But, after many conversations with students in my Eat Without Drama groups about the upcoming holidays, family food drama, and the Annual Campaign of Self-Hatred in JanuaryTM, it has come to my attention that these issues are urgent and deserve airing.
Here are some pointers to remedy holiday freakouts:
1. Provide yourself with food - if you're away from home, bring food with you if mealtimes are irregular and the groceries aren't yours. Make a special trip to the store if you can, and get some snacks you can keep in your room or hotel, if necessary.
2. Continue eating regular meals, even on holidays! Just because there's going to be a big, fancy dinner later, that's no excuse to go without. You don't magically stop needing to eat regularly because it's a holiday - have breakfast, lunch, and snacks if you need them.
3. Make weight talk a non-issue. Don't compliment others on their weight - just tell them you love them. If people want to talk about your weight, tell them you manage it privately and prefer not to discuss it. And if people want to complain about their own weight - especially while eating! - insert a "Let's just enjoy this" or "I think you look great," period. Case closed. Change the subject.
4. Don't make comments on anyone else's eating, no matter how innocent or well-intended. Don't mention their picking up the salt shaker, or their love of stuffing, or ask why they're not eating something. Don't ask how their blood sugar or cholesterol is doing. Leave it be - in tense eating situations, it's best to zip the lip. Confine your comments to how wonderful the food tastes.
5. Give yourself permission to eat the food you really like, and remind yourself that it is okay to get as full as you want. It really is - if you get super-full now, you will probably just be less hungry later on. No biggie.
6. Don't threaten yourself by swearing to diet come Monday, or January 1st. This will only set up what I call The Last Supper Phenomenon, where you eat the entire house in preparation for self-imposed scarcity. Permission means you can eat as much as you want, from now on - not just until your next diet.
7. Make a new kind of New Year's resolution - like resolving to not weigh yourself anymore, or to eat three meals a day, or to actually take your lunch break at work every day. Commit the same zeal to self-care that you used to give to dieting.
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