Virtually every conventional approach deals with overeating in one of two ways.
THE JUST STOP IT APPROACH
The dieting industry’s favourite answer to  overeating is simply to tell you to  STOP IT! You know it’s bad for you.  You know it’s why you’re overweight, you’ll feel better if you don’t...  so just stop it. Summon every ounce of willpower or determination or  whatever it takes to resist the urge and control yourself. If you want  to lose weight badly enough, then you’ll do it, right?
THE OVEREAT, BUT ONLY ON FREE FOODS APPROACH
Some  programmes incorporate overeating as part of their solution. The  alternative to eating too many chocolate bars is to overeat as much as  you like as long as you choose foods that they say are not fattening.  They suggest you turn to low calorie, low fat, low carb foods (or  whatever isn’t on their forbidden list) or fill yourself up with low  calorie drinks. Binge on carrot sticks or celery, stuff yourself with  ‘free’ soup, cram in as much cucumber or spinach as you like, nibble on  rice cakes all day if it helps or pick at lettuce leaves and sunflower  seeds in an attempt to satiate the insatiable. Some of these programmes  positively encourage overeating with days when you can ‘eat as much as  you like’ as long as you stick to certain foods. They go as far as to  exhort you to ‘pile your plate’ with as much as you want.
None  of them address the question of why we overeat and how we can stop. Not  just for the few weeks or months but for good. Relying on willpower or  simply replacing overeating chocolate with overeating carrots is not the  answer. The sad reality is that the diets pave the way to overeating.  Whatever diet we choose, we spend so much time depriving ourselves of  the food we really want that as soon as we give up dieting, we’re eating  for Britain... overeating all those off limits goodies, taking the  brakes off... until the next diet.
THE BEYOND TEMPTATION APPROACH
In  our first book, Beyond Chocolate, we wrote about own experience as  two women who had struggled with our weight for years. We shared our  personal stories and described how we transformed our relationship with  food and our bodies. It’s six years since we wrote Beyond Chocolate and  we haven’t stopped exploring and experimenting for a minute. We  certainly have not stood still, happy in the knowledge that we’d cracked  it! The 10 principles are the basis of a healthy and  balanced relationship with food. As we say in the book, we didn’t invent  them (well, the ‘Be your own guru’ principle is unique to Beyond  Chocolate) we simply took age-old, common sense ideas and made them  accessible. And since then we’ve been looking at overeating in depth,  we’ve questioned and investigated. We’ve watched all our wonderful  participants grappling and experimenting and out of their work and ours  has emerged a process, a way of engaging with the part of us that is  driven to overeat, the part of us that turns to food for comfort, or  sweetness or distraction or just because it’s there, the part of us that  falls into the trap over and over again, despite our very best  intentions, despite everything we know. We have created a process which  is not only unique and effective but which teaches us so much about  ourselves and our overeating that we believe it enriches every part if  our lives.
We have been diving into the subject of overeating  day after day, we have put it under the microscope and observed it,  we’ve worked with it and we’ve carried out experiments (on ourselves!).  We know more about overeating than we could ever have imagined was  possible to know. And we’ve poured all of that knowledge and  understanding into our new book and our new Beyond Temptation Workshop.
The  aim of both the book and the workshop is to  guide you to stop overeating and discover how to live your life without  turning to food, any food, as a treat, a salve or an escape. The way to  stop is to identify the reasons you overeat and then deal with them,  with a set of practical, effective tools.
Join us on March 3rd, we'll be taking you on  an overeating tour and by the end of it you will have all the  information, insights, experience and tools you need to have a  relationship with food which feels balanced, healthy and free. See you there!
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Oh hell yeah! I remember joining one of those Diet Clubs where they said "you can eat a whole chicken on a red day" and I thought "WTF? I've never eaten a whole chicken in my life!!"
ReplyDeleteVery much looking forward to March 3rd! xx
Is there ANY way possible these workshop days could be cheaper? YES I'm worth spending £175 on. But I, and many other women, don't have that kind of free money....
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the book though, ordered it on amazon months ago!
Hi Karen,
DeleteI do understand and I know that £175 is a lot of money for many women, especially at the moment. We do always offer a bursary on all our workshops which is 30% off the price so in this case the workshop would be £122.50. Would that help? Do drop me a line if you would like to come and money is the only thing getting in the way, we are always willing to find a solution. Another option is a half day workshop with one of our Chocolate Fairies - it's a great experience and much more accessible at £49.
Thank you Sophie. I think I shall look for a local half day workshop. I think that might be more suited to my needs too. I'm pretty comfortable with BC but a half day workshop would be great to spend with other like minded women. It's good that other women are aware of the bursary. That's great.
ReplyDeleteI need a beyond temptation experience, but I don't live in England! Are there any Chocolate Fairies anywhere in Germany!!
ReplyDeleteWe don't have any Fairies in Germany yet Anonymous, I'm so sorry. Perhaps you could become the First European Fairy?!
ReplyDelete