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“Let's Talk About Your Body!”
Originally Published on www.DiabetesCare.net
Publication Date : 09/18/14

By Eliot LeBow, LCSW, CDE

This article is going to address how self-defeating thinking perpetuates negative feelings around poor body image. The impact that these thoughts and feelings have on a person’s self-esteem can be paramount to the destruction of one's confidence and happiness. Before a person with weight issues, can utilize strategies to lose weight and find a happier life; they need to understand what they are feeling and where the feelings are coming from. Many common negative feelings and thoughts surround being overweight while living with Pre-Diabetes or Type II Diabetes.

 

Feelings!

Isolation is a prevalent feeling on many levels from feeling that they don’t fit in socially, to actual separation where a person stops going to social events. The fear that people will think poorly of them can take over and can increase one's isolation.

Feelings of worthlessness take over impacting one's abilities to reach out for help. While thoughts of self-deprecation about all the things, a person is not and all the reasons why they're not worth helping happen. “No one would help a loser like me! I have no self-control! I did this to myself! I caused my diabetes!”

With isolation comes loneliness, but it is already there. Feeling lonely does not just happen when a person is alone but can happen anywhere. With a society that screams, “thin is good, and fat is bad, would you like fries with that!” it is hard to not feel out of place in a large crowd, party or going to the grocery store. The grocery store cause problems for some that are overweight.

Feelings of objectification come into play. As that individual, whether real or imagined feel the stare of the people around them. Feeling that people are judging them as though they wanted and deliberately chose to be overweight when that is furthest from the truth.

Even if a person feels it is furthest from the truth they may choose to focus on their diabetes, but “if I had just controlled myself all these years I wouldn’t have Type 2 diabetes, would I! After all, I did this to myself, and I am angry and sad.” The self-blaming continues!

Embarrassment is stemming from how they look to the physical boundaries of the world around them. How would you feel on the bus, train, plane or squeezing through a turn style? For most overweight people, it becomes an emotional pressure cooker.

Imagine for a moment being a size sixteen, living in size eight world. You may feel angry; you may feel judged by the people around you, but at your core, you are mad at yourself. You may feel like a failure, exhausted, rundown and beaten both emotionally and physically. But as you sit there you say to yourself “I did it to myself, I deserve their stares, and I am such a loser.”

 

Living With One's Self-Blame!

Thoughts, Feelings, and Behavior are intimately tied together. It is important to understand as when we think negatively about ourselves, we feel bad, and when we feel bad, we blame ourselves. Self-blame is negative thinking that increases how we feel and view ourselves negatively. Eventually, the emotional pain becomes so much that we need to fix it.

Some living with diabetes and overweight people turn to food for comfort, as a way to cope with these complicated, hurtful feelings. Sugary foods release dopamine, making a person feel better, but it is only a temporary solution. It contributes one's negative self-image while it continues a harmful behavior. People tend to feel guilty about turning to the very thing that added to their weight problem in the first place for comfort.

 

Reality!

The truth is essential, just not the one you made up, where you are responsible for every aspect of your weight issue. If you are not responsible for every aspect of your weight issue, then who is accountable. What is the truth?

No matter what we do, we can only control our behavior to a certain point. Some people can control their behavior more than others, but no one has 100 percent control of every action they do.

Being as honest as you can with yourself, about what you have versus what you don’t have control of can help considerably.

 

Life Skills!

Did you have a healthy home life growing up with appropriate boundaries around food? Growing up did you learn multiple health ways to cope with life? When growing up, and things at home were terrible, did you turn to food to feel better?

The majorities of our behaviors are learned during childhood. Then those learned behaviors solidify as patterns. If there was no one to teach us healthy coping skills or the people who were supposed to show us healthy life skills, like your parents, were unable to teach us, then how could we have turned out any different. Unless you had therapy from birth, it is most likely that you did not receive the life skills and education needed to have lived a healthier life than the one you have now.

 

Honesty!

Be honest with yourself, do you still think that you are 100 percent responsible for your weight issues? Well, let's look at the social factors.

 

Social Pressure!

Most social gatherings happen around food, and one has to be very strong. It is especially true when a colleague from work brings in donuts for everyone. When a person works in a large office, it is always someone's birthday, and peer pressure is high. We wouldn't want to insult the person whose birthday it is; we say to ourselves.

Fact: Peer pressure and what food is available, can be a factor in how you eat.

 

Coping With It All!

There are hundreds of triggers, negative influences and aspects of family history, which you had no control over that got you to where you are today. Weight, food, and consumption are a complex issue and how do you cope with it all?

  1. Don’t be so hard on yourself.
  2. Learn new coping skills to replace emotional eating.
    a. Read an enjoyable book
    b. Watch a funny movie
    c. Go for a walk
    d. Find and work on a hobby
    e. Talk to supportive friends
  3. Seek Professional Help.
    a.    Psychotherapy
    b.    Certified Diabetes Educators
    c.    Dietitians
  4. Seek Self-Help
    a. Overeaters Anonymous
    b. Self-Help Books

All of the above coping techniques can start to change how we think and view ourselves. If you have been living with the weight and food issue for a long time, start with the professional help first.

 

Take Away!

Hopefully, you know longer view your weight issue as 100 percent your fault. Changing negative self-blaming to more positive, honest and realistic thinking can give you the energy to take action toward a better, thinner, healthier you and give you the strength to take care of your diabetes. If you take one thing away from this, please understand that upbringing and environment play a much more significant impact in why so many including yourself struggle with weight issues every day. It’s not all you.

So be kind to yourself and get help if you need it. There is no shame in going to talk therapy to resolve the emotional turmoil you are going through.

Parenting Children with Diabetes (Hardcover & e-Book)

If you are the parent of a child living with diabetes, life can be problematic, to say the least. My new book was designed to help parents manage the trials and tribulations of raising a child with diabetes. http://bit.ly/Parenting_CWD

 


Parenting Children with Diabetes, published by Rowman & Littlefield, offers parents a 360-degree view of what is happening to their child living with diabetes, providing unique tools, insight, and education to help parents and their children navigate diabetes management, communicate clearly and effectively, and live safely and healthfully.

 

 

 

 

© 2011-2023 Eliot LeBow L.C.S.W., C.D.E.,  The information on this server including all images is proprietary and comprises legally protected subject matter belonging to psychotherapist Eliot LeBow, and is displayed on the basis of viewing only. All use, reproduction, and disclosure is prohibited without the prior consent of Diabetes Focused Therapist Eliot LeBow, including all registration marks: ® Diabetes Focused Psychotherapy, ® Helping People With Diabetes Thrive!, ® DiabeticTalks, ® DiabeticMinds, ® The Diabetic Diary. All rights reserved.

Office Location: 323 West 96th street, NYC • Email: eliot.lebow@gmail.com(917) 272-4829

Psychotherapist and Diabetes Specialist : Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, Long Island, Westchester County, Connecticut, New Jersey.