Home→Forums→Tough Times→Why do we self-destruct?
- This topic has 20 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 7 years, 3 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
September 11, 2017 at 5:46 am #168270AnonymousGuest
Dear Tatjana:
You are welcome.
You wrote: “I was more ashamed of him finding out I eat cold food at inappropriate times, standing up in the kitchen. I don’t want him to think I’m a freak”-
it is you who thought: “I am a freak!” You projected that thought to him. He may have thought nothing of that sort. Maybe he thought: she must be hungry. Maybe he thought something else. I don’t know, but neither do you unless he tells you and honestly.
Thing is, you were telling yourself that you are a freak before he showed up, only the voice in your head telling you that was weaker in the background, while your focus was, I am supposing, on the pleasure of eating. Correct?
If so, then notice that for as long as you disapprove of your own behavior, that behavior needs to be stopped whether or not you are observed by another person. You are always there to observe and comment on your own behavior. And so, your behavior has to be okay with you.
anita
September 11, 2017 at 8:00 am #168308TatjanaParticipantSo correct, on so many levels.
The behaviour is partly wrong, and then partly not wrong (especially when i’m eating when hungry, or eating so called “forbidden foods). So sometimes, not being okay with my behaviour is normal, and the behaviour should stop, as you said. But sometimes, it’s the judging that needs to stop, and the behaviour should be accepted. It’s difficult to navigate an eating disorder, cause it’s both bad habits and constant guilt.
Thank you, it put things into perspective.
September 11, 2017 at 8:21 am #168312AnonymousGuestYou are welcome, Tatjana. I very much agree with what you wrote above, I thought very similar to what you expressed last after my last post to you and before reading your most recent.
anita
September 11, 2017 at 2:06 pm #168344TatjanaParticipantIt means a lot, because you have a way of being real, and very objective. This is really what I need to keep sane sometimes. Take care!
September 12, 2017 at 8:27 am #168404AnonymousGuestDear Tatjana:
You are welcome and thank you. As to your post before last, it stimulated my thinking and I would like to develop what you wrote more, in my own mind as I share with you.
You wrote: “The behaviour is partly wrong, and then partly not wrong (especially when i’m eating when hungry, or eating so called “forbidden foods). So sometimes… the behaviour should stop, as you said. But sometimes, it’s the judging that needs to stop”
My thinking: in my disordered (over)eating, I am accepting that it is okay (what you called “normal”) to want to feel good, which is what my overeating is about. It feels good, especially sweetness. It is okay for me to want to feel good. Looking back at my life, I suffered so much, felt badly so often and so overwhelmingly, no wonder I wanted then and want still to feel good. I think that this is the message behind my overeating: wanting to feel good.
The motivation to overeat is not a bad motivation. It is a good motivation, understandable. Looking at the bigger picture, it doesn’t feel good to be bloated (one consequence of overeating). That feels bad. So keeping this consequence in mind, I will not judge myself as I used to do (“stop overeating! From now on you will …!!). Instead I will apply the empathetic approach:
I want to feel good. I understand. Well, I will do my best to feel good: I will pay attention to my eating so that I do enjoy it and do what I can to prevent being bloated as a result and prevent gaining weight as a result as well, so that I do indeed feel good all around.
anita
September 12, 2017 at 8:44 am #168408AnonymousGuestDear Tatjana, again:
Following my last post I am now ready to answer your question, “Why do we self-destruct?” (title of your thread)-
because we want to feel good and at the time when we engage in certain behaviors, we become single minded about how to feel good; we have a tunnel vision about how to feel good. We see only this one-way-now to feel good. We don’t see later, the feel bad consequences.
Isn’t this the same for drug addicts, for any of the impulsive, self destructive behaviors…?
anita
-
AuthorPosts