Understanding Food Cravings | Girlfriend Advice from Treena Wynes
November 20, 2011 – 3:32 pm
Food Cravings, Emotional Eating, using Food to deal with stress … they’re something we talk about with our friends (because we can be totally open and with our friends).
We all know what it’s like to have food positively screaming at us, right girlfriend? Somehow, especially at this time of year, we end up eating more than we’d planned and more than we want.
Girlfriend guest blogger TREENA WYNES explains how the food craving cycle works and why we find ourselves having just consumed all the brownies on the plate.
Did you know we use foods to stimulate or self-medicate ourselves? The foods we choose to perk us up, comfort our anxieties, and relax our tensions actually exacerbate Read More »
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Beliefs I Need to Ditch—Part I | Food Baggage from the Faux Diet Queen
November 18, 2011 – 8:05 am
What food beliefs do you have? Did you grow up with them or develop them as you got older? Our wonderful girlfriend, the Faux Diet Queen, discusses some of the crazy food beliefs she has.
The Faux Diet Queen (or as we affectionately call her, FDQ) has agreed to share her latest (and last) weight loss journey with us as a regular feature at Girlfriendology. We hope you’ll join us to cheer her on, nudge her back on track when she strays, and generally giggle along.
From the Faux Diet Queen:
Over the years I have collected enough Food Baggage to open my own luggage store. Like most baggage, Food Baggage is heavy (accounting for nearly 12% of my body weight). And like the airlines, my hips charge extra for carrying the nonsense around.
Here are five of my all time favorite Food Baggage Tips Tricks Beliefs Bits of Read More »
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Girlfriend to Girlfriend: Let’s Talk About Emotional and Binge Eating
January 14, 2011 – 11:10 am
We all deal with emotional eating, in some degree. Now we’ve got the girlfriend advice to help!
When a haircut from a stylist school turned bad (very bad!), I had one thought: Taco Bell! I almost called my friend Ellen to share my ‘emotional eating’ experience. I wasn’t hungry. I was stressed, upset, and looking for comfort in a burrito supreme.
Emotional eating is just that: eating for reasons other than hunger, when our emotions control our eating behavior. And, as women, I dare say, it happens to us a lot – some to various degrees up to binging and other eating disorders. Thankfully we girlfriends watch out for each other so hopefully we can help. Like you can do with this great girlfriend information. (Share it with any friends who may deal with emotional eating!)
Today’s BlogTalkRadio guest, ELLEN SHUMAN, shared this Read More »
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Body Image and Girlfriends
June 12, 2008 – 11:12 am
Want a good body image? Get some girlfriends!
Do you remember when you were a teen? Did you have issues with being seen in a bathing suit? I did, so when I read the following blog on Busy Mom’s Blog, I thought it would be a great blog to share on Girlfriendology. (And am including it with author Esa’s approval.)*
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With Memorial Day coming up, J and I invited some close friends and their kids (who are also H’s close friends) to come over to the house to swim and grill out. We’ve had a pool for about 6 years, and have great memories of the kids having a blast in the water while the parents get together at the same time. This year, the mom of one of H’s best friends said her daughter doesn’t want to swim. When I asked why, she said it was because she doesn’t want to wear a bathing suit in public. That breaks my heart.
I remember eighth grade as being probably the most awkward year for me, appearance wise, and I can see that in H’s friends as well. Not that they look bad, it’s just the year that their bodies change drastically from the beginning of the year to the end of the year. Their skin goes crazy, their bodies grow like never before, and clothes don’t fit the same way that they have for most of their lives. H had difficulty with the size NUMBER, when she outgrew some of her jeans and we went shopping for new ones. This is a scary time for me, as a mom. I want to teach H how to eat right, exercise, and stay healthy, but I want to avoid things like this short video…
Despite fears of diminishing influence over their children’s lives, research shows that parents continue to be essential role models, in both positive and negative ways. A 1991 Yale study, published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, found that women who began dieting at early ages were more likely to have daughters who would engage in binging or have problems with eating. These mothers were also more likely than other women to agree, when asked, that their daughters should lose weight.
“It’s my impression that parents are not sending negative messages deliberately. They’re doing it unconsciously,” says Debra Franko, PhD, director of the Harvard Eating Disorders Unit at Harvard Medical School. “A mother might say, ‘Oh, these pants used to fit last winter and now they’re too tight.’ The mother doesn’t have a sense that she’s saying anything wrong, but that statement, in combination with all the other messages a child is getting, might leave an impression that how you look means a great deal.”
“I wouldn’t tell a child that appearance doesn’t matter, because in our society it does,” says Rebecca Manley, director of the Massachusetts Eating Disorders Association. “But it’s about looking at what (qualities or attributes) you do have, and focusing on those things.”
So, what are we supposed to say as parents, when our daughters try to wear the jeans that “used to fit” and now are too tight? What do we say when they say they want to “firm up” a little for the swimsuit season? Should we give them advice on making good food choices, or portion sizes, or should we try to change the subject, and say they’re fine as they are, go ahead and eat that jumbo sized muffin at Panera?
I know there is a a happy medium in there somewhere. I have been super-cautious as H grows up not to let her see ME obsess about weight, or exercise, although I’m sure she sees it subliminally. I’ve tried not to tell her that any food is BAD, but to balance out nutritious food with the sugary, fatty stuff that bombards them every day.
I read countless articles that say to teach our girls to “celebrate their bodies individual strengths and vitalities, regardless of dress size”, and that “numbers on a scale or jean size or breadth of their hips must not determine their self-esteem”. That’s all well and good, but when every TV show, magazine article, and teen movie shows girls who look like Barbie dolls, those ideals just kind of seem like empty words.
I hope H’s friend changes her mind and swims on Memorial Day. I want to see her beautiful smile, laughing with her friends and enjoying an afternoon of fun.
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* What does this have to do with ‘girlfriends?’
LOTS. Girlfriends, at every age in our life, impact our self esteem, body image, vocabulary, ambitions … so much of whom we are. When we are young, like these teenage girls going to the pool, we can accept ourselves and our friends, or we made poor decisions and comparisons. Unfortunately this doesn’t end in our youth, we carry our opinions and attitudes with us to our friends as we grow and even pass it along to our girlfriends and daughters.
Past podcasts with ROSIE MOLINARY (author of Hijas Americanas: Beauty, Body Image and Growing up Latina), emotional eating expert, ELLEN SHUMAN and as our latest podcast guest, DEBI SILBER, all gave expert, knowledgeable, educated confirmation on the role that girlfriends have in our self acceptance and body image.
Be a girlfriend to your girlfriends, your daughters, yourself. Love yourself, love others. Don’t judge or stand by when others do. I don’t want to sound preachy. I just want to learn from others and be more accepting of myself and others. I want to go back and be the chubby girl in the bathing suit my mother made that had enough fabric to cover up me and a few others – but this time to be okay with who I was and who I became. I want to be a better girlfriend to my friends and to myself.
Thanks Esa for sharing and inspiring. And thanks to my girlfriends for accepting me as I am and for showing me that you love me, just as I am.
Image via Wikipedia
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