We are all different but at the same time we have
much in common. We are all one. I have noticed a
number of common factors shared by many of the
women who have come to see me during the twenty-
five years of my practice. I will list them for you. See
how many of them match your experiences.
Women have been invalidated.
Women often report that they have often felt
invalidated. When they attempted to tell anyone how
they felt, they were sometimes ignored and often told
they "shouldn't" feel that way. This led many women
to keep their true feelings to themselves. Instead of
being encouraged to express their authentic
emotions, they were told to feel what others wanted
them to feel. In this way, many women grow out of
touch with their own emotions and eventually seek
validation and approval stating they are thinking and
feeling what they expect they "should" be thinking and
feeling, rather than what they actually are experiencing.
Women couldn't make sense of a "crazy-making"
world.
Most women tell me they felt confused in their homes.
They received mixed messages and had trouble
making sense of the world around them. You may
have heard the expression "There's an elephant in the
living room." This means that many issues in the
family, which may have seemed obvious to the child or
young woman, were never acknowledged or
addressed. People pretend all is fine when
underneath the façade things are not fine at all. This
breeds self-doubt and confusion. It is hard to feel
confident and good about yourself when the world
around you is not making sense. It is easier to play
along (and eat to dull your feelings) than to risk
disrupting the family system.
Women think they aren't good enough.
Women are bombarded with messages on a moment
to moment basis about how to look, how to act, what
to say, etc. Messages come from all directions - from
family members, friends, institutions and the media
for example. Women are constantly being looked at
and evaluated. Their weight is often everyone's
business and well-meaning relatives may offer advice
about ways to be more slender and attractive. This is
a dreadful predicament for any woman. You can buy
these magazines and learn how to have a smoother,
fresher complexion, reduce wrinkles and lift your
sagging breasts all the while preparing and serving
amazing meals in minutes. You can read about the
importance of diet and exercise and most likely
unearth much conflicting information.
Along with these headlines you will find slender
smiling women who are held up as examples of how
we all should look. Is it any wonder that women have
a hard time maintaining a positive body image and a
healthy level of self-esteem?
Women have tried endlessly and in vain to be
perfect.
As a professional speaker, I have the opportunity to
address large audiences about women's issues. I
joke with my audience members that there are
probably no women in the room who expect
themselves to be perfect. This usually prompts loud
laughter as each woman looks around and realizes
they are all the same. Most, if not all, women hold
unrealistic expectations of themselves. They would
never expect such perfection from others but they
continue to set impossibly high goals for themselves.
Setting unrealistic, impossible goals leads to failure -
every single time. If we continually set ourselves up to
fail, we can never feel good about ourselves. Instead
we will be discouraged and see ourselves as
failures. This leads to self-punishment and often to
the bakery or candy aisle. Then we eat to soothe
ourselves and, as you can see, much of our over-
eating is emotional.
Women blame themselves for their inability to
control their eating behavior.
Many people come to see me stating they have no will
power and they feel like failures. Often it is remarked
that eating is the one area in which they feel helpless
and out of control. I do not believe in will-power. I
believe we will feed ourselves well when we feel good
about ourselves and are able to genuinely express
our emotions. Being happy, healthy and whole is not
about being thin. It is about being happy with yourself
at whatever size you are now. It is about self-
acceptance and joy. It is about loving yourself.
Women think something is wrong with them and
are outer-directed, rather than inner directed.
It is difficult, if not impossible, to feel good about
ourselves when we are surrounded by evidence of our
inferiority. If people are saying your feelings are wrong
and you do not feel respected, valued and heard, it is
not likely that you will think you are OK. You may at
first, but soon your conviction deteriorates in the face
of contrary evidence. As children we want to be loved
and approved of. We try different behaviors and it
doesn't take long for us to figure out what behaviors
bring approval. We are shaped in this way by the
approval (love) or withholding of approval (or love) by
those around us. So, we grow up looking outside of
ourselves to figure out how to behave. We continue
well into adulthood searching for approval, validation
and love. If we speak up we fear abandonment and
so we hold our tongues. This results in the
suppression of anger and we begin eating to keep
ourselves in check. We literally stifle our feelings with
sugars and simple carbohydrates. We want to feel
better but we keep repeating the same behaviors and
remain stuck in the same self-destructive loop.
You may recognize yourself in some of the
descriptions above. There are many more reasons
why we might get wrapped up in unhealthy eating
behaviors. No matter what your background, you can
make the changes now that are necessary for
healing. Please be gentle with yourself. Let go of old
resentments and bitterness. Make yourself your #1
priority. Remind yourself that you are lovable and you
are worth taking the very best care of.
Please join me for weekly posts on my
Chew Tamer's Blog. You can sign in if you wish
and comment on my musings. I would love to hear
what you have to say!
Meanwhile, I wish you balmy breezes and much
summer fun!
Best Wishes,
Dr. Denise