Dr.
Phil says that the possible roots of your obsession may surprise you.
Most of the time, obsessive behavior and compulsive thinking about food
have nothing to do with food. They have everything to do with your self-image.
It's just that the battlefield you've chosen is food. It's where you've
chosen to exercise tight control in hopes that none of your underlying
fears and emotions will creep up on you.
People often use food as a control mechanism. Having an obsession with
food and controlling your intake of it can be a substitute for having
command over what you really want to control: how you feel about yourself.
Ask yourself what would happen if you didn't focus on food so much and
let go of the control. Do you fear you'd be a worthless human being? What
if you said, "My body image is independent of my self-image. If I
am a good, caring and loving parent/spouse/child and an honest, responsible
citizen, it doesn't matter how much I weigh"? You may want to weigh
less and that's OK. But weight and self-image are not the same thing.
Know that you can unlearn this behavior. Everybody has a definition of
success. If your definition of success is to have hyper-control of food
intake, it's the wrong definition. You need to change your definition.
Understand that ending obsessive behavior with food sometimes isn't the
answer to the problem because it doesn't deal with the root of the problem:
internal dialogue that says you're a bad person if you don't weigh a certain
amount. You need to change your internal dialogue.
When discussing food obsession, Dr. Phil believes it's important to note
that one of the biggest problems with weight loss programs today is that
they are highly focused on food. Many popular programs incorporate a regimented
diet in which people have to weigh food and count calories, etc. People
often go on a diet because they don't want to eat as much but the structure
of the diet requires them to spend their entire day focused on food, which
only exacerbates the problem.
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