Read 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food Online
Authors: Susan Albers
Next, pick something from your list and start planning how to make it happen, even if you aren’t ready to do it immediately. For example, if you want to take piano lessons, look through the phone book for piano teachers. If you want to go scuba diving in Greece, look on the Internet for organized trips. Investigate where they go and how much they cost. This will not only distract you from thoughts about food, it will motivate you to start thinking about the steps you’ll need to take to make your goals happen.
If I didn’t have to work, I’d spend my day cooking, trying new recipes, and making batches of buttercream icing. I love to create new gourmet meals and to bake homemade bread. This passion doesn’t help my waistline. If I was ever going to get a handle on my eating, I had to find something that tapped into my creative juices just as much as cooking does.
—Joan
Joan was one of my best-dressed clients. Every week she’d come to therapy wearing an amazing outfit. I’d overhear the receptionist compliment Joan’s “look.” The secret to Joan’s style wasn’t expensive clothing. It was her homemade jewelry. Her necklace and earrings complimented the color of her shirt to perfection.
Joan didn’t wear her jewelry for the compliments. She was the first to admit that making the pieces was her favorite form of personal therapy. Creating a work of art that she could wear each week made her feel good about her body. She focused less on her weight and more on her style. The process of stringing little beads on a nylon strand kept her hands too busy to pick at food. Also, planning the patterns took a lot of mental energy that pushed food to the back of her mind.
Creating things stimulates your brain in new ways. Designing patterns or seeing a work of art come together is both invigorating and challenging. Working at a craft can help you feel more excited and motivated in ways that simply relaxing may not. You may even observe that when you share your creations with others, you feel like a more well-rounded and interesting person.
Ironically, many emotional eaters are fantastic bakers. Because they love food, they may spend a lot of time baking and cooking. Although the action of cooking can be very soothing, it’s also a recipe for a setup unless you focus on creating only healthy recipes! Very few cooks can prepare food without eating it. So instead of cooking to soothe yourself, try experimenting with some crafts.
~self-soothing technique~
Creative Soothing
I was so bored I didn’t know what to do with myself. The white chocolate macadamia cookies in the kitchen were beginning to call my name, loudly. If I didn’t do something soon, I’d inhale them all, like a vacuum cleaner, in a matter of seconds. So I sat down in front of my computer and started looking up all the random things that crossed my mind. I don’t have time to do this kind of investigation at work. This was the perfect moment to get lost in cyberspace.
—Betsy
If you struggle with boredom, your computer offers you an endless possibility of distractions, from e-mail and instant messaging to iTunes and the Internet. Many businesses have chosen to ban Internet searches precisely because they lose a significant amount of productivity every day due to employees surfing the Web.
If you don’t know where to start, try
www.google.com
and
www.yahoo.com
, which are two popular search engines. “Googling” has become known to many as a verb, as in one googles this or that topic. Searching the Internet will keep your mind and hands busy.
~self-soothing technique~
Type Away the Urge to Eat
Whenever I get into a bad mood, I skip right past the candy I have tucked away and head straight for my old Beatles’ albums. In a matter of moments, I’m singing along, totally wrapped up in the music. Even if I was fighting some major cravings, they are gone as soon as I’ve played a song or two. There are certain songs I play when I’m down, like “Yesterday” and songs to pick me up, like “Love Me Do.” A good song can make me feel better than a massage.
—Judy
Certain songs can turn sadness to laughter, frustration to calmness, and anger to joy in only a matter of minutes. Lyrics contribute to the medicinal power of music. Think of a time when you heard a song that summed up perfectly how you were feeling. It’s nice to know that someone has felt the same way that you have and has understood exactly how you feel. Music can also interrupt negative thoughts. Happy songs, for example, steer your mind in a more positive direction.
Music doesn’t just calm your mind, it also impacts your body. Music has many therapeutic benefits because it affects the brain in so many complex ways. Certain types of music have been shown to enhance memory, calm mood, manage stress, alleviate pain, and improve communication. If you find a song soothing, you will know it by your breathing, which will slow down. Music therapists have also found that the movements of the heart muscles tend to synchronize to the beat of music. The rhythms of classical music are often similar to the average resting heartbeat of approximately 70 beats per minute. So listening to soothing music can help slow down a heart beating too rapidly, which may occur when you are anxious. Faster compositions stimulate your heart rate and sometimes they can actually speed up your entire nervous system.
~self-soothing technique~
Kick Back to a Soothing Melody
Digging my hands into the dirt is so therapeutic. I work in an office, so I never get a chance to get dirty or to sit in the sunlight. Pulling out weeds feels so cathartic and rewarding. When I want to gobble up food, I go into the garden and start digging. It’s harder to mindlessly chomp away at French fries when I’m reminded of how long it takes to hoe one row of potatoes.
—Diane
If you know someone with a green thumb, probably you’ve already heard about the therapeutic nature of gardening. Gardening has a number of soothing benefits that just might be what you are looking for.
Gardens bring forth your nurturing qualities. Flowers and vegetables require frequent care and tending. Maintaining a garden directs a person’s awareness toward the notion of adequate care. Too much or not enough water can be harmful, just like eating too much or too little food. You must get to know your garden well to water it exactly the right amount. You also have to pay attention to the environment. After too much rain, you respond by reducing the amount of watering you do. Think about how similar this is to learning your own needs and to feeding your hunger appropriately. You too must continually adjust how much you eat.
If you keep plants inside your home or at your office, you are increasing the amount of oxygen in the air around you. The plants take in carbon dioxide and use it (with sunlight) to sustain life. Then they expel oxygen back into the atmosphere.
~self-soothing technique~
Mending and Tending Your Mood
I love the taste of potato chips. I could munch away on them all day long. Mindless eating pushes me into this weird mental twilight zone. I don’t really taste the chips. Nor do I think about how many I ate. When I’m sufficiently relaxed, I wake up from being zoned out and freak out about how much I ate. I try to just lie down instead of eating, but I get bored and feel lazy when I’m not doing anything. Recently, I’ve found other calorie-free ways to unplug. I’ve become addicted to puzzles!
—Ariel
Ariel was about to take a test to become a certified dental assistant. If she didn’t pass it, she wouldn’t be hired by the local dentist who had promised her a job. She was feeling terribly worried. After hours of studying, she couldn’t concentrate any longer. She couldn’t stop thinking about what would happen if she didn’t pass. Many disastrous scenarios raced through her head. She was very tempted to reach for the box of crackers on the desk. She could make them disappear in a heartbeat if she let herself.
Instead, Ariel took a mini mental break. She flipped through a puzzle book she’d bought at the magazine stand down the street. Ariel had picked it up only because her sister was obsessed with puzzles. She’d wondered what the attraction was. She chose a puzzle for beginners and got started. In a few minutes, she was completely immersed in the puzzle. She completely forgot her anxiety. The upcoming test vanished from her mind. When she’d finished the puzzle, she felt an huge sense of accomplishment. This gave her the needed boost to start studying again with a fresh mind. Puzzles are like exercise for the brain. They help develop new connections and use parts of the brain that are not always operating. Wouldn’t it be nice to access more parts of your brain so that they can logically talk you out of stress eating?
~self-soothing technique~
Calming Mind Games
~self-soothing technique~
Magnet Notes
It’s likely that you have plenty of magnets on your refrigerator. We mostly use these helpful little gadgets in very functional ways—to hang little reminder notes and photos. Often, these magnets are the only things standing between you and opening the refrigerator. So why not use them to your full advantage? Buy a set of letter or word magnets. You’ll find large collections on wordmagnets.com and thinkgeek.com. When you are tempted to open the refrigerator, spend a few minutes making up a sentence or poem. You’ll be surprised at how addicting this action can be.