you around? You're tougher than that!
Write out your goals and what you want to accomplish.
Enthuse yourself about your goals by visualizing you achieving them. Make
achieving them feel pleasurable. See the things that will tempt you from
your goals and create a feeling of revulsion as you think of them. Spend
time building the desire to achieve.
We spend so much of our life on the little useless details. We easily
become sidetracked. We forget what our goals are and lose enthusiasm. Put
your energy toward what is important. You need to invest time in
encouraging yourself to move forward. When you feel like giving up,
remember where you are going and why you are going there.
Preparing
for failure
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! |