Thursday, April 12, 2007

Meet & Eat

Social events are hard. When I’m eating by myself, I can usually make good choices about foods that fit into my eating plan. Whether I DO make those choices is another matter sometimes, but I’m aware even when I eat poorly that the pressures to do so are coming only from within me.

But being with other people—that gets complicated for me. Like yesterday. I was invited to give a talk over the lunch hour for one of the treatment teams where I work. Lovely, warm people all, and they had informed me that they do a lunch potluck, so I could come and be part of that before my talk. So nice! But such a minefield too. People always want you to try their stuff, and there’s such social interaction around tasting this and that and asking for recipes, etc. I find that I do pretty well on a controlled-carbohydrate diet a la South Beach or Atkins, so I’ve been restricting the carbs pretty severely this week. And let me tell you, it was Fiesta Carb-o-rama around that table. Pasta salads, chips and dip, rice salads, cookies…all stuff that just did not work for me. It’s not like I was hungry—I knew this was coming up and had pre-eaten my own lunch (cheese, hard-boiled eggs and steamed broccoli) before coming over. But I just don’t deal with the social pressure that well. I came out of it pretty unscathed, overall; I had some sugar snap peas that someone brought and a few tablespoons of tabbouleh (made with whole grains, so not as bad as it could be). I’m glad that I was the one talking for the hour, so I had an excuse to not dive in headfirst.

That was just a one-time deal. The tougher thing I do is a weekly dinner I go to at a halfway house that’s part of the mental health program where I work. I’m the staff psychotherapist for the residents of the house, and we meet weekly for dinner and a house meeting/therapy group. Each week one of the residents cooks the meal that we all share, and it’s quite a point of pride for them to do a good job. And there are some fine cooks in this house, let me tell you. You wouldn’t think a bunch of addicts early in their recovery would have found the time to discover and embrace their inner kitchen magicians, but damn. I’m thinking maybe they need their own show on the Food Network. (Having written that, I’m now having fun making up names for that show in my head—heh.)

So the general yummy-ness of the food is an issue, but the harder part is that pressure to ooh and ahh over the food and to eat lots of it, and to be sure I’m equally complimentary to everyone’s culinary efforts. I just haven’t figured out a good way to negotiate this situation, and I basically end up eating a lot of stuff that tastes great and keeps me fat.

Part of the issue is that I just hate talking about my attempts to change my eating habits. It would probably solve the problem were I just to say, “Oh, thanks, but I’m on a diet.” But I feel like making any kind of a public proclamation of my intent renders me and my obesity (as well as my attempts to address that obesity) too damn public. I’d rather have people think that I am just too busy and cool and interested in deep and important things to give my fat a thought.

Le sigh.

That said, though, I’ve been doing pretty well this week. I’ve met my goals thus far: I’ve brought lunch every day so far, and I’ve not had any fast food. I’ve also felt in control of my eating, for the most part. No binges, and I’ve been keeping the carbs to a minimum for the moment.

Hope everyone’s week is going well!

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congratulations on your fantastic willpower! WOW! Carbs are also my downfall and, ever since I moved to England a year and a half ago, they have been in much too plentiful supply. Sometimes I find if I say 'later' to a proffered platter that the person will go away without being offended and then forget about me - but unfortunately I usually just succumb. I think you are doing fantastically.

OK - end of essay. :D

jo said...

Oh my workplace is a food minefield as well - food at meetings, food for social occassions, chocolate for charity drives, Friday afternoon snackies 'just because', gifts from clients, hampers from other services - temptations are everywhere and omnipresent!

And when it is part of the social bonding process it can make it extra hard to maintain steadfast willpower and focus.

The workplace is definitely my diet kryptonite for a million reasons.

I can understand why you don't like making that proclamation about being on a diet - it can feel like a lot of pressure and expectation.

Could you make it more of a health proclamation rather than focusing on the intent to lose weight? Focusing on the diet's purpose to purify, cleanse and nourish - give it a bit of a spiritual angle - totally deep!

Anyway, it sounds like you are doing really well at resisting most of those temptations at the moment.

Anonymous said...

I think Jo's idea of addressing the issue by sayings it's a health choice and not a diet that's keeping you from eating something (or eating large portions) is a good way to go. You could just say things like "I'm trying to limit my red meat/pasta/cheese/etc." or "I'm trying not to eat heavy meals in the (insert whatever time of day it is)" :)

I defintely understand not wanting to declare "Look at me,I'm dieting" to the entire world. for some people a public declaration can be helpful because then they'll stick to their resolutions so that they don't look like they've failed. I prefer to keep my dieting & health resolutions to myself though. No one in my real life, other than my husband, knows I'm even trying to get healthy & loose the weight. I don't want the pressure of friends/loved ones expectations or well meaning "help" and questions about my progress. Then I feel guilty if I'm not able to live up to my goals. Online support is different because I don't feel obligated to please other people. If that makes any sense at all :). I'm going to stop rambling now.

Meegan- (A HAPPY Wife)

Luna Bella said...

Jo and Meegan--I love the idea of talking about food choices as a health issue rather than a dieting issue. Makes loads of sense, and in fact it's true...I mean, that's part of why we seek to change our eating habits, right? And Jo, you're right...casting it in terms of health/spirituality sounds totally deep. :)

I think my reluctance to talk openly about my struggles with my weight and my desire to lose a bunch of it is related to my sense of shame over having the problem in the first place. That'd be a good thing to get over.

And Meegan--I totally agree with you about the difference between online support and support from our off-line friends and loved ones. The latter comes with so much pressure and such potential for disappointment. But with you all, I feel much more able to say what I need to say, even if it's unflattering to my personal self. :) Thank you guys for that!

Luna Bella said...

Squilla--
Thanks for the kind words! I spent a couple of months in England when I was in college, and oh my goodness, I remember the carbs. Not that I was thinking in those terms back then, but I remember that the veggies seemed really unappetizing and I took refuge in baked goods, chips, crisps, beans...so tasty, so cheap. Something about the cool, gray, drizzly weather made me crave carbs all the more.

I was lucky enough to live in a part of London that had lots of small ethnic restaurants, though, which helped a bit. But still. You can get into plenty of trouble with a nice Indian biryani or a kebab on a greasy, crispy pillow of pita.

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