Intuitive Eating: An 'Anti-Diet' That
Works
ByRita Jenkins
Stop hating your body, stop counting calories
and stop using food for purposes other than
to satisfy hunger, and you'll be healthier
and slimmer. That, in a nutshell, is the argument
in favor of "intuitive eating,"
or letting your body tell you when, what and
how much to eat.
"The basic premise of intuitive
eating is, rather than manipulate what
we eat in terms of prescribed diets --
how many calories a food has, how many
grams of fat, specific food combinations
or anything like that -- we should take
internal cues, try to recognize what our
body wants and then regulate how much
we eat based on hunger and satiety,"
says professor of health science Steven
Hawks, lead researcher of an intuitive-eating
study at Brigham Young University.
The findings are reported in the American
Journal of Health Education.
Hawks, who adopted an intuitive-eating
lifestyle himself several years ago and
lost 50 pounds as a result, says that
"normal" dieting in the United
States doesn't result in long-term weight
loss and contributes to food anxiety and
unhealthy eating practices, and can even
lead to eating disorders.
All Diets Work Against Human Biology
Hawks and colleagues Hala Madanat, Jaylyn
Hawks and Ashley Harris identified a handful
of college students who were naturally
intuitive eaters and compared them with
other students who were not. Participants
then were tested to evaluate their health.
As measured by the Intuitive Eating Scale,
developed by Hawks and others to measure
the degree to which a person is an intuitive
eater, the researchers found that intuitive
eating correlated significantly with lower
body mass index (BMI), lower triglyceride
levels, higher levels of high density
lipoproteins and decreased risk of cardiovascular
disease.
Approximately one-third of the variance
in body mass index was accounted for by
intuitive eating scores, while 17 to 19
percent of the variance in blood lipid
profiles and cardiovascular risk was accounted
for by intuitive eating.
"The findings provide support for
intuitive eating as a positive approach
to healthy weight management," says
Hawks, who plans to do a large-scale study
of intuitive eating across several cultures.
"In less developed countries in
Asia, people are primarily intuitive eaters,"
notes Hawks.
"They haven't been conditioned to
artificially structure their relationship
with food like we have in the United States.
They’ve been conditioned to believe that
the purpose of food is to enjoy, to nurture.
You eat when you're hungry, you stop when
you're not hungry any more. They have
a much healthier relationship with food,
far fewer eating disorders, and interestingly,
far less obesity," he points out.
"What makes intuitive eating different
from a diet, is that all diets work against
human biology, whereas intuitive eating
teaches people to work with their own
biology, to work with their bodies, to
understand their bodies," Hawks explains.
"Rather than a prescriptive diet,
it's really about increasing awareness
and understanding of your body. It's a
nurturing approach to nutrition, health
and fitness as opposed to a regulated,
coercive, restrictive approach. That's
why diets fail, and that's why intuitive
eating has a better chance of being successful
in the long term," he maintains.
Two Attitudes, Two Behaviors
To become an intuitive eater, a person
has to adopt two attitudes and two behaviors.
The first attitude is body acceptance.
"It’s an extremely difficult attitude
adjustment for many people to make, but
they have to come to a conscious decision
that personal worth is not a function
of body size," says Hawks. "Rather
than having an adversarial relationship
with my body, where I have to control
it, and force it to submit to my will
so that I can make it thin, I'm going
to value my body because it allows me
to accomplish some higher good with my
life."
The second attitude is that dieting is
harmful.
"Dieting does not lead to the results
that people think it will lead to, and
so I try to help people foster an anti-dieting
attitude," says Hawks. "You
have to say to yourself, 'I will not base
my food intake on diet plans, food-based
rules, good and bad foods, all of that
kind of thing.' For people who are deep
into dietary restraint and dietary rules,
again, that's a very difficult attitude
adjustment to make, to give up all those
rules."
The first behavior is learning how to
not eat for emotional, environmental or
social reasons.
"Socially we eat all the time in
our culture. We go out to eat ice cream
if we break up with our boyfriend, we
eat to celebrate, we eat when we're lonely,
we eat when we're sad, we eat when we're
stressed out," says Hawks. "Being
able to recognize all the emotional, environmental
and cultural relationships we have with
food and finding better ways to manage
our emotions is part of the process."
The second behavior is learning how to
interpret body signals, cravings and hunger,
and how to respond in a healthy, positive,
nurturing way.
Learning the body's signals can be difficult
at first, but Hawks suggests thinking
about hunger and satiety on a 10-point
scale, where "10" is eating
until one is sick and "1" is
starving.
Intuitive eaters keep themselves at or
around a "5." If they feel they
are getting hungry, they eat until they
are back at a "5" or "6."
They stop eating when they're satisfied,
even if that means leaving food on the
plate.
No Food Is Taboo
One part of intuitive eating that may
be counterintuitive to people conditioned
to restrictive dieting is the concept
that with intuitive eating there is a
place for every food. In other words,
there is no food that's ever taboo. There's
no food you can't ever have.
"Part of adopting an anti-dieting
attitude is the recognition that you have
unconditional permission to eat any kind
of food that you want," says Hawks.
"And that's scary for people who
say, 'If I abandon my diet rules, then
I'll fill a pillowcase full of M&M's,
dive into it and never come up again.
That's what I crave, I know that's what
I crave, that's all I will always crave.'
But that’s not the reality. The reality
is that our bodies crave good nutrition."
It is dieting that creates psychological
and physiological urges to binge on taboo
foods. While people may experience some
binges when they first start eating intuitively,
they eventually will learn to trust themselves
and that behavior will disappear, Hawks
maintains.
One technique he suggests is having an
abundance of previously taboo foods on
hand. Once the foods are no longer forbidden,
a person quickly loses interest in them.
"If people are committed to recognizing
what their bodies really want, the vast
majority of people will say that they
very quickly overcame cravings,"
Hawks says, opening an office desk drawer
filled with untouched junk food. "It
certainly has worked for me."
Copyright 2006 Daily News Central
About The Author
Rita Jenkins is a health journalist for
Daily News Central, an online publication
that delivers breaking news and reliable
health information to consumers, healthcare
providers and industry professionals:
http://www.dailynewscentral.com.