Do you eat to live or live to eat?

By finally allowing yourself to satisfy your cravings without sabotaging your diet, you can keep the weight you lose off for good, saving yourself hundreds and even thousands of dollars in the process Get it now!

I've noticed that others, myself included, often eat food without even stopping to assess whether we're hungry or not. I encourage you to get in touch with your body and eat only when you need to. This entails being aware of your body's needs and not eating food if you're not hungry.

When I speak to people who maintain a healthy weight level without any real effort, I find one of the keys for them is they only eat when they're hungry. If they're not hungry they don't eat. This group of people generally find it hard to understand how the rest of us can eat food if we're not hungry.

As most of you know, when we eat food when we're not hungry, this is usually being triggered by something else which is going on in our lives. One of the first steps to identifying these triggers and dealing with them is for you to be aware of the times when you're hungry and the times when you're not. This will take some time and effort to start with, but as with any habit, it becomes easier over time.

Eventually, you will unconsciously go through the process of determining when you're really hungry. First, you need to start thinking consciously about your hunger levels. I would suggest that in your mind or on paper you create a ladder with 10 rungs and label each rung with a level of hunger, according to what feels right for you.

For instance, rung 1 might be "I've just eaten and feel full up. " Rung 2 might be "I ate an hour ago and still feel satisfied." Rung 5 might be "I'm starting to feel slightly hungry.

" Rung 7 might be "I'm feeling hungry now and it would be a good time for me to eat. " Rung 10 might be "I'm absolutely starving and want to devour anything." The wording of these rungs needs to suit you and reflect yourself.

I suggest that round about rung 6 or 7 is when you really start to feel hungry and therefore it's appropriate to eat. Rung 1 should be not needing to eat at all and rung 10 needs to be the other extreme, where you're far too hungry. When you want to eat food, take a look at this ladder and determine for yourself where you are on it.

If you're on a low rung, perhaps your urge to eat is being triggered by something else and it would be beneficial to take a look at this. I would suggest the best time to eat food is round about rung 6 or 7 when you're genuinely hungry and need food more than anything else. I would also encourage you not to get to rung 9 or 10 before you eat, or the hunger you're feeling will overwhelm your good sense and you're likely to overeat in order to feel satisfied.

When you get that hungry, eating reasonable quantities of food seems to go out of the window. This level of hunger causes your blood sugar level to drop and affects the ability of your whole body to operate efficiently, especially your brain. Also, when you reach this stage, you'll probably grab any food that's going, rather than making healthy choices.

The idea isn't to get to the top of the ladder quickly and be able to eat what you want! When you find yourself thinking about food to eat, I encourage you to use this ladder and ask yourself a few questions. Where am I on the ladder?

What am I going to do about being on that rung? For example, if you're not hungry, what else is prompting you to eat? If you're on rung 4 or 5, do you have healthy food available when you move up a couple of rungs?

What do I most need at this moment?

I do both. I eat more than I should. This wasn't a problem when I was active, but since I know work from the home on the computers|computer, it is.

I recently took up some dancing classes to try to offset this. I will say that I love to eat, but I love to eat things that are good for me. I do like a small amount of foods that are bad for me too, I must confess.

I do have to watch my intake of caffeine now. I really love diet coke way too much. That is my own guilty pleasure that is way to bad for me.As far as junk food, I'd much rather have home cooked foods.

I love salads and vegetables, lucky me or I wouldn't be able to get through the door. I have found that if you are having a problem eating too much junk food, simply stop buying it. If you don't have it on hand, you won't eat it.

I can tell a huge difference in my overall health and feelings when I eat foods good for me instead of bad processed junk.

I am glad to here you "get it. " I unfortunately, am actually dealing with this issue right now. Underlying health problems have caused me to get ill and what a wake up call I have had.

I was honest with myself and realized "I lived to eat. " It has been about a week since my drastic change in eating habits. Due to my health condition, I have no choice right now, but I am certain I will continue.

I have been relying on food to make me happy, my whole life, but especially the past 3 years. I had no idea I was doing this, and it is hard to admit, but I was. I am learning to east to live right now.

Hopefully this is the only wake up call I need and life for me will change from here on out.

.

That is an interesting question. I can honestly say that I do not live to eat because there are stretches where I eat very little or at least not as much as I should. I can easily get by one just one meal out of the day as I rarely eat breakfast although I have been eating dry cereal recently, and I usually skip eating lunch to write articles and I usually have a decent dinner.

While I do eat light for the most part, that doesn’t mean that I’m eating to live either because it’s probably not a good idea to skip meals a majority of the time but with the a busy schedule eating in the mornings is a luxury I don’t have very often. So ironically, I guess you could say that I don’t live to eat or eat to live. I’m trying to make a concerted effort though to not skip breakfast so much but we will see what happens.

But in our society, a society that seems so drawn to the whole "body image" issue, there are people who only eat to live. That is to say, they eat what is absolutely necessary to sustain life and that is it. They stave off hunger (at times they don't even do that) by eating just enough to give them the strength they need to carry on through life's daily activities.

Ever conscious of the calories they consume, they often forgo taking in the right amount of nutrients. They stay thin, but at what cost to their overall well-being? There are also people who only live to eat.

They love to eat. They crave food of any and every kind. They eat at every opportunity...a snack while driving in the car perhaps, three meals a day no matter what, along with whatever snack or "treat" they can fit in between meals.

As long as they have something to eat - doesn't matter what - they are satisfied, until the next craving strikes. As I said, shouldn't we do both? Shouldn't we eat to live but also live to eat?

I guess what I'm asking is, shouldn't we have balance? Of course, people who are at the extreme ends of the "diet" spectrum very often have mitigating factors that result in the eating behaviour they display. Psychological or emotional issues are often the root cause of their eating habits.

Once those things are recognized, a person may be able to strike a balance after undergoing some type of treatment. But, I'm speaking in general terms, to the every-day you and me. Since I am not a psychologist or medical doctor and I don't play one on TV, I cannot speak to those disorders.

But speaking strictly from the viewpoint of someone who simply enjoys food and desires balance - feng shui, so to speak - I would address the issue of "live to eat, eat to live" from my own perspective. Obviously I need to eat to live. We all do.

I can vaguely remember a number of years ago, someone making the statement that he had discovered that one only needed water and air to sustain a healthy life.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

Related Questions