Watching this emotionally charged video brings back the agony of my recent breakup. My four year relationship ended abruptly when my partner walked away, leaving a deep, unhealed wound in my heart. No matter how much I try to forget, I can't seem to let go, feeling lost and unsure about my future without him. Despite my best efforts, I remain consumed by the emptiness he left behind, and I just needed to share this pain here.
It's incredibly hard to move on when someone you love becomes just a memory. I was in a similar situation when my five year relationship fell apart. I couldn’t imagine my life without him and fought endlessly to get him back. In my desperation, I reached out to a spiritual guide, who helped me restore what I thought was lost forever.
Interesting! I’m genuinely curious how did you discover this spiritual counselor, and what’s the best way for me to connect with someone who could help me in a similar way?
You should meet Fatherabulu, a highly regarded spiritual advisor who is renowned for helping people reconnect with their ex partners. His unique methods and spiritual insight have restored many broken relationships.
Thank you so much for sharing this. Your advice is invaluable, and I’m deeply grateful for pointing me in the right direction. I’ll definitely explore this and see if it helps me too.
Great video! Sadly, my two-year relationship ended a month ago. The person I thought was the love of my life decided to leave, and I’m still deeply in love with him. I can’t stop thinking about him, and despite all my efforts to win him back, nothing has worked. I feel so frustrated and can’t imagine being with anyone else. No matter what I do, he’s always on my mind, and I miss him terribly.
Letting go of someone you love is incredibly hard. I went through a similar experience when my twelve-year relationship ended. I couldn't bear to lose him, so I did everything I could to rekindle our relationship. Eventually, I sought the help of a spiritual counselor, who guided us back together.
Watching this captivating video stirs up painful memories of the recent end of my 4 year relationship. My beloved partner chose to depart, leaving me with an unyielding ache. Despite my relentless efforts to reconcile, I find myself grappling with frustration and an inability to envision a future without him. Despite attempts to purge him from my mind, I remain haunted by his absence, feeling compelled to express my longing here.
It's hard to let go of someone you love; I went through a similar experience when my 12-year relationship ended. I tried everything to get him back, and eventually I had to turn to a spiritual counselor for assistance.
This is one of the most helpful episodes in TH-cam history. I am a very active person and go to the gym 6 days a week, but i binge eat chocolates and biscuits on a daily basis. Understanding that willpower is bullishit and being present in the behaviour is gold
I developed binge eating after years of dieting. Every further attempt to control my eating caused more out of control binging. I felt so broken. I am slowly working my way out of this with intuitive eating. Everything this man is saying is absolutely correct. Thank you so much for this podcast. I went and found Dr. Judd's book and bought it. Can't wait to start reading it.
I think it cannot be overestimated how much it means to welcome the feelings of addiction/coping with life, traps and tricks, is so important. Not to run from calling of addiction and coping but to sit with it and learn why it’s there and what it’s saying. And to learn, it’s lies. It doesn’t actually support you or your health. It supports the disillusionment a feeling and not feeling about you’re trying to escape. Or numb.
I love how we’ve been getting more of Rich recently. His personal journey is the core of the show and the artful pushback here and in recent episodes is great!
I've learned how to manage anxiety through mindfulness and quit smoking and drinking through mindfulness. Now, it's using mindfulness to deal with food cravings - by far the most difficult one of these to achieve, at least for me. This conversation has been so helpful 🙏 thank you!
I stopped when I'm comfortable not uncomfortable just comfortable. But then 20 minutes later I go back because I want to feel full not just comfortable. Maybe my body doesn't understand the difference maybe I'm just addicted to the feeling of being full. But I understand what Rich is coming from it's hard to stop once you start
I think a lot of habits that we create, healthy or not, is our way of trying to protect ourselves from something. Overeating is definitely one I relate to. Love this podcast!!!!
I really appreciate the points made here. First, I want to touch on the idea of not 'indulging' in certain foods out of fear of overeating. In my opinion, having a healthy relationship with food means finding a balance where we can enjoy treats without feeling guilty or anxious about it. (But I do also understand where Rich is coming from.) Second, it's important to recognize that binge eating can also be a serious eating disorder that requires attention and support. Let's remember to be kind (to ourselves and others)! Wishing everyone well 💕
Hey Rich, listening to you identify with the addiction of binge eating, I can't help but think (stay with me here) that YOU could help so many people if you wrote another book focusing on, not just the steps you took to put drinking behind you, but going even further than 'Finding Ultra” and writing down rules, so to speak, that guide you today. You were an addict and have come out the other side. That in itself is the real stuff, but tell us more . I can hear the conviction in your words and I hang on to everyone of them. You know what you are talking about because you've lived it. Thank you for this interview with Doctor Brewer. Excellent information
Agreed! Doing a 50:50 plate also helps (50% green salad, 50% everything else). I let myself have seconds if I'm still hungry, but it must be a 50:50 plate. Works really well, and often I don't want to bother making another salad, so move on to doing dishes and I'm just fine.
For me one helpful thing is always to ask myself how do I copy the mechanisms of oversaturation in an oversaturated world? What do we do to with our external and internal world? How many things do I really need, how much „fuel“ do I really need (to feel)? I know that way leads to be „boring“ for some of the people in my surroundings especially when I was known for being the motor of good feelings for others. But for this is it, sometimes hard because it is kind of getting „sober“. Thank you for this wonderful interview❤.
I'm so grateful that you are so focking smart. Rich. And that you are in recovery. As a 76 year old food addict who has tried EVERYTHING I'm back to a combo of 12 step and Theravada Buddhism. this was a brilliant interview. Do you know about Kevin Griffin? He has reached similar conclusions with his recovery work.
I’m 44 & I have binge eating disorder. I’ve been binge eating since I was a kid as a coping mechanism. I’ve done so much damage to my nerves with excess sugar intake that now if I eat something processed and/or with a lot of sugar i.e. cake, cookies, ice cream… a few hours later my nerves feel like they are on fire. It’s unbelievable pain where I can barely move. My doctor wanted to send me to a spine specialist where they could inject steroids into my spine (not once did he ask me about my diet or lifestyle, just wanted to put me on drugs right away.) I had to do my own research online and experiment with my diet to figure out what my body can tolerate. I can no longer eat any of my favorite foods. It sucks, but at the same time I know I did this to my body with years of abuse. 😢
I know what you are talking about. I was told to take B6 (50 mg) every morning with food (do not take after noon, or it will mess with your sleep, as do all B vits). That has been very helpful. B6 and B12 can have some healing effects on the CNS - you can research that. Do not take excessive amts of B6 or B12, as they can do the opposite, as well. 50mg is enough. Then, exercise patience.
Cool video, My relationship of 5 years ended a month ago. The love of my life decided to move on, I really loved her so much i can’t stop thinking about her and the memories we shared. I’ve tried my very best to get her back in my life, but to no avail. I’m frustrated, and i don’t see my life with anyone else. I’ve done my best to get rid of the thoughts, but i can’t. I don’t know why I’m saying this here, but i really miss her and i wish i could get her back.
I have been in such a situation. My relationship ended about three years ago, but i could not let her go. So i had to do all i could to get her back, i had to seek the help of a spiritual adviser who helped me bring her back. We are back together, and i must say i am enjoying every moment.
I feel your pain brother and my heart goes out to you, but this spiritual counselor who can bring your girl back sounds like a scam. Only you have the power to bring her back and I would say it won't be that difficult to bring her back if she has access to contact you. The question is would you or should you want her back? If you don't have any children with her then let her go. She is extremely selfish and cruel and even if she came back she would just do it again. What you need to do my friend is experience the "red pill" area of TH-cam and you will find out why this happened. But right now you don't even want to know what she's doing and if you did know you definitely would not want her back! Take the red pill and learn the true nature of women. It will make everything make sense that has happened throughout your whole life involving women. Not just girlfriends but every woman that's ever been in your life
I appreciate this. I've found that making difficult changes or decisions is much easier when you first set yourself up for success. Some things you just won't be able to avoid having to do, but when you can, make the changes easier on yourself by planning what you are going to do and making it as easy a choice as you can by setting up your environment up to support that choice. This can include controlling what items are available, having to report your actions to someone, having someone with you for moral support, avoiding people who make the change harder, choosing a preceding or following 'trigger' event that you already are doing, laying out your clothes or other needed items earlier, etc. Really it can be anything that makes it easier or which reinforces the change.
I love the discussion on self-compassion. It makes perfect sense that this would be a part of the path to overcoming any sort of addiction. As a long term meditator, I once had the blessing of a vision of my younger self. I saw myself from a totally different perspective but with absolute compassion. I realized that before this vision I had no idea what self-compassion meant. To me it’s about the intention and not the result. If you look to the work you’re doing and the good intentions behind them, you can see it. If you’re always looking to the results then compassion is limited. This was a profound lesson for me, a results oriented person.
I have a really poor relationship in food especially candies and chips but this episode even the science half of this episode shifted my entire perspective and gave me so much tools with deal with how I feel, absolutely stellar job. I am so thankful!!
I appreciate Rich speaking up for the rapacious eaters 😅 I didn't get the vibe that the guest totally understands this on a personal level, but I could tell that Rich does.
I agree with most of his views. The thing though is that you have to be at the right place to be able to make these changes. From my experience, most overeaters have underlying issues that need to be addressed before or whilst implementing these changes. Otherwise you're not able to have that curiosity that he mentions. And you keep on suffering.
What an insight.. great point.. I am also suffering from this.. But what's the short-term solution to this in your opinion.. I want to put an end to it.. I know that dealing with emotional issues is indeed the permanent and long-term solution, but is there any temporary fix for me to stop doing the damage..
Agreed. General recommendations are to "start with your diet" and add exercise later. I finally decided to try the opposite and it's working very well. I lifted weights 4x/week for 9 months before my mental health was good enough to try changing my diet (again). Real weight loss didn't start until I added in the diet component, but I've dropped 35# since September and have the energy to keep going. Bodyslims, an Irish online program, follows these principles in this episode very well and is working for me.
Changing some of your habits, one by one, can get you to a better place. But, in order to do that, you have to be aware of these habits. And we're usually not, we do things in some kind of automatic mode. I have seen that journaling on a daily basis is very helpful, it helps you having a clearer view of your patterns. You should keep any feeling of guilt aside though. Guilt is toxic and doesn't help changing behaviours. So, if you decide to have some introspection on yourself and your habits, do it in a benevolent way, with empathy for yourself. This being said, I don't want to make it sound easy because it's not. There will be step backs and they will be part of that journey to more intimacy with yourself.@@akshayangra7793
Re: “stress eating” vs “real hunger eating”. For me, it’s not either / or - it’s being hungry while under a boatload of stress that gets to me. Mindfulness is helpful, but of course, if I’m breathing calmly and moving slowly I’m not actually feeling the stress anymore. Stress feels rushed, panicky, overwhelmed. Also, I think you are assuming it’s just food cravings. It’s the lack of time for so many people that causes us to grab whatever we can find in the few free moments that are available. I would love to have 20 minutes to eat!
As a very busy veterinarian, I completely relate to your comment. Lately, however, I have come to the realization I was using it as an excuse and am making changes to how I structure my life to have much better boundaries and self care. It's not easy!! But, I am listening to this podcast while doing my weekly meal prep. Finding simple recipes, good quality glass containers, etc., has helped so much. Now my grab and go is from my own refrigerator. I also keep a little shelf-stable healthy food at work for "emergencies." Drawing a line in the sand, stopping myself from using busyness as an excuse (and some tears and lots of self reflection) finally changed things for me and I've dropped 30# since September. It's simple, but not easy. I also exercised 6-7 days a week for the past 15 months, the consistency is something new for me too (walking and strength training). I had to hold myself accountable, and it was not easy. I'm doing a very different online program called BodySlims that mirrors this speaker's expertise. It has a stupid name, but is NOT your typical weight loss program, it's a "fix your head to fix your ass" thing and life changing.
Thank you, Rich, your work as enriched my life. After reading your book and Jurek's book NORTH, I started my plant based diet. I never looked back. If you only knew how many lives you have changed. Thank you.
Oh my goodness, I'm loving this conversation! I'm only 21 minutes in but had to pause and comment. I've had so many thoughts recently about our minds and habits. We give in to the voice in our head that is shouting the loudest or influencing us the most. It's like we have this neutral (somewhat anyway) "driver" in the middle of it all that pulls the lever to allow the action. That part of our brain that pulls the lever is oftentimes rooting for one thing to happen but there's just not enough influence from that particular thing. It's almost like a bunch of lobbyists leaning on politicians. I've been pondering how we can feed those good habit voices that we are rooting for so that they have a louder voice....ok, enough, I have to finish this podcast! :-)
Thank you very much for this conversation. I ordered this book from my local indie bookstore as there were so many insights about self-awareness/forgiveness and integration into new habits. Through many years of therapy, I realized that during a chaotic childhood, my only constant comfort was food. Coupled with learned behaviors of body disassociation from classical ballet training and competitive sports, I’ve never really had a healthy relationship with food, hunger or movement even when I was outwardly “fit”. Thank you again and hope all take care of themselves so we can take care of others
The reason why I don't snack; I wait til I feel hungry. Eating between meals, for me, is unnecessary bc I still feel full. That's why practicing intermittent fasting is easy for me to adapt. I'm 68 and not taking any meds for maintenance.
Yuck. “Stop eating when not hungry” is like telling an alcoholic just to give up booze without a program. Eating when not hungry is deeply emotionally tied, and IN FACT ceasing restriction is what freed me. I’ve lost 30 pounds snacking anytime I want and not resisting. Now I am no longer obsessed with food, because yes, I am “ALLOWED” to have food ANYTIME. ❤❤❤
It's amazing the intuitive eating nonsense has made people believe eating whenever you feel like it is something to be proud of. And then you go around telling people to just eat mindlessly. Dangerous ideology.
I recently went through a difficult breakup. My five year relationship ended a month ago, and it's been incredibly hard. I still have so much love for my ex girlfriend, and I can't seem to get her out of my mind. Despite my best efforts to win her back, nothing has worked, and the thought of being with anyone else feels impossible right now. I know it might sound odd to share this here, but I miss her deeply and can't stop thinking about her.
Thank you Rich and Dr. Jeb for another wonderful podcast! If I may, I would like to suggest that perhaps the ‘locus’ IS consciousness - the substance of ALL form,mental,physical,emotional, spiritual. That awareness is the access point of self mastery. Thanks for letting me share!
Also it helps if the meals you eat actually help you feel full. And the best way to do that is to make sure it has a balance of fibre healthy fat and protein. Then you’ll be full for hours and won’t feel the need to snack or stuff your face! If you’re thinking about food all the time it’s probably because you never give your body what it needs in the first place
Please, please please, have Dr Susan Pierce Thompson on your show!! She IS a food addict and has created a program for food addicts and she is a brain scientist. PLEASE!! 🙏🏻
Diets do not work! Will power doesn't work. I am a living proof of that...time to buy the book - another book!! The "Alan Carr" book worked for me I finally give up smoking! Time to loose my visceral fat, wish me luck lol I remain ever hopeful! Thanks guys...k
Regarding the modern separation from our bodies: Check out Eugene Gendlin’s “felt sense”: in the words of Dr. Peter Levine, it’s the “language” of the body. Developing a relationship with the felt sense is also the foundation of self-regulation and trauma recovery in somatic psychotherapy.
Greatly enjoyed and learned from this episode! Timely, informative and insightful. Looking forward to the book and once and for all tackling no longer helpful mechanisms.
You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months sometimes less and now they are multi millionaires. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life ✊🏻❤️
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery (Benjamin). Glory to God.shalom
Sooo good! Super helpful. Thanks so much Rich for continuing to share such transformative info to soo many people! The world is changing, because of you
Depends. I don't eat after 3pm. The whole "eat everything at dinner" thing doesn't appeal to me at all. I want to eat those calories when I'm most likely to use and need them most - not before I go to bed.
I'm not sure this would work for me because I don't feel bad after eating a big meal, I feel great! Feelings of wellbeing, satiety and joy flood through me. I don't feel bad, guilty or "beat myself up". But I am overweight so obviously eat too much.
Yet another insightful episode! 🌟 Here's a sneak peek at 5 of our 12 key takeaways: 1. Understanding Habit Formation: The conversation delves into the neuroscience of habits, explaining that habits are automatic behaviors formed to conserve cognitive energy for new learning. Dr. Brewer emphasizes that habits are composed of three elements: a trigger, a behavior, and a result, with dopamine playing a crucial role in reinforcing these behaviors based on rewards. 2. **The Myth of Willpower in Dieting:** Dr. Brewer challenges the common reliance on willpower for dieting, stating that it lacks neuroscientific support. He argues that willpower is not a variable in the equations for habit change, suggesting that cognitive control and reward values in the brain are more influential in shaping our eating habits. 3. **Food Addiction and Modern Food Engineering:** Dr. Brewer touches on the concept of food addiction, suggesting that it can be pragmatically defined as continued use despite adverse consequences. He also criticizes the modern food industry for engineering products that encourage overconsumption and manipulate our natural reward systems. 8. **Understanding Reward Prediction Errors:** The podcast delves into the concept of reward prediction errors, explaining how positive and negative experiences with something like chocolate cake can influence our future behavior through dopamine responses. This process requires awareness, as being distracted can prevent the updating of our reward values, keeping us stuck in old habits. 9. **Breaking Compulsive Eating Habits:** Dr. Jud Brewer emphasizes the importance of paying attention to break the cycle of compulsive eating. By mapping out habit loops and becoming more aware of the triggers, behaviors, and results, individuals can change their relationship with food and overcome unhealthy patterns. 👉 Uncover all 12 takeaways and get the full power summary at app.kwip.ai/episodes/3JJ7PB_JpKg
Sugar is addictive, when will medicine start using that fact to start with all medicine? Until we deal with that, we can’t just stop eating what our brain is addicted to. It wins every time. It’s not about habit formation. Compulsion, oral fixation, baloney. ADDICTION, OUR BRAINS ARE ADDICTED TO FEELING THE SENSATION THAT FOOD, OR WHATEVER, GIVES. EDUCATION IS KEY!
I'm around 1 hour in the show and I have to say... Well, I wish I could say that food is not good and eating - and overeating - doesn't feel good... But sorry, it does! Yeah, there are foods that disappoint, but there will always be foods that taste great, even when I'm distracted or otherwise engaged. And I don't feel sorry for eating hahaha. I am sorry I get fat, but not for eating. So I think the guest of the show should take this into account in his research. Because I am not the only one who feels this way. Also, I started participating at some overeaters anonymous meetings and hearing the others' stories does not prevent me from overeating one bit! Yes, it somewhat objectifies my behaviour, but that is all. For me, these are just myths or theories. Maybe for others they are as the gentleman says, but I cannot pretend.
@@Denidrakes69 you felt the need to reply to a comment that was a feedback to the show. That seems compulsive, so I suspect that you are not better. You replaced eating with being mean to strangers online. You would have been better off eating. Good thing I am not impressionable. Go to therapy, please.
While acknowledging the difference between "headonic" hunger and real hunger is real. I think as non obese people, it's a gap in experience to say overweight people eat primarily due to headonic hunger, versus actual hunger. Hunger is caused by your hormones. And when you are obese your metabolic hormones are completely disregulated. Leaving "headonic hunger" out of the equation for a moment. I would say that as a man who has been at something like 50% body fat at 265 and 14% body fat at 175, the experience of hunger is completely different. By far, my hunger drive was much greater when I was obese. This is due to high insulin, high cortisol, high estrogen and many other hormones, versus at 14% body fat, my testosterone is much higher, insulin is much lower, growth hormone is higher from fasting and exercise. By far, the least hungry I have ever been is at 14% body fat. A lot of this is a hormone problem. Good news is we can control all those hormones with diet and exercise, stress management, sleep and healthy living.
ethanol (alcohol) created by fermentation in the organism is what makes people addicted to food. nearly every "meal" made by humans today has food combinations which are physiologically incompatible for enzymes to digest. these garantee indigestion - fermentation.
GREAT INTERVIEW AND LIFE CHANGING >WATCHING THIS EVERYTHING IS GOOD EXCEPT THOSE WHITE RIMMED WATER BOTTLES THE WHITE RIM GOT TO GO !!!! A CURTIS !!!!AND HOST !!!
What’s the difference between mindfulness and will power if it’s YOU that uses mindfulness to break a habit? Isn’t using mindfulness just a subform of the will?
How about capitalist not saturating our environment with Foods we would never have access to in nature. Even my dogs would eat bad food if they had access. Meaning transportation, money to buy, and availability..... I have never seen my pets say no to food they like the taste of...... we are mammals
@patriciaojeraransaez2893if you think your biology is that different from a dog, think about the pharmaceutical industry and who they use for drug testing. Love, a veterinarian
Oh my goodness, I'm loving this conversation! I'm only 21 minutes in but had to pause and comment. I've had so many thoughts recently about our minds and habits. We give in to the voice in our head that is shouting the loudest or influencing us the most. It's like we have this neutral (somewhat anyway) "driver" in the middle of it all that pulls the lever to allow the action. That part of our brain that pulls the lever is oftentimes rooting for one thing to happen but there's just not enough influence from that particular thing. It's almost like a bunch of lobbyists leaning on politicians. I've been pondering how we can feed those good habit voices that we are rooting for so that they have a louder voice....ok, enough, I have to finish this podcast! :-)
Dr Brewer actually covered this in his Eat Right Now app. They are called ‘committee members’. They give different excuses to influence your decisions. The key is how to shut them up by thinking ahead, what do I get out of this binging etc….
Stress hormones from overtraining, daily and work stress, and eating foods that you have a stress hormone provoking sensitivity too. Those are your trigger foods because they give you a shot of cortisol and adrenaline. And not sleeping enough and getting too much stimulants.
I live in Canada. I cant pay for more food then what I need so ya. I been eating once a day because food cost ALOT here sense past 3 years it's not manageable anymore.
Hello Fresh offers great meals, from prepared to quick to 45 minute prep and cook. Healthy and budget friendly. Ive been a customer over 10 years. No sales gimmick here.
Prepare a large amount of food like soup, stew, spaghetti sauce one day a week and reheat it on following days. Time saver, and you decide which healthy, NUTRICIOUS ingredients to use. (It's called batch cooking.)
if you need to "prepare" "food", it is not food. what can be considered food comes ready, as is in nature, like a banana, an apple, a pear, a tomato, ... this should have been obvious, but for some reason it seems not the case. why?
no one? you don't need access to "all fruits" any fruit grown in rich soil will do. you needing "variety" on your plate is a myth. the variety (of elements) needs to be in your soil. @@abhayagarwal5097
In week 3 of the Gina Livy weight loss program, she is teaching us about mindfulness with eating.This week we are going back to the basics of mindfulness and The 4 Steps of Mindful Eating. The goal is to have you paying extra attention to how you are feeling at each meal and snack time, leaning into satisfaction and paying close attention to portions. While practicing The 4 Steps of Mindful Eating, you bring your attention back to your portion sizes. This is a familiar practice for you at this stage and one that can easily slip through the cracks when not in the pursuit of weight loss. While trying to solidify, it is important to keep being in tune to your changing hunger levels and portion sizes and listening to your body’s cues. The goal continues to be eating just enough so you feel satisfied and not stuffed 10 - 15 mins after you are done eating. Continuing this practice may have you noticing new or even some of the same issues and associations when it comes to food. It is an opportunity to work through them and even further solidify that mind body connection. This is also the time to pick up on how your body reacts to certain foods and food choices.Now for the main focus this week, which is Mindfulness. You have heard this mentioned over and over throughout your journey and it really is the key to sustained weight loss. Being mindful of your body’s wants over needs, how your body reacts to certain foods and really paying attention to portion sizes will all go a long way to strengthen that mind-body connection. LET’S TALK MINDFULNESS The first step is to pay attention to how the body is responding before, during and after you eat. As you move forward in maintenance and transition off of a Food Plan and into a more natural way of eating for you, you will rely on mindfulness and being in tune to sustain your weight loss. Ginalivy.com
Completely disagree that the power of will is not real. Don't tell me that the ability to delay gratification, resisting short term temptations to meet long term goals is not a thing.
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Watching this emotionally charged video brings back the agony of my recent breakup. My four year relationship ended abruptly when my partner walked away, leaving a deep, unhealed wound in my heart. No matter how much I try to forget, I can't seem to let go, feeling lost and unsure about my future without him. Despite my best efforts, I remain consumed by the emptiness he left behind, and I just needed to share this pain here.
It's incredibly hard to move on when someone you love becomes just a memory. I was in a similar situation when my five year relationship fell apart. I couldn’t imagine my life without him and fought endlessly to get him back. In my desperation, I reached out to a spiritual guide, who helped me restore what I thought was lost forever.
Interesting! I’m genuinely curious how did you discover this spiritual counselor, and what’s the best way for me to connect with someone who could help me in a similar way?
You should meet Fatherabulu, a highly regarded spiritual advisor who is renowned for helping people reconnect with their ex partners. His unique methods and spiritual insight have restored many broken relationships.
Thank you so much for sharing this. Your advice is invaluable, and I’m deeply grateful for pointing me in the right direction. I’ll definitely explore this and see if it helps me too.
Great video! Sadly, my two-year relationship ended a month ago. The person I thought was the love of my life decided to leave, and I’m still deeply in love with him. I can’t stop thinking about him, and despite all my efforts to win him back, nothing has worked. I feel so frustrated and can’t imagine being with anyone else. No matter what I do, he’s always on my mind, and I miss him terribly.
Letting go of someone you love is incredibly hard. I went through a similar experience when my twelve-year relationship ended. I couldn't bear to lose him, so I did everything I could to rekindle our relationship. Eventually, I sought the help of a spiritual counselor, who guided us back together.
Wow, that’s incredible! How did you find a spiritual counselor, and how can I get in touch with him?
His name is Fatherabulu, and he’s an amazing spiritual counselor who specializes in helping people reconnect with their ex.
Thank you for sharing this valuable info! I just looked him up, and he seems impressive.
Watching this captivating video stirs up painful memories of the recent end of my 4 year relationship. My beloved partner chose to depart, leaving me with an unyielding ache. Despite my relentless efforts to reconcile, I find myself grappling with frustration and an inability to envision a future without him. Despite attempts to purge him from my mind, I remain haunted by his absence, feeling compelled to express my longing here.
It's hard to let go of someone you love; I went through a similar experience when my 12-year relationship ended. I tried everything to get him back, and eventually I had to turn to a spiritual counselor for assistance.
Interesting! How did you locate a spiritual counselor, and how can I get in touch with him most effectively?
His name is Father Akunna, and he is a great spiritual counselor who can bring back your ex.
he is father akunna, he has great powers, he can help you.
I appreciate you providing this important information; I've just checked Father Akunna online, and wow, he's really genuine. Thank you so much again ❤
This is one of the most helpful episodes in TH-cam history. I am a very active person and go to the gym 6 days a week, but i binge eat chocolates and biscuits on a daily basis. Understanding that willpower is bullishit and being present in the behaviour is gold
im a chocoholic
good luck.
❤lo
I developed binge eating after years of dieting. Every further attempt to control my eating caused more out of control binging. I felt so broken. I am slowly working my way out of this with intuitive eating. Everything this man is saying is absolutely correct. Thank you so much for this podcast. I went and found Dr. Judd's book and bought it. Can't wait to start reading it.
❤
Good luck with it all. Hope it all works out for you. I’m in the same boat
I think it cannot be overestimated how much it means to welcome the feelings of addiction/coping with life, traps and tricks, is so important. Not to run from calling of addiction and coping but to sit with it and learn why it’s there and what it’s saying. And to learn, it’s lies. It doesn’t actually support you or your health. It supports the disillusionment a feeling and not feeling about you’re trying to escape. Or numb.
I love how we’ve been getting more of Rich recently. His personal journey is the core of the show and the artful pushback here and in recent episodes is great!
Agree. He's getting better and better.
I've learned how to manage anxiety through mindfulness and quit smoking and drinking through mindfulness. Now, it's using mindfulness to deal with food cravings - by far the most difficult one of these to achieve, at least for me. This conversation has been so helpful 🙏 thank you!
I stopped when I'm comfortable not uncomfortable just comfortable. But then 20 minutes later I go back because I want to feel full not just comfortable. Maybe my body doesn't understand the difference maybe I'm just addicted to the feeling of being full. But I understand what Rich is coming from it's hard to stop once you start
I think a lot of habits that we create, healthy or not, is our way of trying to protect ourselves from something. Overeating is definitely one I relate to. Love this podcast!!!!
Jud is a Bodhisattva; his app helped change my eating habits… and life
What is the app?
I really appreciate the points made here. First, I want to touch on the idea of not 'indulging' in certain foods out of fear of overeating. In my opinion, having a healthy relationship with food means finding a balance where we can enjoy treats without feeling guilty or anxious about it. (But I do also understand where Rich is coming from.)
Second, it's important to recognize that binge eating can also be a serious eating disorder that requires attention and support.
Let's remember to be kind (to ourselves and others)! Wishing everyone well 💕
I took accountability for my bad eating habits. I also learned, most of the time I thought or felt hungry, I was really just thirsty.
I think my brain is actually completely incapable of distinguishing boredom and hunger.
Hey Rich, listening to you identify with the addiction of binge eating, I can't help but think (stay with me here) that YOU could help so many people if you wrote another book focusing on, not just the steps you took to put drinking behind you, but going even further than 'Finding Ultra” and writing down rules, so to speak, that guide you today. You were an addict and have come out the other side. That in itself is the real stuff, but tell us more . I can hear the conviction in your words and I hang on to everyone of them. You know what you are talking about because you've lived it.
Thank you for this interview with Doctor Brewer. Excellent information
I've found having small bowls/plates/cups helps a lot. Because it looks full and it makes you stop at a predetermined portion size
Agreed! Doing a 50:50 plate also helps (50% green salad, 50% everything else). I let myself have seconds if I'm still hungry, but it must be a 50:50 plate. Works really well, and often I don't want to bother making another salad, so move on to doing dishes and I'm just fine.
I love the questions that Rich asks he really gets everything on the table
That 5 finger breathing is like micro meditation! I love it.
For me one helpful thing is always to ask myself how do I copy the mechanisms of oversaturation in an oversaturated world? What do we do to with our external and internal world? How many things do I really need, how much „fuel“ do I really need (to feel)? I know that way leads to be „boring“ for some of the people in my surroundings especially when I was known for being the motor of good feelings for others. But for this is it, sometimes hard because it is kind of getting „sober“. Thank you for this wonderful interview❤.
Having this gentleman on was a great choice. Pertinent discussion for the times, the book looks and sounds more appealing than food. Thank you both.
I'm so grateful that you are so focking smart. Rich. And that you are in recovery. As a 76 year old food addict who has tried EVERYTHING I'm back to a combo of 12 step and Theravada Buddhism. this was a brilliant interview. Do you know about Kevin Griffin? He has reached similar conclusions with his recovery work.
Rich, thank you for asking such intelligent, meaningful, relevant questions on our behalf. YOU are a change agent too. A MAJOR one.
I’m 44 & I have binge eating disorder. I’ve been binge eating since I was a kid as a coping mechanism. I’ve done so much damage to my nerves with excess sugar intake that now if I eat something processed and/or with a lot of sugar i.e. cake, cookies, ice cream… a few hours later my nerves feel like they are on fire. It’s unbelievable pain where I can barely move. My doctor wanted to send me to a spine specialist where they could inject steroids into my spine (not once did he ask me about my diet or lifestyle, just wanted to put me on drugs right away.) I had to do my own research online and experiment with my diet to figure out what my body can tolerate. I can no longer eat any of my favorite foods. It sucks, but at the same time I know I did this to my body with years of abuse. 😢
I know what you are talking about. I was told to take B6 (50 mg) every morning with food (do not take after noon, or it will mess with your sleep, as do all B vits). That has been very helpful. B6 and B12 can have some healing effects on the CNS - you can research that. Do not take excessive amts of B6 or B12, as they can do the opposite, as well. 50mg is enough. Then, exercise patience.
Cool video, My relationship of 5 years ended a month ago. The love of my life decided to move on, I really loved her so much i can’t stop thinking about her and the memories we shared. I’ve tried my very best to get her back in my life, but to no avail. I’m frustrated, and i don’t see my life with anyone else. I’ve done my best to get rid of the thoughts, but i can’t. I don’t know why I’m saying this here, but i really miss her and i wish i could get her back.
I have been in such a situation. My relationship ended about three years ago, but i could not let her go. So i had to do all i could to get her back, i had to seek the help of a spiritual adviser who helped me bring her back. We are back together, and i must say i am enjoying every moment.
Amazing, how did you get a spiritual counselor, and how do i reach her?
Her name is Maurice Gleti, and she is a great spiritual counselor who can bring back your ex.
Thank you for this valuable information, i just looked her up now online. impressive
I feel your pain brother and my heart goes out to you, but this spiritual counselor who can bring your girl back sounds like a scam. Only you have the power to bring her back and I would say it won't be that difficult to bring her back if she has access to contact you. The question is would you or should you want her back? If you don't have any children with her then let her go. She is extremely selfish and cruel and even if she came back she would just do it again. What you need to do my friend is experience the "red pill" area of TH-cam and you will find out why this happened. But right now you don't even want to know what she's doing and if you did know you definitely would not want her back! Take the red pill and learn the true nature of women. It will make everything make sense that has happened throughout your whole life involving women. Not just girlfriends but every woman that's ever been in your life
I appreciate this. I've found that making difficult changes or decisions is much easier when you first set yourself up for success. Some things you just won't be able to avoid having to do, but when you can, make the changes easier on yourself by planning what you are going to do and making it as easy a choice as you can by setting up your environment up to support that choice. This can include controlling what items are available, having to report your actions to someone, having someone with you for moral support, avoiding people who make the change harder, choosing a preceding or following 'trigger' event that you already are doing, laying out your clothes or other needed items earlier, etc. Really it can be anything that makes it easier or which reinforces the change.
I love the discussion on self-compassion. It makes perfect sense that this would be a part of the path to overcoming any sort of addiction. As a long term meditator, I once had the blessing of a vision of my younger self. I saw myself from a totally different perspective but with absolute compassion. I realized that before this vision I had no idea what self-compassion meant. To me it’s about the intention and not the result. If you look to the work you’re doing and the good intentions behind them, you can see it. If you’re always looking to the results then compassion is limited. This was a profound lesson for me, a results oriented person.
Thank you for this observation! I never thought of it that way!
I have a really poor relationship in food especially candies and chips but this episode even the science half of this episode shifted my entire perspective and gave me so much tools with deal with how I feel, absolutely stellar job. I am so thankful!!
I appreciate Rich speaking up for the rapacious eaters 😅 I didn't get the vibe that the guest totally understands this on a personal level, but I could tell that Rich does.
Yes to this! I agree! Rich gets it!
Yes, like I care if the cake is great or mediocre. I’m gonna eat it anyway.
it's 430AM, I wake up I obviously browse my socials and I see this thumbnail "YOU ARE EATING WRONG" I sob myself back to sleep.
Another great podcast, Rich Roll. What a gentle man Dr. Brewer is.
I agree with most of his views. The thing though is that you have to be at the right place to be able to make these changes. From my experience, most overeaters have underlying issues that need to be addressed before or whilst implementing these changes. Otherwise you're not able to have that curiosity that he mentions. And you keep on suffering.
What an insight.. great point.. I am also suffering from this.. But what's the short-term solution to this in your opinion.. I want to put an end to it.. I know that dealing with emotional issues is indeed the permanent and long-term solution, but is there any temporary fix for me to stop doing the damage..
Agreed. General recommendations are to "start with your diet" and add exercise later. I finally decided to try the opposite and it's working very well. I lifted weights 4x/week for 9 months before my mental health was good enough to try changing my diet (again). Real weight loss didn't start until I added in the diet component, but I've dropped 35# since September and have the energy to keep going. Bodyslims, an Irish online program, follows these principles in this episode very well and is working for me.
Changing some of your habits, one by one, can get you to a better place. But, in order to do that, you have to be aware of these habits. And we're usually not, we do things in some kind of automatic mode.
I have seen that journaling on a daily basis is very helpful, it helps you having a clearer view of your patterns. You should keep any feeling of guilt aside though. Guilt is toxic and doesn't help changing behaviours. So, if you decide to have some introspection on yourself and your habits, do it in a benevolent way, with empathy for yourself. This being said, I don't want to make it sound easy because it's not. There will be step backs and they will be part of that journey to more intimacy with yourself.@@akshayangra7793
2 hours to say the secret to not overeating is: pay attention to what you're eating 😂
Re: “stress eating” vs “real hunger eating”. For me, it’s not either / or - it’s being hungry while under a boatload of stress that gets to me.
Mindfulness is helpful, but of course, if I’m breathing calmly and moving slowly I’m not actually feeling the stress anymore. Stress feels rushed, panicky, overwhelmed. Also, I think you are assuming it’s just food cravings. It’s the lack of time for so many people that causes us to grab whatever we can find in the few free moments that are available.
I would love to have 20 minutes to eat!
As a very busy veterinarian, I completely relate to your comment. Lately, however, I have come to the realization I was using it as an excuse and am making changes to how I structure my life to have much better boundaries and self care. It's not easy!! But, I am listening to this podcast while doing my weekly meal prep. Finding simple recipes, good quality glass containers, etc., has helped so much. Now my grab and go is from my own refrigerator. I also keep a little shelf-stable healthy food at work for "emergencies." Drawing a line in the sand, stopping myself from using busyness as an excuse (and some tears and lots of self reflection) finally changed things for me and I've dropped 30# since September. It's simple, but not easy. I also exercised 6-7 days a week for the past 15 months, the consistency is something new for me too (walking and strength training). I had to hold myself accountable, and it was not easy. I'm doing a very different online program called BodySlims that mirrors this speaker's expertise. It has a stupid name, but is NOT your typical weight loss program, it's a "fix your head to fix your ass" thing and life changing.
Thank you, Rich, your work as enriched my life. After reading your book and Jurek's book NORTH, I started my plant based diet. I never looked back. If you only knew how many lives you have changed. Thank you.
Oh my goodness, I'm loving this conversation! I'm only 21 minutes in but had to pause and comment. I've had so many thoughts recently about our minds and habits. We give in to the voice in our head that is shouting the loudest or influencing us the most. It's like we have this neutral (somewhat anyway) "driver" in the middle of it all that pulls the lever to allow the action. That part of our brain that pulls the lever is oftentimes rooting for one thing to happen but there's just not enough influence from that particular thing. It's almost like a bunch of lobbyists leaning on politicians. I've been pondering how we can feed those good habit voices that we are rooting for so that they have a louder voice....ok, enough, I have to finish this podcast! :-)
In English it's said ..'I'm hungry'..in Spanish it's 'tengo hambre' ..meaning, i have hunger, which is a better description
YES! Because you don't identify with the hunger. It is not you.
Ay Rich, learned more from YOU than the doc on this one. This episode and my health lined up like whoa, timing was a blessing 🙏🏾💪🏾
Thank you very much for this conversation. I ordered this book from my local indie bookstore as there were so many insights about self-awareness/forgiveness and integration into new habits. Through many years of therapy, I realized that during a chaotic childhood, my only constant comfort was food. Coupled with learned behaviors of body disassociation from classical ballet training and competitive sports, I’ve never really had a healthy relationship with food, hunger or movement even when I was outwardly “fit”. Thank you again and hope all take care of themselves so we can take care of others
The reason why I don't snack; I wait til I feel hungry. Eating between meals, for me, is unnecessary bc I still feel full. That's why practicing intermittent fasting is easy for me to adapt. I'm 68 and not taking any meds for maintenance.
Yuck. “Stop eating when not hungry” is like telling an alcoholic just to give up booze without a program. Eating when not hungry is deeply emotionally tied, and IN FACT ceasing restriction is what freed me. I’ve lost 30 pounds snacking anytime I want and not resisting. Now I am no longer obsessed with food, because yes, I am “ALLOWED” to have food ANYTIME. ❤❤❤
True. Awful title. I disregarded this episode until I realized it features Dr. Jud. In naother interview he says "what you resist, persists. " '
It's amazing the intuitive eating nonsense has made people believe eating whenever you feel like it is something to be proud of. And then you go around telling people to just eat mindlessly. Dangerous ideology.
I recently went through a difficult breakup. My five year relationship ended a month ago, and it's been incredibly hard. I still have so much love for my ex girlfriend, and I can't seem to get her out of my mind. Despite my best efforts to win her back, nothing has worked, and the thought of being with anyone else feels impossible right now. I know it might sound odd to share this here, but I miss her deeply and can't stop thinking about her.
I'm digging the word disenchantment in this convo.
Thank you Rich and Dr. Jeb for another wonderful podcast!
If I may, I would like to suggest that perhaps the ‘locus’ IS consciousness - the substance of ALL form,mental,physical,emotional, spiritual. That awareness is the access point of self mastery.
Thanks for letting me share!
Also it helps if the meals you eat actually help you feel full. And the best way to do that is to make sure it has a balance of fibre healthy fat and protein. Then you’ll be full for hours and won’t feel the need to snack or stuff your face! If you’re thinking about food all the time it’s probably because you never give your body what it needs in the first place
Please, please please, have Dr Susan Pierce Thompson on your show!! She IS a food addict and has created a program for food addicts and she is a brain scientist. PLEASE!! 🙏🏻
Diets do not work! Will power doesn't work. I am a living proof of that...time to buy the book - another book!! The "Alan Carr" book worked for me I finally give up smoking!
Time to loose my visceral fat, wish me luck lol I remain ever hopeful! Thanks guys...k
Regarding the modern separation from our bodies: Check out Eugene Gendlin’s “felt sense”: in the words of Dr. Peter Levine, it’s the “language” of the body. Developing a relationship with the felt sense is also the foundation of self-regulation and trauma recovery in somatic psychotherapy.
Greatly enjoyed and learned from this episode! Timely, informative and insightful. Looking forward to the book and once and for all tackling no longer helpful mechanisms.
I sure hope millions will hear what is being said ❤🎉 thanks gentlemen 🙏
You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months sometimes less and now they are multi millionaires. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life ✊🏻❤️
Thanks to my co-worker (Sean) who suggested Mrs Mary Elizabeth Webb.
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery (Benjamin). Glory to God.shalom
She's a licensed broker in the states 🇺🇸
Oh wow... I knew Mary was famous but I definitely didn’t expect this.
@angelmieky4176 Sure thing, she’d be glad I finally sent someone new her way. You’ll surely reach her
Super nice conversation. Thank you so much.
Fantastic interview 👏👏 thank u what’s is Dr Brewer eating app called pls ? Ta
Sooo good! Super helpful. Thanks so much Rich for continuing to share such transformative info to soo many people! The world is changing, because of you
I do intermittent fasting and worked out its habit not hunger that gets you to break-fast in the morning.
Unless you front load like I do and feel truly hungry when I break-fast in the early morning.
Depends. I don't eat after 3pm. The whole "eat everything at dinner" thing doesn't appeal to me at all. I want to eat those calories when I'm most likely to use and need them most - not before I go to bed.
For me snacking can be a physical habit. It’s something I feel compelled to do with my hands
I've seen other interviews on Dr. Brewer's book tour and Rich's is the best. Thank you!
❤ please 🙏 do the five finger/thumb breathing exercise as a short... would love to share that with my family members ❤
would love to be on your program. How I became free from cigts, sugar, shopping, religion, eating disorder and more.
The Eat Right Now has been tremendously helpful for me.
I'm not sure this would work for me because I don't feel bad after eating a big meal, I feel great! Feelings of wellbeing, satiety and joy flood through me. I don't feel bad, guilty or "beat myself up". But I am overweight so obviously eat too much.
You are so good at asking question. Enjoyed this one very much. Hope you recover and back to your usual active self soon.
Sweet shout out to rain, dr Tara brach
I need to listen to this.
Yet another insightful episode! 🌟 Here's a sneak peek at 5 of our 12 key takeaways:
1. Understanding Habit Formation: The conversation delves into the neuroscience of habits, explaining that habits are automatic behaviors formed to conserve cognitive energy for new learning. Dr. Brewer emphasizes that habits are composed of three elements: a trigger, a behavior, and a result, with dopamine playing a crucial role in reinforcing these behaviors based on rewards.
2. **The Myth of Willpower in Dieting:** Dr. Brewer challenges the common reliance on willpower for dieting, stating that it lacks neuroscientific support. He argues that willpower is not a variable in the equations for habit change, suggesting that cognitive control and reward values in the brain are more influential in shaping our eating habits.
3. **Food Addiction and Modern Food Engineering:** Dr. Brewer touches on the concept of food addiction, suggesting that it can be pragmatically defined as continued use despite adverse consequences. He also criticizes the modern food industry for engineering products that encourage overconsumption and manipulate our natural reward systems.
8. **Understanding Reward Prediction Errors:** The podcast delves into the concept of reward prediction errors, explaining how positive and negative experiences with something like chocolate cake can influence our future behavior through dopamine responses. This process requires awareness, as being distracted can prevent the updating of our reward values, keeping us stuck in old habits.
9. **Breaking Compulsive Eating Habits:** Dr. Jud Brewer emphasizes the importance of paying attention to break the cycle of compulsive eating. By mapping out habit loops and becoming more aware of the triggers, behaviors, and results, individuals can change their relationship with food and overcome unhealthy patterns.
👉 Uncover all 12 takeaways and get the full power summary at app.kwip.ai/episodes/3JJ7PB_JpKg
Sugar is addictive, when will medicine start using that fact to start with all medicine? Until we deal with that, we can’t just stop eating what our brain is addicted to. It wins every time. It’s not about habit formation. Compulsion, oral fixation, baloney. ADDICTION, OUR BRAINS ARE ADDICTED TO FEELING THE SENSATION THAT FOOD, OR WHATEVER, GIVES. EDUCATION IS KEY!
I'm around 1 hour in the show and I have to say... Well, I wish I could say that food is not good and eating - and overeating - doesn't feel good... But sorry, it does! Yeah, there are foods that disappoint, but there will always be foods that taste great, even when I'm distracted or otherwise engaged. And I don't feel sorry for eating hahaha. I am sorry I get fat, but not for eating.
So I think the guest of the show should take this into account in his research. Because I am not the only one who feels this way.
Also, I started participating at some overeaters anonymous meetings and hearing the others' stories does not prevent me from overeating one bit! Yes, it somewhat objectifies my behaviour, but that is all. For me, these are just myths or theories. Maybe for others they are as the gentleman says, but I cannot pretend.
Ah, well, you're not even at the "want to want to get better stage."
No one can help you yet. They'd be wasting their time.
@@Denidrakes69 you felt the need to reply to a comment that was a feedback to the show. That seems compulsive, so I suspect that you are not better. You replaced eating with being mean to strangers online. You would have been better off eating. Good thing I am not impressionable. Go to therapy, please.
While acknowledging the difference between "headonic" hunger and real hunger is real. I think as non obese people, it's a gap in experience to say overweight people eat primarily due to headonic hunger, versus actual hunger. Hunger is caused by your hormones. And when you are obese your metabolic hormones are completely disregulated. Leaving "headonic hunger" out of the equation for a moment. I would say that as a man who has been at something like 50% body fat at 265 and 14% body fat at 175, the experience of hunger is completely different. By far, my hunger drive was much greater when I was obese. This is due to high insulin, high cortisol, high estrogen and many other hormones, versus at 14% body fat, my testosterone is much higher, insulin is much lower, growth hormone is higher from fasting and exercise. By far, the least hungry I have ever been is at 14% body fat. A lot of this is a hormone problem. Good news is we can control all those hormones with diet and exercise, stress management, sleep and healthy living.
ethanol (alcohol) created by fermentation in the organism is what makes people addicted to food.
nearly every "meal" made by humans today has food combinations which are physiologically incompatible for enzymes to digest.
these garantee indigestion - fermentation.
Good to find out what Dr. Jud has been up to lately.
GREAT INTERVIEW AND LIFE CHANGING >WATCHING THIS EVERYTHING IS GOOD EXCEPT THOSE WHITE RIMMED WATER BOTTLES THE WHITE RIM GOT TO GO !!!! A CURTIS !!!!AND HOST !!!
THE LONG SIDE SHOT >ITS LIKE THE AURA COMING OF THE BOTTLES JUST STEELS THE ATTENTION AND ENERGY > ITS LIKE THEIR STEELING THE LIGHT ...
LOVE all his books! Amazing author!
What’s the difference between mindfulness and will power if it’s YOU that uses mindfulness to break a habit? Isn’t using mindfulness just a subform of the will?
How about capitalist not saturating our environment with Foods we would never have access to in nature. Even my dogs would eat bad food if they had access. Meaning transportation, money to buy, and availability..... I have never seen my pets say no to food they like the taste of...... we are mammals
They’re not capitalists, they’re demons and witches disguised as capitalists.
The food industry does the same to pets as humans. My dogs liver and gallbladder are testament to that.
@patriciaojeraransaez2893if you think your biology is that different from a dog, think about the pharmaceutical industry and who they use for drug testing. Love, a veterinarian
Capitalism needs misery to thrive
you're wrong if you think pavlov's work only applies to "dogs" ... @patriciaojeraransaez2893
My problem is that kindness given or received feels transactional. I know that’s messed up but I don’t know what to do with that
Thank you for tis conversation. Hits home.
Oh my goodness, I'm loving this conversation! I'm only 21 minutes in but had to pause and comment. I've had so many thoughts recently about our minds and habits. We give in to the voice in our head that is shouting the loudest or influencing us the most. It's like we have this neutral (somewhat anyway) "driver" in the middle of it all that pulls the lever to allow the action. That part of our brain that pulls the lever is oftentimes rooting for one thing to happen but there's just not enough influence from that particular thing. It's almost like a bunch of lobbyists leaning on politicians. I've been pondering how we can feed those good habit voices that we are rooting for so that they have a louder voice....ok, enough, I have to finish this podcast! :-)
Dr Brewer actually covered this in his Eat Right Now app. They are called ‘committee members’. They give different excuses to influence your decisions. The key is how to shut them up by thinking ahead, what do I get out of this binging etc….
I, too, find the binary system so much easier. I do not drink, I do not eat animal products. I am working on the I DO part.
Stress hormones from overtraining, daily and work stress, and eating foods that you have a stress hormone provoking sensitivity too. Those are your trigger foods because they give you a shot of cortisol and adrenaline. And not sleeping enough and getting too much stimulants.
But what if it’s both hunger AND craving?!
I would literally eat 1/3 of all what i eat during day when i would not eat when i just have a urge for entertainment or stressreduction.
Meditation is a component of the AA 12-STEP PROGRAM ...
Preordered the book after getting 2o minutes in
I live in Canada. I cant pay for more food then what I need so ya. I been eating once a day because food cost ALOT here sense past 3 years it's not manageable anymore.
Hello Fresh offers great meals, from prepared to quick to 45 minute prep and cook. Healthy and budget friendly. Ive been a customer over 10 years. No sales gimmick here.
I need that bottle of water. Good size, glass and wide mouth. I’ve been looking for it. I need to know how I can get it. Thanks
Very helpful thank you
What kind of food is prepared quickly but not processed and cost the same? Where is that? And what is that?
Prepare a large amount of food like soup, stew, spaghetti sauce one day a week and reheat it on following days. Time saver, and you decide which healthy, NUTRICIOUS ingredients to use. (It's called batch cooking.)
if you need to "prepare" "food", it is not food.
what can be considered food comes ready, as is in nature, like a banana, an apple, a pear, a tomato, ...
this should have been obvious, but for some reason it seems not the case. why?
@@maxdecleyntrue that but also no one have access to all fruits for the nutrition if I am not wrong!
no one?
you don't need access to "all fruits"
any fruit grown in rich soil will do.
you needing "variety" on your plate is a myth. the variety (of elements) needs to be in your soil. @@abhayagarwal5097
I eat once a day, mostly meat. It takes
Why do they both? And? Every? Sentence? Like it's a question?
In week 3 of the Gina Livy weight loss program, she is teaching us about mindfulness with eating.This week we are going back to the basics of mindfulness and The 4 Steps of Mindful Eating. The goal is to have you paying extra attention to how you are feeling at each meal and snack time, leaning into satisfaction and paying close attention to portions.
While practicing The 4 Steps of Mindful Eating, you bring your attention back to your portion sizes. This is a familiar practice for you at this stage and one that can easily slip through the cracks when not in the pursuit of weight loss. While trying to solidify, it is important to keep being in tune to your changing hunger levels and portion sizes and listening to your body’s cues. The goal continues to be eating just enough so you feel satisfied and not stuffed 10 - 15 mins after you are done eating.
Continuing this practice may have you noticing new or even some of the same issues and associations when it comes to food. It is an opportunity to work through them and even further solidify that mind body connection. This is also the time to pick up on how your body reacts to certain foods and food choices.Now for the main focus this week, which is Mindfulness. You have heard this mentioned over and over throughout your journey and it really is the key to sustained weight loss. Being mindful of your body’s wants over needs, how your body reacts to certain foods and really paying attention to portion sizes will all go a long way to strengthen that mind-body connection.
LET’S TALK MINDFULNESS
The first step is to pay attention to how the body is responding before, during and after you eat. As you move forward in maintenance and transition off of a Food Plan and into a more natural way of eating for you, you will rely on mindfulness and being in tune to sustain your weight loss. Ginalivy.com
Ayurved mai already bataya gya hai
For your chronic back pain try hypnosis for self healing
Completely disagree that the power of will is not real. Don't tell me that the ability to delay gratification, resisting short term temptations to meet long term goals is not a thing.
Agreed. Quitting smoking, remaining employed, not eating the whole carrot cake…I have many personal triumphs 😂
Rich gets it!!!
Where are your chairs from !! ❤them
Food addiction is definitely a thing I’m surprised this is a debate in the scientific community
WOW!!
We know that doesnt work
I think we can't heal binging ED, unless we don't have the choice. Like no money. Starvation due to a war or natural disaster
I DO KNOW THATS THE SILICON SEAL >>>BUT !!!
“The disenchantment database” LOL