Sept/Oct 2007

feature article
The Joy of Eating
Psychology, Physiology, and Food
BY WENDY UNDERHILL
Let me push aside my buttered cinnamon toast and get to work on today’s
assignment, the Psychology of Eating. We aren’t talking pathologies
and disorders; nor are we talking about the latest news flash about micronutrients.
For now, we’re talking
about the Why of Eating, as opposed to the What.
Take my cinnamon toast, for example. As kids, my brothers and I not only
toasted bread and slathered it with butter and copious quantities of cinnamon
sugar, but we also put it under the broiler until it just began to bubble.
No surprise, then, that it’s my food of choice when life gets rocky.
Meanwhile, I’m chasing my toast with tea—fully caffeinated
and laced with sugar overriding natural, physiological mechanisms for
energy and appetite. Dare I also mention that I’m reading the newspaper
as I eat? By doing two things at once–eating and reading–I’m
not getting full satisfaction from the toast, to say nothing of poor reading
comprehension. Indeed, I’m practicing a form of mindless eating.
There’s yet one more psychological ingredient in this breakfast:
self-chastisement. So why do I–-or so many of us—eat this
way?
Emotional
Eating
Sometimes, we eat because it seems to meet an emotional need. We may eat
in response to the clock; if it’s noon, it’s time for lunch,
whether we’re hungry or not. We may eat when we’re bored,
or in response to an emotional upset (“What an awful day. A brownie
sure sounds good.”) Sometimes we eat to reward ourselves for a job
well done–a lesson we too-often pass on to our kids. And we may
even eat because our jaw needs to move, to release frustration or stored
tension.
These are just a few of the ways food serves us psychologically. “The
truth is, food works as an antidote to emotional needs,” says Denver-based
Linda Spangle, R.N., M.A., author of Life is Hard, Food is Easy (LifeLine
Press, 2004) and One Hundred Days of Weight Loss (Thomas Nelson, 2007).
“It does make us feel better, but it can become your best friend.
That’s where it becomes a struggle.”
To step aside from that struggle, just recognizing it, is step one; the
second is to know when you’re ready to change. As an example, Blair
Koch, of Boulder, spent her childhood in the competitive figure skating
world. When she left the sport as a high schooler, her weight swelled
from 110 pounds to 180. It wasn’t until after she moved away from
home, finished college and began her career that she shed most of the
added weight quite by accident. She describes it this way:
“I finally had friends who accepted me for who I was and what I
looked like and I just wanted to have some structure in my life. But essentially,
I had the ‘energy’ and ‘focus’ that could be put
towards me. I was so not into dieting that I didn’t really realize
the extent of the weight loss, as I was just having fun eating well, working
out, spending time with friends, etc. In fact, I went home that first
Thanksgiving and my Dad picked me up at the airport and he walked right
by me - he said he didn’t even recognize me!”
Koch is one of the lucky few; when she changed the story of her life,
her body changed, too. And yet she’s still a perfect example of
how food can serve emotional needs, not physical needs. Most of us take
a bit more than just a move to a new city to kick-start a non-diet relationship
with food. That “more” might be finding a food counselor who
can sort out intentions, actions, and “whys” of emotionally
based eating.
Mindless
Eating
Food psychology isn’t limited to just the emotional role a brownie
may play. We also respond unthinkingly to invisible environmental prompts.
The book, Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think by Brian
Wansink, Ph.D., (Bantam, 2006) details the subtle ploys marketers use
to encourage us to eat: big portions, brand names, plate size, prominent
snack displays, labeling junk food as if it’s healthy (gumdrops
are a “Fat Free Food!”), and on and on. Wansink has done countless
experiments that indicate that just about all of us are tricked into eating
more by shapes, smells, price, distractions, containers, and more.
The more we are able to deconstruct these “Eat! Eat!” psychological
messages, the sooner we can begin to re-engineer our shopping, kitchen,
and mealtime habits.
Physiology
The thermodynamic model tells us that food intake minus exercise equals
weight change. This decades-old input/output model is correct as far as
it goes. If you restrict calories enough, weight drops. However, as Americans
gain weight by the year, it is obvious that there is more to the story.
Evolutionarily speaking, humans are more like the ant than the grasshopper
in Aesop’s fable. We’re programmed biochemically to stockpile
resources (that is, fat) when food is available, and release it during
lean times. Now, living in times of endless plenty, we’re stockpiling
more and more against the slim possibility of calamity.
So, we have to change this worthy but outdated internal programming. To
do so, it helps to look at the chemistry of metabolism and our mental
state. “Our frame of mind directly impacts metabolism to such a
degree that what we think and feel profoundly influences how we digest
a meal,” says Marc David, Boulder-based author
of The Slow Down Diet: Eating for Pleasure, Energy and Weight Loss
(Healing Arts, 2005).
(Meet Marc at the Nexus
Holistic Expo November 17-18th, Denver Merchandise Mart. Marc will
be presenting: THE SOUL OF NUTRITION: METABOLIC TRANSFORMATION
FROM DEEP WITHIN - Saturday, November 17th, 2007 10:30 - 11:45am.
Presentation is free with $7 admission to expo. Find out more at:
http://www.nexuspub.com/n_expo_marc_david.htm
)
By reducing stress, we can reboot our systems. Counterintuitive as it
may seem, being more relaxed actually boosts our metabolism and increases
digestion. Additionally, ongoing stress leads to a buildup of cortisol
and insulin, two of the primary hormones that signal the body to store
fat–so when we reduce stress, we stop pumping out compounds that
make our body hang on to every calorie. How to stop stress? First, we
need to slow down our lives. Failing that, we can at least slow down our
eating.
Pleasure.
Ah, the pleasure of food. We not only like to smell it and taste it, we
like to read about it. The memoir, Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman’s
Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth
Gilbert (Penguin, 2006), is the latest hit book that relishes the details
of good food. Here’s a mouthwatering sample, starting as the author
returns from a market trip:
“I walked home to my apartment and soft-boiled a pair of fresh brown
eggs for my lunch. I peeled the eggs and arranged them on a plate beside
the seven stalks of the asparagus (which were so slim and snappy they
didn’t need to be cooked at all). I put some olives on the plate,
too, and the four knobs of goat cheese I’d picked up yesterday from
the formaggeria down the street, and two slices of pink, oily salmon.
For dessert–-a lovely peach, which the woman at the market had given
to me for free and which was still warm from the Roman sunlight. For the
longest time I couldn’t even touch this food because it was such
a masterpiece of lunch, a true expression of the art of making something
out of nothing.”
Now that’s pleasure! And if it boosts our metabolism, great.
Intuitive
Eating.
Gilbert learned to eat what was fresh, local, beautiful–-and there
was no whiff of negativity about it, a negativity inherent in the diet
culture. Without moving to Italy, anyone can access a more natural, intuitive
eating pattern by first paying attention to our sensations of hunger and
satiety.
Once those cycles are brought to the conscious level, we have the choice
to eat when we’re hungry and stop when we’re full. (Note:
eating slowly helps because there’s a delay between eating and when
the brain registers satisfaction.)
This intuitive path is detailed by Evelyn Tribole, MS, RD, in her book,
Intuitive Eating: A Revolutionary Program that Works (St. Martin’s
Griffin, 2003). She recommends that readers stop counting calories, carbohydrates,
or anything else, and that we tune in to whether it is truly a “hunger”
in our stomach or some other craving. Then, guess what? You’ll gravitate
toward good foods that the body needs nutritionally, not emotionally.
While Koch didn’t read Tribble’s book, she could still be
a poster child for the concept.
The best part of “intuitive eating” is that it prompts us
to eat luscious, real foods. Ersatz meals in a can do provide calories
and minerals, but are hardly a satisfying or sustainable way to eat! Indulge
in the delicious: avocados, berries, nuts, greens. One of the urges that
eating should satisfy is the desire for variety, and that comes in texture,
taste, color, and even temperature.
Conscious
Eating.
“Conscious” or “mindful” eating starts from a
similar premise, and helps challenge old habits, whether developed from
cultural messages (“clean your plate”) or physiological pathways
established by years of poor eating.
The concept suggests that we be present and aware when eating, appreciating
the sight of the food before consuming it. That means sitting down to
eat, taking smaller bites, experiencing the mouth feel fully, and savoring
flavors.
Being conscious starts much earlier than the meal, of course. It begins
with advance planning for what to buy and how to take your intentions
to eat joyfully on the road. If nothing else, conscious eating means thinking
first, eating second.
The
sacred nature of food.
From a mind-body-spirit perspective, eating can be a sacred act. Thinking
of it this way may lead to eating with a conscience. If you’re not
convinced, check out the venerable Diet for a Small Planet or
Diet for a New America or the 100-mile diet offered in Plenty:
One Man, One Woman and a Raucous Year of Eating Locally (Crown, 2007).
Food choices based on the sake of the earth tend to satisfy the body as
well. Other worth-reading books that examine the sacred aspects of food:
Art of the Inner Meal: Eating as a Spiritual Path, by Donald
Altman (HarperSanFrancisco, 1999) and Conscious Eating, a masterpiece
by Gabriel Cousens (North Atlantic Books, 2000). Getting in touch with
the sacred tends to provide greater satisfaction in all of aspects of
life. Think about that the next time you reach for your personal equivalent
of cinnamon toast.
Wendy Underhill is a regular contributor to Nexus. Look for her column
"The Enlightened Tourist" each issue.