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Goodbye Comfort Food: How to Free Yourself from Overeating
Goodbye Comfort Food: How to Free Yourself from Overeating
Goodbye Comfort Food: How to Free Yourself from Overeating
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Goodbye Comfort Food: How to Free Yourself from Overeating

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About this ebook

Find a way out of emotional eating when life throws you a curveball with compassionate advice from the author of Devour Obstacles for Dinner.
 
Why can’t I stop eating when I’m so great at everything else?
 
Are you a successful, loving woman who can’t stop reaching for pizza and chocolate cake? Does the idea of a diet-free life sound like a pipe dream? Have you recently overeaten, then regretted it? Are you convinced that a bag of chips and a box of cookies are the best comfort for dealing with stress? If your answer is yes, there is a different way to ‘do life.’
 
In Goodbye Comfort Food, Robin Rae Morris, a licensed mental health professional, shares an upbeat, engaging, and proven process to help you eat to nourish your body.
 
Here’s what you’ll learn:
 
  • Why you turn to food for comfort.
  • To eat when you’re hungry. Stop when you’re not.
  • How to end the yo-yo weight cycles.
  • The shocking revelation that there are no good or bad foods.
  • Why never going on a diet again can be the best decision you’ll ever make.
 
If you’re ready to stop relying on comfort food to get you through the day-to-day buy this book today!
 
“My clients with food issues are laughing and relating to this book in a way that brings them hope and supportive tools to use every day.” —Wendi Carter, LCSW, counselor and life coach
 
“Robin’s insights are like the combination of your best friend, confidant, expert and equal.” —Dr. Deborah Walters, author of The Supreme Remedy
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 2, 2019
ISBN9781642792812
Goodbye Comfort Food: How to Free Yourself from Overeating
Author

Robin Rae Morris

Robin is a licensed mental health counsellor who enjoys private practice in Woodinville, Washington. She loves beauty of the Pacific Northwest and also loves travelling to present at seminars. She has worked in community agencies, private and public schools, and has been a dance teacher and theatre director for kids 5 – 95. In all of her work, she is most concerned with the transformational process for each individual, and providing opportunities for deep connections between individuals. Her varied professional career positions give her a unique, creative and easy to relate to style. She encourages clients to become self-empowered and also to access their innate creativity. Robin has a Masters Degree in Existential Phenomenological Therapeutic Psychology from Seattle University, in Seattle Washington. Don’t be afraid of that last sentence, it just means that her therapeutic training focuses on the issues faced by humans throughout our life spans. She loves books, bicycles, being grateful, gardening, hiking and snow-skiing. To learn about counselling, consulting and speaking opportunities, please visit RobinMorrisCounseling.com A long time story teller, both by nature and the family she was born into, Robin has also become a collector of stories. These stories are based in the funny, poignant, determined and passionate accounts collected over thirty years of choosing to work as a dedicated helping professional. She is continuing to be of service to others by offering a series of books and also a series of seminars. The books and seminars are based in getting inspired by others’ stories, and assisting clients to create their own magnificent life story.

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    Book preview

    Goodbye Comfort Food - Robin Rae Morris

    They don’t call it comfort food for nothin’! Let’s talk about what they are. C’mon, you know your mouth is already watering. Your mind is planning for when you’ll eat them. You can feel it so close, so let’s name names!

    In no particular order, our cast of characters includes, but is not limited to:

    •Fried chicken

    •Teriyaki chicken

    •Chicken alfredo

    •Pasta with meatballs

    •Pasta with tofu

    •Pasta with parmesan

    •Pizza with parmesan

    •Brie, cheddar, or goat cheese on bread

    •Sourdough bread, 14-grain bread, or cinnamon raisin English muffins

    •Blueberry muffins, chocolate chip cookies, carrot cakes, and lemon pies

    •Bacon and eggs. Bacon and everything.

    •Fruit *

    *Fruit. No. Just kidding. I once had a therapist tell me If you have to eat for comfort, try eating fruit. I thought, You just don’t get it.

    And now I realize how much she didn’t get it. Not only have I never met a single comfort food eater who wants to soothe with sliced fruit, the physiology isn’t there.

    Our go-to comfort foods of choice are brilliant. They are the foods that will dampen our physiology so that we literally feel less emotion and stress. Additionally, since most of our comfort food choices involve sugars and carbohydrates, our brains will begin to crave even more of them, which keeps us trapped in a comfort-food feedback loop that becomes progressively harder to break.

    Then there’s the marketing that surrounds us. A recent advertising poster outside of the local Starbucks featured a photo of a whipped cream topped caramel coffee drink below which was written, Made to Crave. Like that’s a good thing. Well, maybe it is for Starbucks. Yet my point is that as if it weren’t difficult enough to break a comfort food, emotional eating cycle, everywhere we look, we’re encouraged to reward ourselves with foods that increase the very cravings we’re trying to overcome. C’mon, you deserve a break today. And you do, you deserve the opportunity to break away from foods and habits that momentarily sweeten your life, yet ultimately steal your soul, well-being, energy, and positive sense of self.

    Speaking of giving yourself a break, before you go any further in this book, the first thing I’d like you to do is to congratulate yourself for choosing comfort food. It’s a brilliant way to deal with the world: simple, effective, and efficient; a dependable problem with a dependable response and dependable outcome.

    Something up? Something uncertain? Grab a two-foot submarine sandwich and down that puppy in one sitting. Go ahead. No one’s judging. Ok. You might be judging yourself, but not in that moment, because in that moment, there is the experience of yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum in every quickly inhaled bite.

    Yes, we love comfort food. And we long for a way out of this mess. There is a way out of turning to food when life throws you a curveball, your boss expects overtime, your kids are a mess, and your life feels unmanageable.

    There is also the possibility that, once a comfort food woman, the desire (whether quietly nudging you or urgently screaming at you) to turn to your favorite comfort food in times of trouble and turmoil will never completely go away.

    What will change, I promise you and I know you don’t and shouldn’t believe me yet, is that no amount of comfort food will ever be worth your peace of mind, clarity of thoughts, and ease of taking fruitful action. (Which I guess is where the fruit actually comes in.)

    Helen has had a hard day at the office. Despite a recent promotion that originally left her elated, she is now overwhelmed at no longer being part of the team, but instead giving her first performance reviews to people who used to be her co-workers and pals.

    Her first performance review required putting a pal on a performance plan. It was a tense meeting. It ended in polite and politically correct statements addressed to one another. At the end of the meeting, Helen thought, We used to share with one another. Now, we’re speaking corporate speak—the kind of language we used to make fun of! Helen felt the pang of lost connection.

    Helen returned home, put on her PJs, skipped dinner, pulled out a pint of Ben and Jerry’s Chocolate Therapy ice cream and a package of Walkers shortbread cookies shaped like adorable Scottish Terrier dogs, and cuddled up in a blanket on the couch. Netflix, and comfort food, take her away!

    She simultaneously watched the newest installment of This Is Us, while the ice cream melted away her cares. The smooth, buttery cookies added just a bit of crunch. The creamy goodness and buttery crunch became one with the emotional catharsis of people living an intense TV life. Suddenly, Helen was in heaven.

    She polished off another pint of ice cream, the entire package of cookies, and

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