57931

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

 

America's Secret Addiction

America is a nation of self-disclosers, amiably acceptant of our weaknesses. Celebrities, family members, coworkers and friends think nothing of admitting their compulsions and dependencies on alcohol, street drugs, prescription medications. We enter rehab programs, clean up, dry out, and go on with our lives: beating our problem or entering a long series of relapses and treatment episodes. Except, perhaps, for politicians or ministers, there is little social stigma attached to such mistakes unless there are criminal overtones that may lead to incarceration.

Television and films have educated us on the dangers and side effects of dependence upon alcohol, heroin, cocaine, amphetamines, designer drugs, steroids, pain pills, cannabis and opium. We had to coin the term chemical dependency (CD) to completely cover the broad and ever-growing field. We approach individuals ensnared in their abuse as victims of a disease, to be educated and helped as long as they have a willingness to change and are prepared for the painful journey that owning responsibility for one's own self-destructive behavior demands.

But the most widespread, self-destructive, dangerous addiction afflicting America is never discussed: FOOD.

The treatment of overeating is extensive: diet clinics, fitness programs, fat farms, plastic surgery. We collectively spend billions of dollars on weight loss aids and fitness equipment. We decry the epidemic of obesity that is overtaking our population to an enormous (literally) degree. We investigate metabolism and hormonal effects. We debate the comparative merits and flaws of protein, fats, carbohydrates, and roughage. We develop new vitamin and mineral formulae. Diet books, support groups, internet clubs, and television shows trumpet tips, techniques, special aids and hundreds of weight control regimes that promise inevitable weight loss with the right combination of "tasty" and "delicious" foods, guaranteed to ensure that our comfort levels remain high and our self-discipline minimally challenged.

We fail to confront the irrefutable fact that obesity is caused by food addiction. Excuses and metabolic rationales aside (No, Virginia, no one ever walked out of a Nazi concentration camp or a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp fat -macabre but true) our out-of-control overweight is a direct result of our obsession with, and dependency on, too much food.

You may disagree. After all, the other CD addictions are for substances we can totally banish from our lives whereas we have to eat to live.

Consider the problem from a slightly different perspective. In the United States, an "all or nothing" society, the goal of the typical CD treatment program is total abstention. The alcoholic is taught that one sip of liquor is never acceptable and constitutes a full relapse from which recovery must start over. In Europe, and many other parts of the world, moderation is considered more realistic than abstention. The goal is to lower the level of usage to the point where it has no deleterious effects on the user's life and the problems - work, relationships, mood, productivity -are resolved.

Such a model can more easily be applied to food. Our bodies require a certain level of sustenance to thrive. It is when the intake becomes excessive that problems arise: appearance, the inability to be active, fatigue, depressed mood, and strains on the internal organs. If we can temper that level of intake, we can avert the consequences that follow overindulgence in anything.

Such is indeed the focus of many weight control programs. However, they are missing one vital ingredient: acceptance of personal responsibility. At a 12-Step meeting, members repetitively admit to the group: "My name is B and I'm an alcoholic." Imagine, if you will, the different atmosphere that would be engendered if a member were to state: "My name is B. I drink a lot because I inherited the genes from my drunken parents and I can't drink, like all my friends can, without overdoing it. It's so unfair that everyone else can enjoy a drink and I can't."

Such a statement sounds ridiculous coming from an admitted problem drinker yet that is exactly what we allow from our problem eaters. It is far more likely that we will tell a close friend: "M, I think you have a problem with alcohol and I want you to get help," than we will tell an equally close friend: "G, I think you have a problem with too much eating and I want you to get help."

We remain silent about overweight because we don't want to hurt anyone's feelings. We use euphemisms like "heavy" and "queen-sized" to avoid the word "fat." When a very overweight friend asks plaintively, "Don't you think this dress makes me look slimmer?" we quietly agree, refusing to give the honest answer that nothing in the world will make her look slimmer except losing 60 pounds of avoirdupois!

One lesson learned over decades of CD research and treatment is that the problem must be acknowledged before it can be addressed and beaten. CD clients are notorious for making excuses, playing mind games with those around them, and shirking self-responsibility whenever they can. If we can bring ourselves to acknowledge that we are addicted to food, it allows for eventual movement into a process of change, bypassing the excuses and rationalizations at which overeaters excel -- to an extent that their CD counterparts would admire.

Confrontation of the problem requires that we drop the faade of politeness and euphemistic phrasing. As a society, we need to look at others and ourselves and call it as we see it. If I'm fat, I'm fat, and it's my responsibility to not only admit that honestly, but to also admit to myself and the world that it is my fault: I am the one who made myself fat. No one else forced food into my mouth. Like the recovering alcoholic at the bar, I can always say no or drink a plain club soda. Like the recovering cocaine addict who learns to stay away from certain street corners or drug houses, I can stay away from bakeries, fast food outlets, and pizza parlors.

Weight control can be simple - eat only what you need to survive - but never easy. The fallacy of many diets is that we can lose weight without suffering. Stopping or minimizing CD abuse is always painful and a craving for chocolate, ice cream, or the urge for sugar (no one seems to crave vegetables) can be as overwhelming to the dieter as the addict's emotional need for his drug of choice.

Naming our national weight problem for what it really is, a plain old addiction to food, releases us to start the process of rehab and recovery that has been so completely developed in the CD field. Honesty, and the willingness to work through pain to reach our goal, allows us to not only accept our responsibility for our problem but also to relish the triumph of our eventual success.

Virginia Bola is a licensed psychologist and an admitted diet fanatic. She specializes in therapeutic reframing and the effects of attitudes and motivation on individual goals. The author of The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual, and a free ezine, The Worker's Edge, she recently completed a psychologically-based weight control book: Diet with an Attitude:A Weight Loss Workbook. She can be reached at http://www.DietWithAnAttitude.com

Swiss Army Knife Jewelry Meditation Yoga Nesting Doll Cool

Comments: Post a Comment



<< Home

Archives

Dec 14, 2007   Dec 15, 2007   Dec 16, 2007   Dec 17, 2007   Dec 18, 2007   Dec 19, 2007   Dec 20, 2007   Dec 21, 2007   Dec 22, 2007   Dec 23, 2007   Dec 24, 2007   Dec 25, 2007   Dec 26, 2007   Dec 27, 2007   Dec 28, 2007   Dec 29, 2007   Dec 30, 2007   Dec 31, 2007   Jan 1, 2008   Jan 2, 2008   Jan 3, 2008   Jan 4, 2008   Jan 5, 2008   Jan 6, 2008   Jan 7, 2008   Jan 8, 2008   Jan 9, 2008   Jan 10, 2008   Jan 11, 2008   Jan 12, 2008   Jan 13, 2008   Jan 14, 2008   Jan 15, 2008   Jan 16, 2008   Jan 17, 2008   Jan 18, 2008   Jan 19, 2008   Jan 20, 2008   Jan 21, 2008   Jan 22, 2008   Jan 23, 2008   Jan 24, 2008   Jan 25, 2008   Jan 27, 2008   Jan 28, 2008   Jan 29, 2008   Jan 30, 2008   Jan 31, 2008   Feb 1, 2008   Feb 4, 2008   Feb 8, 2008   Feb 9, 2008   Feb 11, 2008   Feb 12, 2008   Feb 13, 2008   Feb 14, 2008   Feb 15, 2008   Feb 16, 2008   Feb 17, 2008   Feb 18, 2008   Feb 19, 2008   Feb 20, 2008   Feb 21, 2008   Feb 22, 2008   Feb 23, 2008   Feb 25, 2008   Feb 26, 2008   Feb 27, 2008   Feb 28, 2008   Feb 29, 2008   Mar 1, 2008   Mar 2, 2008   Mar 3, 2008   Mar 4, 2008   Mar 5, 2008   Mar 6, 2008   Mar 7, 2008   Mar 8, 2008   Mar 9, 2008   Mar 10, 2008   Mar 11, 2008   Mar 12, 2008   Mar 13, 2008   Mar 14, 2008   Mar 15, 2008   Mar 16, 2008   Mar 17, 2008   Mar 18, 2008   Mar 19, 2008   Mar 20, 2008   Mar 21, 2008   Mar 22, 2008   Mar 23, 2008   Mar 27, 2008   Mar 28, 2008   Mar 29, 2008   Mar 30, 2008   Mar 31, 2008   Apr 1, 2008   Apr 2, 2008   Apr 3, 2008   Apr 4, 2008   Apr 5, 2008   Apr 6, 2008   Apr 7, 2008   Apr 9, 2008   Apr 10, 2008   Apr 11, 2008   Apr 12, 2008   Apr 13, 2008   Apr 14, 2008   Apr 15, 2008   Apr 16, 2008   Apr 17, 2008   Apr 18, 2008   Apr 19, 2008   Apr 20, 2008   Apr 21, 2008   Apr 22, 2008   Apr 23, 2008   Apr 24, 2008   Apr 25, 2008   Apr 26, 2008   Apr 27, 2008   Apr 28, 2008   Apr 29, 2008   Apr 30, 2008   May 1, 2008   May 3, 2008   May 5, 2008   May 8, 2008   May 15, 2008   May 16, 2008   May 17, 2008   May 20, 2008   May 22, 2008   May 23, 2008   May 25, 2008   May 26, 2008   May 28, 2008   May 31, 2008   Jun 3, 2008   Jun 4, 2008   Jun 10, 2008   Jun 11, 2008   Jun 12, 2008   Jun 13, 2008   Jun 18, 2008   Jun 24, 2008   Jun 26, 2008   Jun 28, 2008   Jul 1, 2008   Jul 3, 2008   Jul 4, 2008   Jul 5, 2008   Jul 9, 2008   Jul 12, 2008   Jul 14, 2008   Jul 15, 2008   Jul 17, 2008   Jul 18, 2008   Jul 19, 2008   Jul 21, 2008   Jul 22, 2008   Aug 3, 2008   Aug 5, 2008   Aug 7, 2008   Aug 8, 2008   Aug 9, 2008   Aug 11, 2008   Aug 14, 2008   Aug 15, 2008   Aug 17, 2008   Aug 19, 2008   Aug 20, 2008   Aug 21, 2008   Aug 22, 2008   Aug 26, 2008  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?