Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - The Anti-Diet | Evelyn Tribole
Episode Date: December 20, 2023The interview that changed the way Dan relates to food. Evelyn Tribole, MS, RD, CEDRD-S is an award-winning registered dietitian, with a nutrition counseling practice in Newport Be...ach, California. She has written ten books including the bestsellers Healthy Homestyle Cooking and Intuitive Eating (co-author). Her newest book is the Intuitive Eating Workbook: Ten Principles for Nourishing a Healthy Relationship with Food.In this episode we talk about:How meditation practice and intuitive eating are similarThe difference between mindful eating and intuitive eatingWhy gentle nutrition is the last principle of intuitive eatingHow to rethink negative body imageWhy you can’t tell how healthy a person is by looking at their bodyWhy it’s important not to talk about food in moralistic termsHow to make peace with and rethink our relationship with foodRelated Episodes:How to Embrace the Anti-Diet | Christy HarrisonSign up for Dan’s weekly newsletter hereFollow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTokTen Percent Happier online bookstoreSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur favorite playlists on: Anxiety, Sleep, Relationships, Most Popular EpisodesFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/evelyn-tribole-rerun-2023See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast, Dan Harris.
Hello, everybody.
I will admit that I, and I suspect I'm not alone in this, have the potential to get pretty
dysregulated around food and body image. admit that I, and I suspect I'm not alone in this, have the potential to get pretty,
dysregulated around food and body image. A lot of men don't like talking about this stuff,
but there's plenty of evidence that this is truly a unisex issue, especially during the holidays,
when we're all surrounded by treats and stress eating, because either we can't see our family,
or we can see our family, and they're making us crazy. This interview you're about to hear changed my life. That is an overused phrase, but in this case it is genuinely true.
I came into this conversation and you'll hear this. I came in with somewhat hostile attitude
toward my own body filled with, you know, not so realistic expectations and unsustainable
restrictions, etc. But over the course of this interview, you will hear in real time as my mind starts to change.
Ever since we recorded this back in 2020,
I've been working one-on-one with my guest,
Evelyn Tribbley, on these issues.
Evelyn is the co-creator of something called
Intuitive Eating, which you can think of as
a kind of anti-diet.
Diet's, she argues, do not work.
Worse, they lead us to mistrust our body. So when we
misread the signals that our bodies are sending to us, we don't actually know when we're
hungry or when we're full. Her approach, Evelyn's approach is backed by science and powered
by mindfulness. One quick note before we dive in, this episode is part of our end of the year,
Deep Cuts series meant to provide you a measure of sanity as you navigate the holidays.
I want to let you know about a big series. We're going to kick off in the new year. We call it the
non-negotiables. We're going to be talking to an incredible array of fascinating people about the
practices and principles they cannot live without. We're going to be talking, for example,
to Brian Stevenson, the founder of the Equal Justice Initiative about how he perseveres
in the face of long odds. We're going to talk to the legendary Buddhist nun, Pemma Chodron,
about the one thing, and it's quite radical that she cannot do her life without. We're also
talking to Glennon Doyle and Bill Hater and Esther Parell.
It's a cavalcade of stars.
I think you're going to enjoy it.
The series kicks off on January 3rd.
And before I finish this segment, I want to let you know that if you're looking for a
last minute gift and you want to help somebody change their mind for the holidays and going
forward, let me suggest a gift subscription to the 10% happier app.
Bonus for you, no shipping, no waiting
online. It is delivered instantly. You can visit 10%.com slash gift. That's 10% all one
word spelled out.com slash gift to snag a gift subscription.
When you find something you love, you stick with it like this podcast and like working
out with
Peloton.
This holiday season, bring home a Peloton bike, bike plus or tread, and work out your way.
I always look forward to a ride on my Peloton bike.
Unleash yourself.
Ride, run, box, or freak the hit out.
It's your workout, your rules.
For Peloton's December offer, head to www.1peloton.ca slash deals.
All Access Membership Separate, Terms Apply.
Hello listeners, this is Mike Corey of Against the Odds.
You might know that I adventure around the world while recording this podcast.
And over the years, I've learned that where I stay when I travel can make all the difference. Airbnb has been my go-to place for finding the perfect accommodations.
Because with hotels, you often don't have the luxury of extra space or privacy.
Recently, I had a bunch of friends come down to visit in Mexico.
We found this large house and the place had a pool, a barbecue, a kitchen, and a great
big living room to play cards, watch movies,
and just chill out.
It honestly made all the difference in the trip.
It felt like we were all roommates again.
The next time you're planning a trip,
whether it's with friends, family, or yourself,
check out Airbnb to find something you won't forget.
Great to meet you.
Likewise, I'm so excited to be here.
Thanks for making time for this.
You did it.
Absolutely.
How did you get into meditation?
It's so bizarre.
I was the securitas root.
The long short story is when my mom was dying of cancer,
I had to keep missing sessions with patients.
And I would tell them why I didn't think I was flaky.
And so a patient might give me a book called Mindful Grieving.
And I remember looking at it, thinking,
why in the hell do I want to feel my grief? I am a 10 of sadness
and it broke me open because I noticed during those times I practiced some mindfulness. As I knew
it back then I was just a little baby meditator. But I noticed there was times I was neutral. There
was times I actually was happy even though my mom was dying. And so it opened something up. And then
I ended up taking this is this is really funny. I took a professional retreat with someone
who's a Zen master in a pediatricianist for health professionals. And I'll never
forget the second time they made us meditate. I thought I was going to die. I called
my best friend, they made us meditate two times. Now we're going to go into silence.
And long story short, here I am. I fell in love with meditation. I now train with
Dan Brown, who's just an amazing teacher for me.
I've never met Dan Brown. He's at Harvard?
He's at Harvard. And the thing that appeals to me personally, I'm a skeptic. That's what I
loved about your story. I'm a skeptic. I'm always the one asking the questions. And because he's
also an academic and a practitioner, he is a very satisfying relationship with my mind.
He's just really, really gifted. And one of the most humblest persons I've ever met, especially being at Harvard, you know, so...
How did you find him?
Oh, I got his book.
It's a really, really big book about the stages of meditation, Mahamudra, pointing out the way.
And I bought it, put it down, five years later, I picked it up, and it blew me away.
And I realized I had the illusion I was meditating,
but I was not meditating properly.
And I thought, I've gotta go meet this guy,
I've gotta go train with him.
And I did and that's what just knocked me over.
So when you say you weren't meditating properly,
but he pointed out the way to do it properly,
what was the difference there in the technique between?
You know, with meditation,
your mind goes all over the place.
And one of the techniques he has, I won't go into details since I'm going to teach her,
but he really has you practice the awareness of your breath the entire way and really noticing
when you leave, noticing when you have partialized concentration in these types of things.
And so the other thing I like about him is a teacher.
When you go into retreat with him, he's there the whole time.
Usually in other retreats I've been in,
you have a teacher for me about an hour
and then there's constant interaction.
I connected with it very deeply.
So when you say you went and met him,
did you just say,
hey, can I get a little bit of your time
or do you show up at the...
No, no, no, no, I showed up when it was retreats.
I signed up and it was so funny,
it was held at a monastery.
So I was like, oh my God, I'm going in deep here.
And it was great, it was really, really great.
And I have become, you talk about being 10% happier.
I think I'm a 10% better person,
which makes people around me happy.
Were you complex before?
I didn't think I was reactive.
And I realized, holy moly was I so reactive.
But the thing that has changed with me,
I was telling this with Dan, we just met a couple months ago,
is that I have changed.
I actually, this is gonna sound terrible.
Before I would do the right thing, because you're supposed to,
but now I actually genuinely care.
It's hard to put into words what this is,
but this connection and this compassion,
and you talk a lot about the woo stuff, the moushy stuff,
and I'm like that.
And now here I am talking about the woo moushy stuff,
and it's like, oh, we have to end all suffering.
And so what this is done in my career, oh, you get it.
Yes.
Yeah, I'm not a woop person.
But it has lit my passion for what I do to a level
I didn't expect would happen to put an unnecessary suffering
as it relates to mind and body.
Because there's so much unnecessary suffering
around eating and body and judgment and shame.
And you talk about conceptual mind.
Oh my gosh, the rules and the concepts
and the judgments that are out there,
it's neat to watch people's lives change.
There's a technique that we created
through intuitive eating over 25 years ago.
We've updated it all along.
And the cool thing is there's now research on our method.
And it just warms my heart in ways is there's now research on our method. And it just, it just warms
my heart in ways. I just can't begin to describe. We're gonna go deep on diet culture. Let's just
stay with your practice for a second. Of course. So would you call yourself now a Buddhist?
I am a Buddhist. I did take refuge, yeah. But you know, it's funny. I don't talk about.
Define taking refuge just for people. It's just, I mean, you take a vow that basically, you know,
you take refuge in, you're just,
you take refuge in the Buddha, the Dharma, and the song.
And the song, yeah.
And, you know, one of the most troubling parts of it,
this is gonna sound really silly,
but I'll just show you where I was back at the time,
is that they have to cut off some of your hair.
And I've heard you talk about your own hair.
So the idea of losing some of your hair for a ceremony,
it was just, it was about letting go
and not having attachment.
But the reason I don't usually talk about it, is I don't like to be in that othering place,
being different.
I'd rather find what we have in common because as soon as I say I'm Buddhist, then walls
might come up from some other people.
But I consider myself a secular Buddhist, meaning I don't know what happens in the life
after, but I love the principles and the philosophies, and it's a beautiful way to live without
judgment, without having to recruit other people.
Yes, that's exactly the way I feel.
Oh, yeah, yeah, exactly the way I feel.
So what for you, you know, giving your life history was the most valuable application
of Buddhism internally.
Was it the kind of the calming of the mind that comes with learning how to focus on the
breath and then when you get distracted starting again, was it the mindfulness that comes with learning how to focus on the breath and then when you get distracted starting again, was it the mindfulness that comes from doing that where you see how crazy
you are and then the craziness doesn't own you as much, or was it where you were describing
earlier this kind of compassion or a combination of all of the forms?
I'm an answer in a different way. It's funny when I'm meditating, I don't get into all
these places that some people do, But I see the... Meaning?
All these experiences meditating, realizing aspects of the mind.
What it does for me is like this is slow unfolding.
All of a sudden I realize, my God, I've changed because I'm not reactive.
Oh my gosh, I have discernment in places.
So I call it freeze frame moments.
I'm going to turn to experience only because you might relate to it because of your son.
So my son was about three and I was on a book deadline.
And my office downstairs, I was on a book deadline,
and my office downstairs, I was facing the computer.
He comes in, and he says, hi, mommy.
I don't even see him, but something caused me to turn around
and look in his little eyes, and something was off,
and I go, are you okay?
And all of a sudden he starts crying.
He just watched Goofy goes to college.
She goes, I don't want to go to college and leave you.
I can't leave you.
And that scene haunted me. Not haunted me. I thought, I'm so glad I paid attention.
This was before meditation, but I call it a freeze frame moment.
So what happens now being a meditator, I have a lot more of those freeze frame moments
where I notice something.
And I do something with it, or I just notice it.
And maybe I become not reactive or maybe I have more discernment and what I would I decide to do.
It's, I have more patients like I've never had and I'm kind of a high energy person and
pretty, and it's, I'm a damp, I've dampened down a bit.
Wow, what were you like before?
So that's the other thing.
I've had some people say, oh, they're afraid that they would change if they became a
meditator.
I said, actually, I don't, I haven't changed as far as my personality. The energy, the passion is still there.
And, but the difference is that the compassion and the less reactivity, I'm a better person because.
Right. Right. I mean, I've experienced the same thing. I mean, I still have many, many, many flaws.
It's just that the volume comes down a little bit on the flaws. You feel like you have more visibility of them
and into them and agency in the face of them.
So there's a Tibetan phrase that I've quoted many times
on the podcast that for enlightenment
it translates into a clearing away
and a bringing forth.
Oh my gosh.
A clear way, a lot of the noise and junk
and you bring forward the better angels
of your nature or just sort of your better judgment, et cetera, et cetera.
And that's my experience of how this works.
I would completely agree with that.
It's hard to put it into words and it's the slow unfolding.
And sometimes I'm hesitant to put it into words and talk about how amazing I feel because
I don't want to have an expectation of someone be disappointed.
This is a slow evolution where you kind of look back off the cushion and go, wow, you know?
Yes, yes, that's absolutely right.
So, okay, so how does everything we've just discussed
apply to eating?
Oh, I'm gonna tell you.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
This bear in mind, that cackle you just heard
is from a practicing Buddhist.
That's correct.
That's the takeaway, everything you came into the practice with.
I say that with approval.
Just a quick.
Thank you.
I feel really validated, not that I need it, but I do.
So here's one way I'd like to say it.
Just as the practice of meditation is an inside job, it's inside.
The practice of intuitive eating is also an inside job.
And it's about connecting to your body.
And okay, I have to tell you, I'm also a geek, I love research.
And one of the, you're going to love this.
You're in a place so you can use the drop as much science as you want.
Oh, thank God.
So this is going to intersect in a way I think you might like.
And if you don't, that's okay too.
So the basis of intuitive eating, it's a self-care eating framework.
And it's based off of something- What does that mean? I want to tell you. Okay. So it's taking care of yourself on a superficial level, but on a deeper eating, it's a self-care eating framework. And it's based off of something- What does that mean?
I want to tell you.
So it's taking care of yourself on a superficial level,
but on a deeper level, it's based
around something called interceptive awareness.
That term, what that means, it's our ability
to perceive physical sensations that arise within the body.
I know you know that experience through meditation,
but let me tell you what's so brilliant about it.
It reveals states like a full bladder. People know what to do with a full bladder, thank
God.
Hunger and fullness states, but every emotion has a physical sensation.
And so when we're in touch with the physical sensations of our body, we are actually have
a treasure-total information to get our needs met.
All of this is happening in the right side of the brain and the insula.
And guess what?
Meditators have more intraceptive awareness, which is kind of cool. I consider it our
superpower. So when we're aware of physical sensations, it's giving us information like,
what do I need right now? Do I need to sleep? Am I lonely? These kinds of things. The problem
in the challenge in today's culture, diet culture, is that people aren't war with their
bodies. And when you hate your body, at war with your body, you're not listening to the messenger.
It's like your best friend's knock on door,
hey, I have some information for you,
and you're like, go away, go away.
When you respond to that,
information is called interceptivity,
but we're saying, I get out of here.
And then when people start down the rabbit hole
of all these different kinds of diets,
lifestyles, whatever you want to call it,
they disconnect from their body,
and they start to distrust these sensations, because they're trying to fake it out, fake hunger, fake fullness.
You know, it's all this biohacking.
Oh, this biohacking can be extra, this, extra that.
When I was like, how about listening to our bodies?
What about that?
Okay.
I have a million questions.
Oh, please.
Let me just start with a base, a foundational question.
So intuitive eating was something you designed 25 years ago
before you started meditating.
Correct.
Okay, so you stick by that framework,
but you supercharge it with the mindfulness.
Is that correct?
Well, I'll tell you what's interesting.
It's kind of not correct,
because I'll tell you what,
mindful eating and intuitive eating
are two different things.
They're very compatible and they're different.
And one of the biggest differences
with intuitive eating,
one of our biggest directives,
there's 10 principles, is reject the diet mentality. Mindful based
eating doesn't have that. You absolutely need awareness to
access and two deviating for sure. In fact, when we wrote the
book, John Cabot Zins book, Fulcotastophy Living was only
out. I think for about four or five years, it was the first
time I've seen the term mindful eating used in the
vernacular. And because mindfulness wasn't in the
vernacular, we used the description of having consciousness,
which now I would say having awareness around it.
So I would say anyone coming in from a mindfulness-based
background or meditation background
is gonna have more access to that.
I get excited when I have meditators as patients
and clients because they can access this a little bit better,
but living in diet culture,
they still have rules and judgments,
they're not even aware of.
It's like fish and water, like what's water, right still have rules and judgments, so not even aware of it's like, you know, fish and water.
Like what's water, right?
Right.
Yeah.
So mindful eating would just be, in my experience of it, is just bringing your full attention to the process of eating,
which if anybody's ever gone on a meditation retreat, you eat slowly, you're doing everything slowly.
Yeah.
You eat less, you find, because you're aware
when you're full and you're actually tasting your food
and putting your fork down between bites,
something I've had trouble doing off retreat.
So I understand that.
I think if I'm standing it correctly.
You are.
So one can do that without having a conscious rejection
of the water that you reference,
which is the diet culture in which we all swim. Is that a faithful reproduction of the water that you reference, which is the diet culture
in which we all swim.
Is that a faithful reproduction of what you just said?
No.
Oh, okay, that's right.
And I will tell you why.
Because people are not aware of the diet culture.
So they might be saying that they're listening
to their hunger and fullness.
And that's awesome.
That's a great start.
That part is correct.
But if in their mind they're saying,
I shouldn't be eating this much
because that's the rules of diet culture that interferes with the awareness. They're
not even aware of that that's an issue. So sometimes my favorite question to ask
meditate, ooh I'm going to ask you a question. Can I ask you a question? Yes.
Because I struggled with this stuff. So my question to you Dan is where does your mind go when
you're eating? I don't know. See? Oh okay. That's what I'm talking about. Most people don't know. See? Oh, okay.
That's what I'm talking about.
Most people don't.
And so, I think mindful eating is an awesome thing.
I went to one retreat with a practitioner.
I thought, if I'm going to train with someone,
I want to really understand the model.
And it's beautiful.
You're into a sensation of eating taste, texture,
all that kind of stuff, how it feels.
But working with a mind in terms of where you're going,
are you comparing your body with someone else's body?
Are you comparing your food to someone else's food that's sitting next to you, they could,
oh my God, they got more than I did
when you're at retreat that happens a lot, you know?
Yes, it does, yes.
I'm sorry, I'm talking really fast.
So part of what this is,
so here's the conundrum that I see a lot.
Years ago when I would ask somebody,
could you eat your meals without distraction?
I used to get a pretty much a yes on to that,
and now it's as if I'm asking to give away
their first born, because the question I guess,
what would I do?
What would I do?
Because they're so used to the mind being occupied.
And so one thing I will start with as well,
could you commit to one meal?
You know, and I don't want to make someone do what they do.
I will always respect to honesty.
If the answer's no, then okay,
we're going to find another way.
And where I'm at right now with some people is like,
how about can you commit to three bites and having awareness, the first bite, the middle bite no, then okay, we're going to find another way. And where I'm at right now is some people is like, how about can you commit to three bites and having awareness?
The first bite, the middle bite, the end bite, just to get some connection of what's going
on, what's the food taste like, what's your body feel like, you know, all of these kinds
of things that go on.
And so what I find that's missing in the meditators that I've worked with is not knowing where the
mind goes when they're eating.
They think that, oh, I'm eating without distraction.
This is really great. And I would say, yeah, that's great. But where's the mind? Where's the mind goes when they're eating. They think that, oh, I'm eating without distraction. This is really great. And I would say, yeah, that's great.
But where's the mind?
Where's the mind?
And if your mind is in distraction,
then you're not really connecting with your body.
But the cool thing is, you get to the point
of effortless effort.
You don't have to be a monk and meditate
to get this process down.
But when you're in the learning curve,
it helps to have more of this awareness.
And we know from research on neuroplasticity,
for neurons to rewire together to fire together,
there has to be awareness at the time.
This is coming out of Andrew Hoberman's lab out of Stanford.
So I think it's a really cool thing, you know?
So I just wanna keep pushing a little bit on the difference.
I think by this point, the listener will have understood
what mindful eating is, which is again, bringing your full attention to the best of your ability while you're eating,
to the tastes of the food, to the sensations in your body, and then when you get distracted,
starting again. So, I think that we've got that down. So, what's left for us to do right now
is to dive deeper into intuitive eating and what the difference is there.
Right, right, right. So, I'll say one more more thing and then I'll get into those differences. So a scholar,
we were in this great discussion on Facebook on what is intuitive eating and the intuitive eating
folks were writing beautiful things. I wrote beautiful things. I thought on intuitive eating. She
comes in and says, well, I think intuitive eating is a framework of self-care eating and mindful
mindful eating is a skill set. I thought, oh my god, that's beautiful and it's nice and short.
So that's another way of looking at it as well.
Very compatible.
If anything, if any of your listeners come away with this,
it's very compatible.
But when you start looking at it from a research base,
it's important to know there's a difference in this.
So one of the big things is rejecting the diet mentality.
And one of my, I actually had a debate.
I was on a conference panel with some mindfulness experts.
And I said, my position is, it puts people
on the path of unnecessary suffering.
If we can't already let them know I'm part of the secret.
And that is if you're dieting, it's going to hijack this whole process.
When you're dieting, the mind goes external.
How much in this?
How much in that?
How much do I weigh?
What about the macros?
And we need to be going inside instead.
So it's a path to having less suffering.
But don't we need to know you refer to macros,
macros, new...
Sorry, I did that.
Yeah. No, that's fine. It's fine.
But don't we need to have the basics of nutrition down?
For example, I went to a, I moved,
I gave up animal products about a year and a half,
maybe two years ago.
And I had to do a big education with a nutritionist,
a vegan nutritionist, who taught me how to do this without making myself sick.
So learning that and getting a sense of like, am I getting enough protein today so that
I have enough energy?
Don't I need to have some external?
Well, here, the answer is kind of, and here's how I will say it, the 10th principle of
intuitive eating is on your health with gentle nutrition.
And the reason we kept it as we made it the last principle, at least I both have master
science to raise a nutrition.
She's your co-author.
She's the co-author.
She's the co-author.
At least, RESH.
Yeah.
And we love, especially, I'm the nerd geek on the team and I love science and we love
nutrition.
But what we found is if we introduce that too soon, it interferes with the process of
checking in.
So it's more about a timing issue.
Yes, health absolutely counts.
But if we do it too soon, it becomes problematic. Gotcha. So, okay, so we don't need to go there now. So walk us through
the rest of the principles. Okay, so we reject the diet mentality. That's easy. That's easier said than
done, because it's everywhere. Honoring your hunger, that's pretty straightforward. Honoring your
hunger. So don't stifle it if you're hungry.
Yeah, this is actually a normal experience.
It lets us know we need to eat.
And actually the sad part is, and I've seen this a lot with my patients, is if you're
trying to ignore hunger and you try to fake it out, guess what happens?
You end up into this what I call primal hunger.
You cross that line.
I don't care.
I'm going to eat you.
I'm so hungry.
And people have a lot of guilt around that and they don't realize
Guess what? This is your biology. This is your body really really working well
We've seen that in a classic Minnesota starvation study. I don't know if you're familiar with that. Oh my god
Can I tell you about it? So these guys were college-age men who
Conscious of objects in World War two and just to be in this study
They had to be super duperper healthy, biologically and psychologically,
past all these exams.
And then they were put on a semi-servation diet for a period of months, and we saw what
happened to them.
Predictably, they became alnourished, but what was really shocking is what happened to
their mind.
They started collecting recipes and cookbooks, and all they would do is talk about food.
And when I give this talk at universities, I tell them, and these men lost interest in sex.
When I say it, I think, they go, they know how profound that is because there's no energy.
Then some of the men started binge eating and creating eating disorders.
On average, these guys were starving.
They were having around 1700 calories a day.
This became the first study on the psychological consequences of under-eating.
So we've known this.
And since then, when we've looked at all the research that's come out on dieting, when
you diet, it messes up your mind like, oh, it increases risk of eating disorders.
The act of dieting actually causes rebound, weight gain.
Most people don't know this, but by year five, it's going to come back.
The most consistent predictor of weight gain is dieting, going on a diet regardless of
how much weight you started with, right?
So, shout out to Grace Livingston, one of the producers on the show who sent me, and this
may be an excerpt from you, but there is not a, this is a quote here, there is not a single
long-term study that shows that weight loss dieting is sustainable.
Study after study shows that dieting and food restriction for the purpose of weight loss leads
to more weight gain.
Yes, weight gain.
Worse, the focus and preoccupation on weight leads to body dissatisfaction and weight
stigma, which negatively impacts health.
Isn't that shocking?
Isn't that shocking?
So when I have conversations with doctors, I would say, would you prescribe a medication
that by year five actually causes more problems?
It actually causes heart attacks as opposed to clearing out arteries and they're like,
hell no.
And it's like, well, why would you prescribe weight loss then?
And it's a complex area of science.
And so what a lot of healthcare practitioners do is they follow policy, but they're not
following the research.
It doesn't work.
So then the question is, what do we do?
We can still do healthy behaviors.
Weight's not a behavior.
Weight is not a behavior.
And then people have so much shame
when the weight comes back.
And when they're losing the weight,
like especially on Instagram, oh my gosh,
all they're before and after.
And it's so loud, oh look at me, I feel so good.
And then when it all comes back, you don't hear a thing.
You don't hear like, I feel awful.
I can't stop being.
So binge eating is really common.
A common consequence of dieting in terms of harm.
Is there anything wrong with wanting your body to look a certain way?
It's a really good question.
I think in today's culture, the answer is it's all around us that kind of pressure.
The real issue when I'm working with patients that want to do this work is I'll tell them,
can you put this idea of weight loss on the back burner?
Because if it's your primary directive, it's going to interfere with the process.
And I can't even tell you what's going to happen to your body within two-it-a-veeding.
You might stay the same, you might lose weight, you might gain weight.
Because this is about healing your relationship with food.
But it's a really tough one, I say, especially for women in this culture.
But men as well, when you start looking at the incidence of eating disorders, one out of three people with
eating disorders identifies as a man.
And the thing I find that's so disturbing is that eating disorder rates have doubled.
A new study just came out in May looking at 90 different studies.
They have doubled because, in my opinion, diet culture has normalized this unhealthy relationship
with food.
I wonder if the social media is part of that as well.
Oh, I'm sure it is.
Yeah.
So I'll just speak personally.
I've mentioned this before on the podcast.
A little bugaboo of mine is, I'm 48 as we record this.
I had like a brief shining moment in my 30s where I was single and was very fit, very fit.
And for the first time in my life,
I had like visible abs.
And it's created this little hobgoblin for me,
this little bug of blue.
I don't like as I've gotten older
that I have more sort of girth around belly,
even though it's not much, I'm a slim guy.
And yet I notice it coming up again and again
in this sort of self-critical loop in my head.
So I wonder, is what you're saying to me,
just drop that, you know, and is that even doable?
Dropping the desire to have the body look a certain way?
So my short answer is yes, drop it, Dan.
But that's a hard thing to say to anyone
when they have that desire because our
culture reinforces this all the time. And so I start looking at how does this make you
feel, this constant comparison to a time in your past. So that's the thing I look at.
So this is where we use the mind of meditation. And that is let's get a curious non-judgment.
How does it make you feel? Oh, I'm here again. I'm comparing. How does it affect your eating?
And here's the thing that just kills me, how it affects relationships,
especially if you're really pursuing it, because you're going out to dinner with your
wife or your friends. And instead of really engaging in the conversation, the back of your
mind is chattering about, well, I want to look this way. I want to look this way. The diet
says this or diet says that, and you're not connected.
You literally just described like my last few dinners.
Thank you. So that's harmful.
That's harmful.
And so I think that's why I get so many people unsolicited emails and DMs.
Oh my God, this changed my life.
And I think it changes because you're starting to connect with the people that are with you
as opposed to playing that game where you're talking to someone on the cell phone and they're
there.
They're saying the right words, but you can tell they're not there.
It's the same kind of thing.
But how to, you acknowledge to your credit that this is hard to do.
So I mean, I pass reflective surfaces on the regular in my bathroom as I'm getting ready.
And it's just this automatic thing of, oh yeah, how does the body look? Right.
And then it's a spiral into negativity. Now, I've actually done a reasonable amount of work
thanks to the aforementioned Grace Livingston,
who is very interested in this stuff.
And all the work of Kristen Neff,
who's, oh, she's awesome.
Right, so a lot about self-compact.
So I have these little mental habits
that I've tried to develop that,
when I notice that voice kicking in,
right, you know, Kristen Neff has this great three-part thing. So I have these little mental habits that I've tried to develop that when I notice that voice kicking in right one
You know, you know, Christian F has this great three-part thing the first is
Just to notice mindfully that you're that yeah, this sucks. This is suffering two to
Tune into the fact that there are millions of people right now dealing with this exact same thing to sort of widen the lens
Yeah, more perspective and three to send yourself a little bit of good vibes
I like that, but I while I've found to send yourself a little bit of good vibes. I like that.
While I've found this to be a useful sort of circuit breaker
on this habit loop, this habitual self-laceration,
I still have this question looming of,
well, aren't, isn't a certain body type,
muscular, visible muscles, isn't that a sign of good health,
and therefore isn't it rational that I should want this?
Well, that's a loaded question.
So I'm going to answer it many ways if I may.
You can go as long as you want.
Thank you.
So first of all, you cannot tell by looking at someone's body at the health of their body.
So there's someone who's kind of well known on Instagram named Latoya Shanti, who last
year got fat-shamed at the New York Marathon, my own 21 or 22.
She's in a big body, she acknowledges that.
She says, fit is can be.
So you can't tell by looking at someone's body.
But because of all the images we see on social media
and then you being in the media yourself,
there's a pressure you have that I would say
the average man doesn't have.
Yeah, I gotta look at my face on television all the time.
Yeah, and so part of this, I actually do another tick.
I love Kristen and F.
We actually adapted some of her work in our workbook
to work with these kinds of things.
And so we'll put a link to her interview in the show notes of this episode.
Oh, awesome.
So I think one of the things we have to recognize here, when you're talking about body in this
case, you're talking about a belief system and a value system.
So this is not just happy thoughts and it goes away.
This is, we have to root this out.
And this is going to take time and practice.
So the only time, no, well, so one of the things I've, I just got really curious with somebody happened to be like a math genius and I said to her,
how many, when did you start having thoughts about your body negative thoughts? I think
for her it was age 10, I think she was 40 when I was talking to her and I said, how many
times a day do you think you've had these negative thoughts? And let's multiply it out.
It was like 50 million or something like that.
So so much suffering.
It's so much suffering, but the point is so much suffering. Absolutely.
So you're having 50 million hits of body shame versus three hits of a
Christian, a Christian nephtechnique, which is awesome. But sometimes people have
the expectation that I'm going to use some loving kindness and self-compassion.
I'm going to be all kumbaya with my body. And my answer is I would love if that was true,
but we need to know it's going to take time and space because it's all around us. And so it's going to take these repetitions.
And one thing I would add to this when it comes to bodies is to recognize I am not a
body. You have done some awesome things in your career. I think I told you I read your
book. And it's like, damn, look at all this stuff you've done. You're not a body. You're
a dad, you're a reporter. You've done all these amazing things. You are not a body. So sometimes I will have people
acknowledge that I am not a body. For some people, here's a little Buddhism. I ask people,
what's your body lineage? And like, what do you mean? I said, well, what about your mom
and dad? How do they feel about their bodies? How about your grandparents? And looking how
it comes down the family tree? It's like, oh, no wonder this is not so easy just to
uproot with a couple of compassionate thoughts.
It's something we need to do, but it's going to take time.
And then in your case, you've got a family.
And so one of the things I love to say when I'm working with parents is,
I would love to stop the legacy in your family.
I don't want your son to have these kinds of worries.
I wanted to go have fun and play or go
school instead or whatever he wants to do but not be worried about the value of his body.
Just to be clear, just to emphasize a point you made before, you're not saying be unhealthy.
Correct. Oh, absolutely. I'm not saying that.
No, I met just the other day, another woman, not the woman you referenced who is in a big
body herself and she runs marathons. In fact, she runs, not the woman you reference to, is in a big body herself
and she runs marathons.
In fact, she runs, she's basically an ultra marathon, and just radiant human being and
just killing it out there.
So, if you took, I would imagine we didn't do this, but if you went, it took, did blood tests
on her and did an EKG and all that stuff,
I suspect you would find she's extremely healthy.
And so that's the measure I think I'm hearing you say.
So in my case, for example, I recently got to work up and all the numbers came back really
positive.
So maybe that's what I should be focusing on rather than, you know, how my pants fit.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And to recognize it's going to be a practice to keep letting that go.
No, it's saying how it makes you feel doing some of the compassion itself talking
you were mentioning and remembering you or not, a body.
Much more of my conversation with Evelyn Tribbley right after this.
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I'm gonna give you an example.
When we talk about health, we need to be broader.
It's not just our bodies and what we eat.
It also includes things like our mental health,
our well-being,
our social determinants of health, all these kinds of stuff, how much sleep you're getting.
There was a really profound study published in the 90s.
I called every study I read, I just said, it's a half I have, so I called the Food Worry
Study.
And they looked...
So the reason...
So that was an affectionate laugh, I'm not laughing at you.
Oh no, I was laughing back at you, I liked to laugh, so I wasn't even threatened by that
one. I also want to make clear to the audience that I'm enjoying this. you. Oh, no, I was laughing back at you. I liked to laugh, so I wasn't even threatened by that one.
Ha, ha, ha.
I also want to be clear to the audience
that I'm enjoying this.
Oh, good, good.
I like your energy.
Thank you.
So Paul Rosin looked at four countries.
He looked at the United States.
He looked at France, Belgium, and Japan.
And the United States, we in the US,
we worried the most about what we eat
and we enjoyed at the least.
The French, on the other hand, oh my gosh,
they love their food, and they could care less about health back when this was done. And eat and we enjoyed it the least. The French, on the other hand, oh my gosh, they love their food and they could care less
about health back when this was done.
And Belgium and Japan were somewhere in between.
And the thing that he said was so profound was, you know, we keep worrying about if food's
going to kill us or cure us.
We haven't looked at what the impact of that worry is because when you worry, it raises cortisol.
That's not good for health either.
And that's what I'm seeing right now.
It's just too much worry around the eating.
Like, let's enjoy our food.
Food is supposed to be enjoyable.
It's a source of pleasure.
And I will tell you, Dan, I was really lucky earlier in my career.
I was on a task force with Julia Child when she wanted chefs and nutritionists to get
along.
So we'd have to meet once a month and come up with something.
And it really impacted me.
And the message to the dieticians and nutritionists of the world is like, when you're planning
all this healthy stuff, please, for the love of God, consider taste and to the chefs,
please consider health.
The idea, it's not one way or the other, you know?
I just kind of rocked my head back in recognition when you said the thing about worrying.
Because it's just really bad with me.
Because I spend a ton of time worrying about this,
this morning I'm staying in a, we're doing this interview
in San Francisco, where I'm out here for work.
And my wife and son came and, which is amazing.
And I try, from what we can get into this,
try not to eat too much processed grains,
sort of like bread stuff,
but I love bread. And now that I don't eat animal products, it's one of the few sort of,
like sinful things available to me. So this morning, okay, so she's making a lot of gestures.
I'll let you talk in a second. So this morning, my wife ordered avocado toast for me,
and when I got back from the gym, I ate it all. But was I enjoying it?
Yes, but a lot of there was this worry going on in the background.
So that's toxicity.
Yes.
Yes. Can I say stuff now?
Yes, please. Say as much as you want.
So first of all, that kind of worry takes Rob's you from the joy of eating.
I feel in my body right now.
Oh, so, and I wanna mention something,
and you saw me react.
Yeah.
It's going, ah, when you said, sinful.
So when we start talking about foods and moralistic terms,
it's problematic.
And I try my best.
I really know it.
Yeah, and especially with kids,
because kids are so black and white and they're thinking,
I eat a bad food there for I'm bad.
I'm gonna give you some examples
that I'm gonna break your heart
because it breaks my heart down.
So this is what they have to do with kindergarteners.
It's funny, I have a really cool Instagram feed
where people comment and say things
that just gets me even more energized.
So someone's kindergarten teacher
removed the homemade cookie mom put in the lunch
because the kindergarten teacher said it was bad.
Now this little kindergarten is afraid to eat this kind of food that mom packs in the lunch, which is to have that fear
at five years old and have the parent having authority over what they want to pack in their
kids lunch, things like that. It makes me sad. I'd rather the worry be somewhere else, you
know, but not with what we're eating. We need to get back to the joy of it.
I totally agree. And yet I did the little voice in my head, I'm going to...
Let's hear the voice in my head.
Good, I'm glad you're cool with that.
Is saying, well, isn't there empirical evidence to suggest that some food is better for
you than other foods?
Ooh, let's go there. Okay. So here's a really interesting thing about data.
A lot of... I'm developing kind of a philosophy. And you can tell me what you think about data. A lot of, I'm developing kind of a philosophy,
and you can tell me what you think about this.
So a lot of the fear-mongering, it used to be from the media,
from headlines, from nutrition research news,
and the media would sensationalize it.
Now I'm seeing that the universities are putting out
press releases that are putting the sensationalistic stuff
in there, and the media is just merely reproducing it.
A lot of these studies showing, quote, bad effects
like what you're describing
are something called epidemiological research
where dissociation, not causation.
Gosh, did they control for exercise in this group?
Did they control for smoking?
Did they control for sleeping?
There's so many things they're missing.
So these epi studies because they're so large
and numbers are thousands and thousands of people,
sometimes millions.
They generate lots of headlines.
And these studies have a value, they tell us,
you know what, this is interesting.
We should do a study on humans
and see it wouldn't intervention data make,
wouldn't intervention trial make a difference,
will it change the quality of their life?
And so we don't have that much data in nutrition,
there's a lot of a lot of soft stuff on there.
And so food becomes preached in terms of identity
like it's a religion, you know?
It's amazing to me how this has happened
that people think that they're better than other people
because they eat a certain way
or that they're not so good
because they didn't eat a certain way.
And so this is where we need to really remove
the morality from eating, you know?
Okay, so I hear you when you say
that we should be skeptical of the research,
but are we not at a point where the research is
dispositive on eating a sleeve of Oreos?
Oh, well, let's look at that.
Okay, so that sounds so straightforward of a question,
right, and I hear that.
But see, here's the thing about the Oreos.
Who would want to eat a sleeve of Oreos
with that feel good, you know?
So the people I meet that would eat a sleeve.
Me, by the way.
Okay.
So that was not without, that was not judgment on other people.
Good, good, good.
So this has even better than it's used.
So we'll go with it.
So my experience is that when people eat sleeves, the cookies, our whole boxes, and I
work with a lot of people that do.
Yeah, you're sitting with somebody who used to.
Yes.
Oh, yay.
There's usually deprivation in that background.
There's usually like, I shouldn't, I can't have this food.
And they're from when they're from... Yeah, my, I can't have this food. And therefore when they're...
Yeah, my parents didn't let me have food.
Oh my God! Okay, so then what ends up happening is
when they finally get it, get to have it.
Whatever, there's an event that comes along,
there's an emotion, we just say, to heck with it.
You eat those cookies and you really know in that moment
you're never gonna have them again.
You're never gonna have them again,
so I'm gonna get them all right now while I can,
because I'm right at your laughing, you get it, right?
I just call your story. You did. that's that's the issue and so when someone
says I'm enjoying this interview so I'm so glad I'm so glad we'll have to do it again you're amazing
I really think first of all I think you're helping me right now in this moment and I think by extension
you're gonna help tens of thousands of people that's why I'm here when I get that from you yeah yeah
just a little bit of love in the middle of the day. Oh, thank you.
I always take that in.
Thank you.
Good.
So one of the things I get, because we
haven't talked about the third principle of intuitive behavior,
or one of them.
I know it's so funny.
I don't know the order.
I can tell you what they are.
I don't know the order, because I never go in order.
I go with what the person needs.
But one of the principles that's the most misunderstood
principle and controversial for those who don't get it, it is called making peace with food, which being all foods fit,
including Oreos.
And the biggest fear question I get is, oh my gosh Evelyn, if I let myself eat whatever
I want, I would never stop.
That's what I was going to ask.
Thank you.
See?
Did I call you already?
Intuitive of you.
And that usually is a reflection for how much deprivation there's been in your life.
Because there's a permission paradox that happens.
When you really know you can have the Oreos or whatever it is, for the first time you get
to really ask, well, do I really want them?
If I eat them now, I'm going to enjoy them.
And why would I eat a quantity that doesn't feel good in my body?
It changes everything.
It's one of my most favorite things to observe over and over again.
And I have to tell you, I didn't tell you this part, there's a lot of research behind the foundation
of intuitive eating.
It was research inspired, but now it's evidence-based now.
But our model is actually based on a lot of research
around kids, where they showed this phenomenon
that if you forbid a kid from having a food,
that is the food that they obsess about.
That's a food they end up sneaking.
That's the kid who at the birthday party is going nuts
over the cake and the candy, not the presents,
and stuff in it in their pockets.
And so we see that same phenomenon in adults.
So as an example, when someone's,
I'm gonna make this complex, but easy at the same time.
So when someone's dieting, not getting enough to eat,
and now they have forbidden foods around,
they can't eat this or can't eat that,
and something happens and they can't stand it.
So they eat like a box of Oreos.
And in their mind, nothing can explain that,
except, oh my gosh, it must be addiction.
And it's like, no, this is a combination of biology
when you're not getting enough to eat,
your brain is not craving kale.
I have never met a patient.
You had to say, Evelyn, you got to help me
with this kale thing.
I can't stop eating it, right?
Because our brain needs carbs.
It's the preferred energy source.
But because, and I'll say, the experience is real,
nothing can explain this, this drive,
and the intensity in the urges, that primal hunger.
But when you get to a point that you're ready
to allow these foods in first, you need to nourish
the body consistently, and then allow these foods in,
it changes it.
So a few months ago, on my, I just recently debated a scientist
on, I loved doing the gains on addiction food addiction so called
Addiction and to get ready for it besides having research
I thought you know in my experience. I've had a lot of patients believe they were addicted to food and with time
They realized they weren't so I posted on Instagram. Do you ever believe you were addicted to food?
And they realized you weren't oh my god the stories that came in that came in. So to me, it's an example of the problem
when you start labeling things, calling things
when the research isn't there to support it.
It's a kissing cousin to labeling something sinful.
Yes, yeah, I just realized that changed topics
on you a little bit on that.
But yeah, it's a similar idea.
It creates a barrier and it creates fear.
And when you have fear around eating,
guess what, you're not gonna wanna trust your body.
Yeah, and I want you to trust that
digressions even really, really long ones
are totally welcome here, so don't worry about it.
I, so let's just go with what you're on right now,
because it's really, it's very, very interesting to me personally.
One thing I would just wanna say is
you've basically helped my wife win an argument
and many probably in the course of this,
but one in particular, as it pertains to our son,
I don't know that I actually,
we really argued about this
because I've just let her go with it,
but her view is around dessert stuff.
Just don't be weird about it.
Just let them have,
just to the point of, you know,
you don't want to just give him dessert for every meal.
But if he's, you know, asking for something and it makes sense,
let him have it.
And as a consequence, our son's not that crazy about sugar.
See, that's what I'm talking about.
So he's really not Halloween.
We came home, he spent the whole evening organizing
the candy into different groups because he liked the colors or the kind of candy it was.
Didn't want to eat any of it. See? Oh my gosh. And yet, if your wise wife hadn't been, you know,
nudging you in that direction, I would have been crazy about it. Or he would have been crazy about it.
Well, I would have made him crazy because my parents made, I don't want to get down to my parents because my parents, I love my parents.
They, my dad used to say this really nice thing
to me and my brother before we were going to bed
at night, he'd say he would say,
nobody's perfect, but yours close as is possible.
Oh my God.
And I feel that way about them as parents.
There is no such thing as perfect parents
but my parents were wonderful parents.
And yet on this one, I think they,
because they're physicians and we're trying to make us healthy
out of this incredibly positive, loving impulse,
limited our sugar intake.
And that has, I'm now realizing,
made me pretty crazy about sugar.
Well, and let me also just validate what you're saying.
I've never met a parent yet who didn't want to be doing
the best for the kids.
So what we say now is like, okay,
you're learning something different and maybe you can do something.
So I've got to tell you the story that reinforces what you're saying, because it's so visual.
I got a call from a parent about her seven-year-old daughter over a holiday.
We had a white dress on,
chocolate fingerprints all over her dress.
And she said, honey, did you eat the chocolate, whatever it was?
And she said, no, mommy.
No, mommy.
And the evidence was everywhere and she said you know
That was the first time to her knowledge her daughter is outright lied to her and she made her wonder what am I doing here
Am I making a mistake that my daughter needs to lie to me?
So she came in and saw me in long story short well-meaning, but they had rigid rules absolutely no candy
So the only time this kid got candy was that parties
This was like a party kind of thing and the visual of that white dress with the chocolate
So I gave her similar advice what I'm suggesting to you.
It's like, let's liberalize the food.
We don't have to serve dessert for dinner, but we don't make it a big deal either.
Food has become Switzerland.
It's neutral.
We don't put energy into it.
And long story short, it changed the whole dynamic.
Yeah, my wife has done a really good job.
Good for her.
Good for her.
So, let's get back to the thing you said before that perfectly described my mentality,
which is, so let me just step back and say,
on sugar, I went through this long phase
where I would just binge it to the point
where I would feel awful.
And when I say awful, I don't mean awful,
just awful in the moment, I would feel awful the entire next day.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
So that's how much I was eager.
Okay.
And I have an addictive personality.
Okay.
Um,
and so what I decided to do a couple of years ago was I was, it was yet another day
where I was texting back and forth with my wife saying I feel awful today.
And I, I just, I just decided, you know what?
I'm going to leave it alone. Uh, I just decided, you know what?
I'm gonna leave it alone. I'm having trouble with moderation,
but I'm reasonably good at abstinence.
So now for the last couple of years,
I've gone through the world with just the policy,
as you can make me, as my friend Gretchen Rubin says,
you can make me a birthday cake, but I'm not gonna eat it.
And it's been reasonably successful
in that I haven't had a day where I felt awful
because I ate so much so many Oreos a night before.
But now sitting here with you,
maybe I have to tweak that success story.
And the reason why I'm bringing all of this up
is you said before, a lot of people say to you,
if you allow me to have that one Oreo, I'll never stop.
Yeah.
So that's my mentality.
Yeah.
So given everything I just said,
how would you suggest I proceed?
I'm so glad you're asking.
I get this question a lot.
So first of all, I'd want to make sure that you're getting enough to eat because the truth
is, let's say you had just a crazy day on deadline, pulled into a meeting, you worked
out and you finally get home, you have an dinner at 8 o'clock and let's say lunch was at
11.
In other words, nine hours without eating.
If you decided to make peace with sugar right then and there, you're going to eat a
meal worth and that's not going to feel good. So I'd want to make sure
your body's nourished and that when you have whatever it is that sweet, that you have
it at a time when you can pay 100% attention to it. And I remember asking you the earlier,
where does your mind go when you're eating? I want your mind to be on the, I would love
for your mind to be on the process of eating. Note what comes up even before you do it.
Fear, excitement and maybe being judging the fact
that you're excited.
Oh my god, this is the wrong man, I'm so excited.
That's common, by the way, really common.
And then even just noticing as you're unwrapping the candy,
the sound of the candy, as you put,
you know what I love, oh my god,
I wish I had it here with you.
But like a junior man,
it's are my favorite ones to do, a food experience with,
because I would have you smell it.
And when you smell junior man,
yes, you smell mint, you smell chocolate,
you smell hints of vanilla,
then you put it in your mouth,
and don't even take a bite,
and notice what happens to the taste and the texture.
Then take one bite without chewing,
that's hard, hard to do.
I always say, pretend I'm a kindergarten teacher,
don't go ahead of me.
And then finally, when you feel comfortable,
chew, notice the taste, notice the
texture, and then after you finish swallowing, notice the remnant taste.
So I actually do this in my office.
That's mindful eating right there, both of them.
It is, it actually is.
Well, the first lesson in mindfulness-based stress reduction is the raisin.
The raisin, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This one sounds much more fun though.
It is much more fun.
So I usually have people bring in their foods and I tell you I
This is what I just have to joy to do this work to watch people's minds get blown like oh my god I had somebody used to binge on candy corn pounds and pounds every holiday when it would come around thanksgiving it around
Halloween and
She bought them in we did this thing
She tasted things she'd never tasted before because it was always urgent
Herring do this now before no one's looking.
Haring, let's do it fast.
Don't taste it.
And then feeling like what you were talking about, just feeling awful afterwards.
And part of that awful is not only the physicality from the eating, but the emotional labeling.
So it becomes in mesh.
This is what this equals now.
You know, once we have to separate it out, because all along as you're eating, and when
you finish, do I like how I feel?
You know, you can stop anytime you want to.
Much more of my conversation with Evelyn Tribbley right after this.
What a life these celebrities lead.
Imagine walking the red carpet, the cameras in your face,
the designer clothes, the worst dress list, big house. the world constantly peering in, the bursting bank account, the people trying to get the grubby mitts on it.
What's he all about? I'm just saying, being really, really famous, it's not always easy.
I'm Emily Lloyd-Saini, and I'm Anna Leong-Rofi, and we're the hostsribly Famous from Wondery, the podcast which tells
the stories of our favourite celebrities from their perspective. Each season we show you what
it's really like being famous by taking you inside the life of a British icon. We walk you through
their glittering highs and eyebrow raising lows and ask, is fame and fortune really worth it?
Follow Terribly Famous now wherever you get your podcasts
or listen early and ad-free on Wondry Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondry app.
Hello listeners, this is Mike Corey of Against the Odds.
You might know that I adventure around the world while recording this podcast.
And over the years, I've learned that where I stay
when I travel can make all the difference.
Airbnb has been my go-to place
for finding the perfect accommodations.
Because with hotels, you often don't have the luxury
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Recently, I had a bunch of friends come down
to visit in Mexico.
We found this large house and the place had a pool, a barbecue, a kitchen, and a great big living room to play cards, watch movies,
and just chill out.
It honestly made all the difference in the trip.
It felt like we were all roommates again.
The next time you're planning a trip, whether it's with friends, family, or yourself,
check out Airbnb to find something you won't forget.
Okay, so I suspect that what I'm about to say is I suspect speaking for
many people in the audience, which is wow, you are really forcing me to rethink
my relationship with food. And yet, I'm still in this position of wondering
how am I going to do this. Tonight at dinner with my wife and child for the first time in a couple of years say,
okay, I'll have a little dessert.
How's that gonna go?
Even if I've been, I have a bag of food over there
that I'll probably eat between interviews today.
So I will be nourished by the time dinner rolls around.
And yet I have this fear that I will go crazy.
So, and that fear is really common.
So number one, I'm glad you're challenging.
You're thinking on this.
I love that.
You're challenging, I think.
Yeah, yeah, I'm glad that you're revealing that.
It's good.
But I'd want you to do it at a time
that you feel ready to do it.
I see.
So, for example, I've really noticed I've
been jet lagged the last couple of days
and I've done a bunch of mindless eating.
Sure.
Fatigue is one of those mind states that can leave that.
You would want me to feel physically and mentally strong.
In a good place where it's today, a good point.
You get to decide that.
So let me share a little bit of research behind this.
It might help with the fear factor.
So there's a couple of drivers that we created this principle.
One of them has to do with habituation research.
Habituation has to do with novelty.
That when something is new, it's very exciting.
One of the best stories I ever heard
was from a habituation research
who described falling in love.
You're falling in love.
And for the first time, you hear that person say,
I love you.
And it's magical and it's awesome
in your own top of the world.
10 years later, you're married,
you're a committed relationship
that same person says I love you. And it's nice, but it's of the world. 10 years later, you're married, you're in a committed relationship. That same person says, I love you.
And it's nice, but it's not the same level of joy.
When you get a new car, when you get a new computer, when you
knew anything.
So that's what habituation is.
Novelty wears off.
It's like leftovers.
It's really the leftover principle.
After I used to do some cookbooks, and I'll never forget, making
cakes and all my fam, oh my god, cake, cake, cake.
But by the end of that chapter, I couldn't give a cake away,
because they knew they could have it.
So what happens is when someone's been dieting
or have rigid rules like no sugar,
what happens is food stays scary and food stays exciting.
You haven't had the habituation effect.
You've had the extremes, you haven't had the middle.
So what we know from habituation fact,
if you wanted to do this systematically,
actually have a systematic approach,
you would choose one food, the same flavor, same brand.
So for example, if it was ice cream, maybe it's hoggondoss ice cream, but you don't vary
it up with halotox, because it's very different even if it's vanilla.
And because we know with novelty, if you introduce new flavors, it'll take a little longer.
You can do it that way if you want to.
You can do it any way you want to.
But when someone's really, really scared, I'll say, you know, let's create the optimal situation.
What do you, number one, what do you need to feel safe?
What's optimal for you?
Where do you want to do this?
I've had some patients say, I don't want to do it at my home.
I don't want to have a bag of candy or a big gallon ice cream calling my name.
Can I go out somewhere?
It's like, absolutely.
Yes, you can.
And so, it's about building, when it ends up happening, you don't have to eat through
the alphabet of sugar to get this.
But once you start having a certain amount of experience, as all of a sense, it's just
a beautiful thing to witness over and over again.
What you see in your son could be in you as well.
There's been too much energy and too much rigidity around it in my opinion, which is why
it keeps it exciting.
Therefore, with excitement comes fear.
You would recommend that the abstinence model that I've been bringing to sugar is probably
not the wisest approach.
Should be good.
Yeah, that's what I would say.
And so what you're recommending
if I'm hearing you correctly is pick one super exciting,
the most exciting kind of dessert.
Or any kind, you could do the safest dessert.
Maybe something boring.
Like for me boring, for my taste buds would be vanilla way
for cookies.
It's dessert for some people, but it's like,
no, I'd rather have a real cookie.
I agree with that.
But if we're trying to go for habituation, should we pick the most exciting?
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
You just keep repeating it.
So the dessert of the week might be a certain cookie or ice cream or whatever that happens
to be.
And then do what with it?
Just eat it slowly.
Yeah.
The way you described with the juniaments.
Yeah.
And I would generally recommend not before a meal,
but to do it sometime after a meal.
So hunger's not driving it.
It's all about the taste experience of it.
And over time you're saying habituation sets in.
And then I can walk into a holiday party
with a cornucopia of pastries and not-
It's not a big deal.
They think, oh my God, what did you,
I mean, the thing that's so funny,
in the early days and people didn't know what I do
for a living, they're like, how can you do that?
How can you only eat two bites?
Like I'm full.
And they're like, oh, it was no magic.
That's what habituation is.
But when you watch it in your kids,
you're seeing that play out over and over and over again
when you watch it in yourself.
How long does this habituation take? And does it have take and does it have to do it systematically by food.
If I do it vanilla wafer, it will scale to everything else.
No, it's really different for everybody.
I don't have a metric on that.
I have some people that prefer to list every single food they're terrified of eating and
create a hierarchy.
Sometimes they start with the safest foods, but they feel safe to them.
And then they will,
you know what's really sad now?
I have people that are afraid to eat carbohydrates.
It's like, no, not the carbohydrates,
your brain needs them.
And so we're starting with basic foods,
like bread and those kinds of things.
The carbohydrates is a big category as I understand it.
It's the big difference between rice and wonder bread.
Yeah, yeah.
But it doesn't mean it's bad.
Wonder bread.
Yeah, yeah. I know, right? Oh, Apple, what kind of nutrition are it's bad. You know? Wonder bread. Yeah, yeah.
I know, right?
Oh, apple macchiato, I'm so sorry.
What are you saying?
Ha, ha, ha.
But look at the French, you know, the French bread, for example.
Yes.
That's white flour, man.
They have one of the lowest rates of heart disease
in the world.
And yes, we can argue that they have other health enhancing
behaviors that they do, but it's, you know,
one food is not going to make or break you.
One food is not going to, unless you have like an allergy
to like peanuts, it's not going
to do you in.
So I've done this around bread too, which is, I've made it to exciting.
I've made it illicit.
And therefore it's super exciting when I start eating it, all of those psychologies kick
in.
Right.
And then because in your mind, I'm not going to do this again.
This is an exception because I'm jet lagged.
Yeah.
So then it's more exciting.
And now the volume is going to come in because it's opportunistic eating.
I'm never gonna have, oh my God, this bread.
Especially here in San Francisco, oh my God.
So you're gonna eat more quantity and so that drives
and then you don't feel good.
And then you say, see, I need to have rules
around my eating, this doesn't work.
So again, what you would recommend
is a habituation process.
Yeah, when you feel ready, not when you feel ready,
not when I say you're ready,
when you feel ready to do this, you ready, not when I say you're ready, when you feel ready to do this,
to start adding sweets back in.
And same with bread.
Yeah.
And would you do these concurrently or separately?
Would every feel ready to do?
So for example, I've learned to get out of the way
of my patients, I've had patients come in,
ready to do things I would have never recommended.
And they do beautifully, you know?
So I've had some patients that go out and
buy every single food they think they can't have and put it in their pantry. That would
terrify a lot of my other patients. But if they're ready to do that, I'm not going to
stop them. If that feels like they want to do that and they're ready, okay, let's do it.
I have other patients that are terrified as we start really slow. And that's okay, too.
They'll buy a teeny tiny cupcake like it sprinkles or sousi cakes are one of those places.
The mini ones, you know, not the regular size. That's okay
And you get to see what happens and you know what happen. Oh, I don't know if I should tell you this. Oh, I'm gonna tell you
The thing that cracks me up that happens I would say one out of four times someone has a food
They have this push pole relationship with they finally give permission to eat it
And then and then they don't like it.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
It is not that it tastes bad,
but we've removed all the excitement,
and there's no taste in it, you know?
It for, I had someone who was into chocolate kisses.
And I said, you know, if you're gonna eat chocolate,
why settle for, you know, there's nothing wrong with kisses.
The one that go for a good dive or something else.
And they said, what a great idea.
And then when they had the kisses,
they didn't like them at all.
It's like, oh my God, this is like eating a crayon tip, you know.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
So it's a surprise, you know.
Or I had someone who was a French fryaholic
and she made peace with French fries
and when she discovered in the past, she would only have them limp and limpy off of her kids'
plates, her husband's plates, sneak them in, lots that way.
And what happened to her, she was no longer willing to eat them that way.
She'd only eat them in a way—oh, so this is another principle of intuitive eating,
aim for satisfaction, you know?
It ultimately is not satisfying to overeat, and it's ultimately not satisfying to
under-eat.
And what I love about this principle
is only you can answer that.
What's that feel like to you?
What would a satisfying meal feel like and taste like?
And how do you want to feel afterwards?
How do you, okay, answer those questions.
And then I know we all have to answer them ourselves,
but how do we answer those questions?
Well, so first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all,
I have to start with a question. I've had patients say, I have no idea. And crying, so first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all,
first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first of all, first they were a kid, oh my God, I used to love eating, you know, macaroni and cheese and broccoli or something like, whatever it happens to be.
And then ultimately, so here's a classic I used to hear,
diets are like fashion, they come and they go,
they come and they go.
And so this is when people are doing like big old salads,
no croutons, hold this skin off the chicken
and an iced tea for lunch.
And I had a patient say, oh, that was really good.
And I said, was it satisfying?
Oh, it was really good.
Did it, how long did it sustain you?
Two hours? I said, oh, so you had a it was really good. Did it, how long did it sustain you? Two hours?
I said, oh, so you had a meal.
And it only lasted for two hours.
It sounds like it's not like a snack to me.
It seems like a pain.
So looking at those kinds of things,
and it only you have the answer to that question.
And so I consider myself kind of like a tour guide.
I can direct you for some fun rides, you know, with eating,
but you get to decide if you like it or not.
It seems like mindfulness would be incredibly useful here.
Oh, it's very, very useful.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Having awareness of everything.
Awareness is key to all of this.
Yeah.
Where are we?
Where are you?
I mean, so in mindful eating, we really slow down while we eat.
Yeah.
That part of intuitive eating too.
Yeah, and you know what's really interesting?
I don't put any emphasis on slowing down,
because I think it's kind of contrived.
I put the emphasis on the savoring aspect of eating. I don't put any emphasis on slowing down because I think it's kind of contrived. I put the emphasis on the savoring aspect of eating because that's
actually interesting. Is it slowed down and be mindless? Yes, you can. You absolutely
can because back to that question, what does your mind go when you eat if it's
somewhere else? You are and not your mind's not there on the eating. So yeah, so
looking at that and so people have asked, what do I do when I eat then? You know,
there's no TV TV there's no phone
It's like that's what you recommend to people to start noticing what does it taste like in other words when when
When people start practicing yeah to it of eating you're saying don't do it for another TV. Yeah
It's okay to have a conversation with other human being absolutely but
Don't be reading your phone or or listening to a podcast and let the only distraction would be a
Conversation with another person other than that you're just eating. Yeah, and I'm always careful about this
What the phenomenon that we've seen is that when people come from a dieting background they invariably
Accidentally turn into a beating into a set of rules, you know, and so this is not where I was going with this
Well, that's why I'm that's why I'm offering this little bump stop here Dan
And so this is not where I was going with this. Well, that's why I'm offering this little bump stop here, Dan.
Slow down.
You're already way ahead of me.
I should just stop interjecting.
Oh, no, no, no.
This is good because that means other people
are thinking the same thing.
So I would say, yes, it's a best practice,
especially if you're new to intuitive eating.
But let me give you an example why I think it's important.
And my patients laugh at this.
And I love this.
This is when I used to read the Wall Street Journal.
So at the very bottom of the front page,
sometimes they would trick me.
I know they didn't do it on purpose.
I'd start reading a story while I'm eating breakfast.
And oh no, it's a full length feature, two pages.
That meant I had to have more cereal
or more whatever that was eating.
So disconnected.
And then I'm so full.
I thought, isn't this hilarious?
I'm a creator of this model.
I know the stuff, but I just got disconnected.
So it happens, it's normal.
But you still follow, you still run a foul
of your own precepts, you're saying?
Of course, because I'm human.
And that's my point.
This is not past or go.
So, and actually, this uses as a really great example.
So I don't react to that.
I don't go, oh my god, you bad dietitian.
And you think you are.
It's like, oh, I'm a comfortably full.
What I know from my own experience,
it means I probably less hungry for lunch.
And I don't do any penance for it.
I like to say what my body's gonna do naturally, you know?
So we're really just riding,
we're tuning into our bodies and riding that through the day
instead of letting all of these external factors drive us.
Including people.
You've been saying this all along and it only took me now to understand it.
But that's actually the way it works.
So that's actually, you're actually very advanced that you understand it right now.
Okay.
I'm sincere when I say that.
It's you are actually in charge.
You're the boss.
And I tell you my young adult patients love it.
I say, I work for you.
You're the expert of your body.
The problem is you have fear around your body.
You have mistrust. I can help you start to cultivate some of your body. The problem is you have fear around your body. You have mistrust.
I can help you start to cultivate some of these things
and the compassion that's needed when you make eating,
I don't even have to say mistakes,
but when you eat in a way that's upsetting to you,
I'm always like, what can you learn from this experience?
What can you learn from this?
What were the causes and conditions that this happened?
Yeah, you don't feel good right now, I hear that,
but what happened?
And what might you do differently next time?
You know?
Well, for example, so what would I do differently around having flown out to San Francisco
a couple of days ago and experience some pretty massive jet lag exacerbated by having a
four-year-old in the hotel?
Woke up at 315 very, very lonely.
No.
What can I learn from that?
Because I can't make jet lag no longer a part of my life.
Of course.
And so I did a lot of sort of mindless comfort eating.
How would I incorporate that into my going forward attitude
towards?
Yeah, so what I do with this is like,
it's like, it, you work with what you know to be true for you.
And that is jet lags are regularly part of your,
your career, that kind of travel.
And so the question to me is, okay, this is, I call it heavy metal jacket time for self-care.
And I'm in the same way, by the way, I don't feel good when I'm traveling like that. So that
means I'm going to do my damnedest to get sleep. You don't have that option with a kid,
you know, waking up at 315. But I'm going to really make an effort to have meals if I
can rather than snacks. I don't, I don't, my preference, and this is not a right or
wrong. My body feels better if I can sit down
and have a civilized meal as opposed to running
from snack to snack to snack.
The snack will do a lot of that.
With the latter, they're running from snack to snack.
And I do that in my office when I have busy, crazy days,
but I think the reason I'm not so impacted,
I don't have the jet lag or other things going on.
I think there's something about the act of sitting
and taking the time out that it does something for my mind
besides the actual eating aspects. So for me, that's something that the act of sitting and taking the time out that it does something for my mind besides the actual eating aspects.
So for me, that's something that really, really works.
It might mean I'm not taking on an extra project during that time period.
It's going to be yes, but not now or later, or just going to be a flat out no.
So I look at those kinds of things.
So when you're having what I call these really vulnerable times, what foundational self-care
needs do you need?
And that's not a bunch of woo-woo.
I've had patients call me on that.
Like, I want to get a manicure.
I don't want to.
It's like, I'm not talking about them.
I'm talking about the boring self-care, like sleep, you know,
like having downtime, time for yourself, time to have a meal.
And sometimes you can't.
And you're going to be one of my best out of body experience
is not out of body.
Awareness experience.
I am driving.
This was a crazy day.
I'm fighting off a cold.
I have a cough drop. This is multitasking, multitying, a cough drop, this was a crazy day. I'm fighting off a cold, I have a cough drop,
this is multitasking, multitying,
a cough drop on one side of my mouth
and I'm eating a bagel on the other
as I'm driving to work.
And I thought I wish I had a picture of this.
And the reason I love telling that story
sometimes it's the best we can do.
And that's, I was okay with that, didn't I mean?
So this is instructive because your example is instructive
and I know that's why you shared it,
is one can have a sense of humor,
as opposed to sort of an inner sort of militaristic attitude,
toward the mistakes that we are ultimately going to,
mistake might not even be the right word.
Learning experiences.
Learning experiences that we have on this course,
because as you said earlier, we are human,
we are going to overeat until we're uncomfortable at full.
Yeah, absolutely.
And your approach, which you just modeled, is laugh at it and learn from it, as opposed
to go into some crazy self-lazzuration.
Exactly.
And that's the part that actually hurts mental health, all of that, the expectations and
the rigidity.
And that's what I find for a lot of people when they struggle with.
So sometimes I have this rigid mindset that eating needs to be the certain way.
It's like, no.
And that toxicity that you've, the cortisol you've released into the system almost guarantees
that you're going to do it again.
Well, that's actually a really good point.
If you're being stressed out about your eating decisions and then you, and then you're gonna do it again. Well, that's actually a really good point. If you're being stressed out about your eating decisions
and then you're stressed eater,
you've just double loaded yourself up, absolutely.
Absolutely.
So, let's go back to the,
I have the 10 more parts of intuitive eating.
We've rejected the diet mentality.
We've honored our hunger.
We're making peace with our food.
For here is challenge the food police.
Oh, yeah, this is a good one for you.
And you have jumped out of order
because there's a couple of other.
Yeah, I told you.
So that's fine.
All good.
You know what I do in session two is like,
what is the person need?
Yeah.
This is the model, but you don't have to go in order.
When you write a book, you have to go in order.
But yeah, so challenge the food police
is working with the inner critic, the inner bully in your mind, you know? It's the collective food police that, you have to go in order. But yeah, so challenge the food police is working with the inner critic,
the inner bully in your mind.
It's the collective food police
that tells you how to eat and those kinds of things.
Like, so I like to ask, where did your rules come from?
What food rules do you have?
And where did they come from?
And I'm not even so much concerned about the rules.
I'm looking more at the rigidity on them,
and I'm looking at what happens
if you so-called violate one of your rules. How does that impact you? And that's an interesting conversation
right there. Where do my rules come from? I mean, I think they come from random bits of,
well actually, you know, I have a nutritionist who actually is quite a, a, a,
a compassion soft in his approach, even though he's a vegan body builder. Okay.
But he's pretty, sort of, he has a sense of humor and is not, I think, very much understands
the dis-utility of shame.
But I guess, yeah, him or just random conversations I had with people who look really healthy.
Yeah.
And so, and then we start looking at some of the rules.
So let's say it came from a person of authority
Well, where did that information come from? It's really interesting when we it's deconstructing sometimes
The our own myths. It's like well who said that who made up that rule, you know to what end to is it serving me right now?
Is it serving me or is it I once had a patient? I love this
It's it's a mundane example, but it's a brilliant one and she she said, yeah, my rules, I have to have protein with me.
I was like, okay, what happens if you don't?
Because I'm kind of disappointed.
And I said, well, I should go because I know I'm going
to be hungrier later.
I go, that's, you know, so that was great feedback.
She's not rigid about it.
She's in touch with her body.
I didn't work with her very long,
because she was really in a really good place.
Well, protein is interesting because I keep it in mind, in part because it's a little bit
more challenging to get protein when you're on a plant-based diet and I'd like to exercise
and you need a certain, you know, you don't need as much as the culture is telling you
as I've learned, but you need a certain amount of protein for it to perform at your best.
So I do try to keep that in mind.
That is, I guess, a rule and there are plenty of lines.
It could be a guideline.
If it's a guideline and a preference, that's not a big deal.
It's when I look at the rigidity of it.
I see.
I see.
Especially when it involves restricting. That's when I get really concerned.
Gotcha.
You're eating less.
All right. So, that's four, five. It's respect your fullness, which we've done.
We've done, yeah.
Six is discover the satisfaction factor, which we've done.
Yeah.
Seven is, and I don't think we've done this one, honor your feelings without using food.
Yeah, and so, and I want to be, I want to clarify on this, it's, it's normal to use food
with feelings and we celebrate when we have a wedding, there's going to, did you have wedding
cake, Dan?
Oh, yeah, I had, I was eating sugar.
Okay.
Those are the kinds of things that make me sad when there's a life event that we have
a tradition as a culture and you opt out for whatever reason.
Do you know what I mean?
I am rethinking the whole sugar thing.
I'll get back in touch with you after this and let you know how it goes.
That's awesome.
So it's about expanding your toolbox for coping mechanisms.
So like when you travel and you're constantly exhausted, what are your coping mechanisms
to deal with the emotional fatigue and then the physical fatigue looking at those kinds
of things? So I use a kind of a two-point technique there.
When eating is feeling like it's beyond you,
that you're eating in a way that doesn't feel good to your body,
it's a way of coping with emotions.
What are you feeling right now?
That's not a hard question to ask or answer,
but the one that stump's feeling every time is,
what do you need right now that's related to that feeling?
What do you need right now that's related to that feeling? What do you need right now, you know?
so
if I'm
bored yeah
And I'm reaching for something that I know is gonna make me feel crappy
Yeah, because it has in the past okay, or actually it's not so much the thing. It's the quantity of the thing okay
It may be asking myself, what are you feeling,
and what do you actually need the face of this board?
Yeah, what kind of stimulation can I have other than,
doesn't need to be food?
Yes.
You know, I've got, I have this growing list of things.
I start with a couple of foundational suggestions
I get people, and then we grow from there.
So my top two right now are people
are curating puppy videos.
And then what's the other one?
Lama videos, a little baby lamas.
It's just something to do that's kind of engaging
and you can look at it later.
It has to be whatever's meaningful for you.
Meditation.
Meditation, there you go.
Eight, respect your body.
Oh, that's a big one.
And we alluded to it a little bit at the top.
And that is this idea that you cannot tell by the look of someone's body what their health is,
and that all bodies, and I mean all, and I'm really careful when I use words all or never, and I mean when I say all,
all bodies deserve dignity and respect, period.
And that's a tough one for a lot of my patients. A lot of my patients have grown up with shame around their bodies,
or not even shame per se, but that the only way that you can be successful in the world is to have a certain kind of
appearance, you know, and they're spending all their time and mental energy around that
and in pain and suffering.
And I do see a lot of patients with eating disorders.
And I think part of the reason we're seeing eating disorders double is because of all of
this appearance-based stuff we got going on with our culture in part with social media
and in part with diet culture.
Well, what do we do about the fact that we have,
we can stipulate, I believe,
because you've said it to the fact that people will judge you
often based on how you look.
So given that many of us want to navigate the world
even I'm on TV, so people, if I put on a bunch of weight,
may notice, it may not attend to look,
this is very unfair, but it tends to be way more scrutiny on the females on TV than males.
But nonetheless, maybe they'll notice and maybe I'll be less successful or whatever.
Should I not take that into account?
So we're talking about a big issue right now and has to do with weight stigma.
That's a problem that I want to help solve,
but it's systemic.
Yes.
And I'll, okay, I'm gonna be really vulnerable
with it here now.
The one and only time as an adult that I thought
about dieting was when I made my debut
in Good Morning America.
It was four months post-pregnant, post-partum rather,
post-pregnant, yeah.
This is back in.
Back in 95.
And I thought if I'm ever gonna diet, it'd be now.
And I thought about it, and I couldn't do it
from being aligned within my values.
But the point I'm saying is I felt that urge
because of the perception.
And so what we need to do,
this is easier said than done,
is we need to work past that,
that you're more than what you look.
It's interesting right now to be seeing more diversity
in media, more diversity in magazines
in women's bodies and sizes and we need that.
So, there's not an easy answer on that, but we see the harm of weight stigma in healthcare.
Where doctors are looking and these have been documented in medical journals where they look at someone and say,
oh yeah, just lose weight, you'll be fine. There was a woman who died a few years ago in Canada,
was just feeling awful after doctor to doctor, they said, just lose weight.
She finally saw a doctor that saw more than her body,
didn't work up, she had a stage four cancer
and died just days later.
So in her obituary, she put that in there
so that no one would go through the fat shaming
that she had.
It's a really big problem in her culture, you know?
Wow.
And yet, it's not sure, it really answers
what we should do as individuals.
If I'm on the hunt for a new job
and I want to look my best in my interviews.
Yeah, I this is a systemic problem right I can't solve that myself and and yet I still need the job so should I not be restricting my eating or no absolutely not
double sessions at Barry's bootcamp in order to lose the weight no I think and I actually I have worked with people in the entertainment business where that's part of,
I mean, I'm talking about actors and I used to work
in movie industry and I've been there seeing that.
And the problem is, and what I look at is what this does
to you in terms of your energy.
All your mind now is going to on this, this diet thing.
If you're acting, you can't even emote properly
because you're a little dull, you know?
And so it's about really connecting with what you bring
to the table, what your value set is, period.
And I would hope, hope, hope
where you're adding your career right now
that that's what really matters for you.
And that maybe you can start being part of that message, Dan.
Yeah, I mean, it's really, I'm really,
there's so much here that's electrifying.
Yeah.
And this is a big one, an important one too.
No, I'm referring to everything you're saying.
Oh, thank you.
One thing that's just particularly on my mind right now
is just thinking about how much energy
I've wasted on this.
Yes.
You know, I will tell you, I can't tell you
how many tearful sessions I've had with people around that.
The amount of time spent, the amount of money spent, postponing a vacation
or not going to an event because they didn't want to blow their diet.
This one, I'll tell you this, when I hear a lot from parents, is how cranky they were
and yelling at their kids in a way that wasn't aligned with their parenting values.
And I don't say this to guilt or shame anyone, but just to shed the light on, there are consequences
when the body is not getting enough to eat.
Our body, we have this illusion
that we have 100% control over what we eat.
It's kind of like breathing.
We can, we need all the stuff with the breath,
you can do in meditation,
but you can also choose to stop breathing,
but you also know the moment you stop to choose breathing,
your body will finally make you breathe.
You'll pass out and when you come to,
it'll be, you're gonna inhale the whole room.
And the same thing with eating.
If you stop eating enough food or restricting
to a certain level, there gets to be a point
where your body mind can't stand it.
You're gonna be thinking about food more.
It's in the brain aspect and there's gonna be a drive
and then when you finally eat, you're gonna inhale it.
It's not a little polite snack here.
So nine exercise, feel the difference.
Yeah, and actually it was interesting.
We have our fourth edition's coming out in June 2020.
We're actually changing the word to movement instead of exercise because so many people have had
a lot of shaming around that in terms of the militant kind of stuff. But the idea is that you move
in a way that feels good. So having the joy of movement was so key. And I don't know if you know
my athletic background, but I'm someone who nationally likes to move.
I, I ran on the boys track team because they didn't have a girls track team when I was in school.
And then competed in college and then Olympic trials in, in the marathon.
So I'm, I'm someone who I like exhilarating movement, not because of what it's doing to my body,
but I love how it makes me feel during it.
And then afterwards, wow, well, now I have to admit that, you know, I exercise most days, and I do like the way I feel afterwards,
but I think that very often I'm doing it not
because I'm enjoying it in a moment,
but I'm doing it because I like,
I wanna make sure that I'm healthy
and I wanna make sure that,
and I have some goals either stated or unstated internally
about the way I want it to show up on my physique.
Uh-huh, uh-huh.
So, and what happens at least with some of the people I see
is when the exercise or movement is mainly about
the calories burned or physique oriented,
it's easy to burn out.
And then, number two, if someone's on some kind of weight loss
diet and they're exercising, I don't know how to do that.
That's hard to do.
And so a common pattern I see is they stop the diet
and they stop working out and they have a lot of shame.
And my answer is, I don't know how you do that.
Ferrari is not gonna go if there's no gas in the tank,
it's not gonna go around the track
and your body doesn't want to go.
But how do we uproot those?
So I'm not doing that.
I'm not on a diet.
But I do all different forms of exercise, and I really like the way I feel,
and a little bit how I look afterwards, but I don't often enjoy the doing of the thing.
So, you're saying I should just totally orient toward exercise that I actually enjoy in the moment.
For the most part, but sometimes, you know,
I'll give you an example, maybe meditation's a better
example for me to use.
I often don't enjoy it while I'm doing it.
I enjoy the aftermath of it.
I enjoy the quality of my life, but sometimes it's the pain
in the butt for me to go sit on the cushion.
It's just the, you know what I mean?
And so that can be that way sometimes for movement as well,
but knowing that you get these other secondary benefits,
I think that's fine.
So fine, so I swam a bunch this morning
and it was a little monotonous,
but so I might not have loved it in the moment,
but I do like the way it makes me feel
and if I'm tuning into that, there's the power.
Exactly, exactly.
I will say one thing I've mentioned Grace Livingston,
who's one of the producers on the show, she's also helping me. I'm writing a book right now about kindness and she's
served my partner in crime on that as a heading up a lot of the research and also giving me feedback
as I go. She refers to herself as a book therapist. Oh, I love that. It's really cool. And she
And she had the suspicion that maybe there was a little bit
of difficult energy around my approach to exercise. And gave me a suggestion to occasionally drop
in the notion while working out of gratitude.
Oh, I love that.
So I'll be working out and I'll notice
that I'm on some big jag of,
wow, I'm not doing enough, or this is not gonna be enough
for the day, or this isn't gonna make a difference
on whatever metric I want, and just to best of my ability,
boom, just be grateful that I have a body
that's functioning at this level, at this age,
et cetera, et cetera, so many people don't.
And I found that to be a pretty close to a silver bullet.
I have to drop it in a bunch,
in my mind, and as I did during swimming today,
wow, this is boring.
Hey, but you can do this thing.
And I was able to get swimming lessons not long ago
so that I can do it correctly,
but grateful that I had the means to do that.
So that, anyway, I just share that as a part of it.
Well, I think that's a really good point.
And then I think what I'd add to that too,
that it's okay to take a day off,
if you're not feeling good,
if you're not feeling it.
You know?
Because you don't want to get injured also.
That was the hardest thing I ever learned how to do
is that rest of this is important as training,
especially if you're going more intense activities.
I just recently, I'm gonna tell you,
my aspiration is to be a ping pong player and into style.
I actually have a ping pong coach.
And I love it.
And one of the reasons why, besides fact, I love it,
is I don't see many entries around at all.
I want the longevity of doing this.
My other sports I've been injured in, so yeah.
Let's do the last, the 10th of your pillars here,
which is one that we've mentioned, but I think it worth
digging in again, because I can hear skeptics out there
asking this question in their heads over and over again.
Honor your health with gentle nutrition.
Right.
So in other words, you don't beat yourself up over how you ate.
And it's more about looking at your pattern of eating over time.
And the biggest kick I get is when someone asks me, when can I start eating healthy Evelyn?
And my answer is anytime you want to, but usually they're coming out of the rabbit hole
of dieting, they're making peace with food, and they don't want to go back to the rigidity of which
they had, you know?
And so it's looking at those kinds of things.
It's looking at, yeah, adding some more vegetables into your eating and those aspects.
And so one of the things I like to stress is intuitive eating is actually 10 principles.
You can't cherry pick them and just say it's just make peace with food.
If you go on to Instagram and you look at the hashtag of intuitive eating, all you see
are pink donuts. I think because people are so excited they can eat these things,
that's what they write about. They don't write about the On Your Health with gentle nutrition,
but that's still a part. And you get to a point, you don't apologize or explain what you're
eating, whether it's donuts or whether it's a salad with kale and tofu grilled into it,
it's your body, your business. Okay, so if people find themselves at the end of this
conversation and in the position
which I find myself right now, which is really intrigued.
Yeah.
What are the next steps?
What do they want to do?
I want to do your program.
Oh my gosh!
Wow!
So we do have a workbook, the Intuitive Eating Workbook.
That's one way, it's more intense in the book,
because there's a lot of questions in there
to really help you get connected.
To read the book, get the workbook.
Get the workbook for sure, for sure.
We have a free online community,
the Intuitivating Online Community.
You can follow me on Instagram.
And so the way that I say this,
that most people can actually do this on their own,
but what happens sometimes is they,
when you have a long history of shame around your body,
or around dieting, you might need some help with with that and so we have trained people that that are trained in our method
And you could check that out
So you may have somebody locally who could be your counselor, right?
Exactly. They're certified into a debuting counselor. Yeah
That's excellent because it sounds like for I just to repeat what you just said and I'm thinking this maybe even true for me that
As as exciting as a listening to a conversation like this may be or as for me, that as exciting as listening to a conversation
like this may be or as exciting as a book and a workbook may be, you may need an accountability
partner or some more.
You know, and I got to tell you, yeah, okay, so I guess I'm going to tell you this.
So we have, we have over 900 people in 23 countries trained in this.
So I just finished training three groups of Ukrainian psychologist.
They want to train because the Moscow
Moscow psychologist got trained
I think it's great, but it's it's really neat that
That they're you want to use this method. Do you know what I mean?
Because imagine if every health professional that you saw your doctor you saw your trainer
You saw your nutritionist and you're getting a similar message. I think we'd be we'd be in a better place in this world
I'm gonna do it. Oh, I'm that's awesome. In better place in this world. I'm going to do it.
Oh, that's awesome.
In closing, is there any point that I didn't give you a chance to make during the course
of this interview?
My gosh.
I'll feel guilty by not giving you some answer to that question, something profound.
Do you feel satisfied at the end of this meal?
Oh, my God.
I feel satisfied at the end of this conversation.
I actually do.
I feel heard and understood, which is actually really a really great feeling.
The fact that it's opened up your mind to some possibilities is thrilling to me.
I can guarantee you I got more out of this than you did.
Oh, well, gay.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, thank you.
Thanks again to Evelyn Trivoli. Love her. She's amazing. Talk to her all the time.
And like I said, that interview had a massive effect on me.
Thanks to you for listening.
I genuinely appreciate that.
And thanks most of all to everybody
who worked so hard on this show.
10% Happier is produced by Justin Davey Gabrielle
Zacherman, Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson, DJ Cashmere,
as our senior producer, Marissa Schneiderman
as our senior editor, Kevin O'Connell,
as our director of audio and post-production,
and Kimi Regler as our executive producer, Alicia Mackie leads our marketing and Tony Magiar is our director of
podcasts. Finally Nick Thorburn of Islands wrote our theme. If you're interested in learning
more about intuitive eating, we'll post a link in the show notes to an episode with Christi
Harrison that further explores this topic. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
If you like 10% happier, I hope you do.
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