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Food Cravings? Listen to Your Body

Posted: 08/03/10 11:10 AM ET

I've been reading the work of Marion Woodman, an author and Freudian analyst who's well known for her writings on addiction and eating disorders. In much of her work, she talks about how literal the body is in its signals; in a recent interview she says, "The longing for sweets is really a yearning for love or sweetness."

If cravings really are that transparent, why are we so frequently at their mercy? I think it's a simple answer: we just don't take the time to listen to where the craving is coming from. What part of our selves is doing the craving--the body or the mind? The fact is, we don't really pay much attention to our selves from the waist down. In our culture, the head is where the action's at; it's the part that's sexy and loud and bright, and we're completely at its mercy. Meanwhile, we drag the body around like a dog on a leash.

But the body is brilliant at expressing its needs and desires. It's just not as shrill or strident as the mind, and we don't get still and quiet often enough to hear it -- or we do hear it, but allow the mind's whims to subjugate the body's needs. When we get sick, it's often the body's way of saying "Enough!" when it's fed up with being ignored. And it's an opportunity to check in with our selves from the neck down, and notice what needs attention.

What does all of this have to do with eating? Everything. In our culture, we eat from the neck up. When we dine out, we choose grilled salmon, no sauce, dinner salad, dressing on the side, because the brain tells us this is a nutritious choice that will keep us slim and healthy. At the store, we load up our shopping carts with nonfat milk, low-calorie "butter" spread and diet soda, because our minds tell us those foods will also keep us slim. Sometimes, we load up our shopping carts with frozen dinners and boxed mac 'n cheese, because our minds tell us we're behind on deadlines and we don't have time to cook.

Ordering grilled salmon in a restaurant is a fine idea, and there's nothing wrong in general with shopping for easy-to-prepare foods. But where is the body in all of this? If you order the grilled salmon to be virtuous, but you're not in the mood for fish, and you're longing for risotto, your body won't be fed in the same way. The meal will be nutritious, but it may not be nourishing. You won't experience pleasure.

Now, the tricky part about cravings is differentiating between the needs of the body and the capricious desires of the mind. Is it truly your body that wants ice cream or spicy cheese nachos, or is it your mind that wants them, to provide a momentary distraction from stress, worry, anxiety, loneliness? It could be that you don't want food at all; maybe, as Woodman suggests, you're really craving sweetness in your life. (Or in the case of nachos, more spice.)

Maybe the cells of your body really are crying out for ice cream or nachos; maybe you've been on a highly restrictive diet since eighth grade, and your cells are starved for fat. If that's the case, you might want to engage your body in a dialogue; maybe another kind of fat--olives, avocado, coconut oil, organic butter--would appeal even more strongly.

Sometimes our cravings are what our minds call "healthy" cravings, for foods like fresh melon or walnuts. Because we indulge those cravings without mental or emotional suffering, those aren't the issue. Other cravings for foods that cause adverse physical reactions in the body--like sugar for a diabetic, or wheat for someone with Celiac--simply shouldn't be indulged. And if you have a serious eating disorder like anorexia or bulimia, I encourage you to seek one-on-one, professional help.

For everyone else, try this out: the next time you have a food craving that's causing you distress, just stop what you're doing and notice. Where is the longing in your body? What exactly is it saying? If possible, find a place where you can be still and quiet for at least 10 minutes. Get comfortable, close your eyes and just sit with the craving. What comes up? What words, images, physical sensations, emotions are behind the craving?

Sometimes, when you're sitting at the edge of a craving, you'll find that your body wants to move in a certain way; allow it that freedom, and see if it's offering a clue to what's really going on. Begin to write about your cravings in a journal; it's a fascinating exploration into the inner landscape. Sometimes, you'll find that a craving really is signaling a nutritional deficiency in your body. But you may also notice that, most of the time, your cravings have nothing to do with food. It's hard--painful, even--to sit there with a craving and be with what comes up. But if you can do it, it's liberating, exhilarating and ultimately more rewarding than a chocolate chip cookie.

What do your cravings look like? Please post your comments; I'd love to hear.

Lisa Turner is a food writer and intuitive eating coach, with 20 years of training and experience in nutrition, meditation and body-mind practices. In addition to writing magazine columns, she's also a co-founder of Boulder Soup Works and a faculty instructor at Bauman College of Culinary Arts and Nutrition in Boulder, Colorado, and is hard at work on her next book. Visit her websites at www.TheHealthyGourmet.net and www.InspiredEating.com.

 

Follow Lisa Turner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/InspiredEating

I've been reading the work of Marion Woodman, an author and Freudian analyst who's well known for her writings on addiction and eating disorders. In much of her work, she talks about how literal the b...
I've been reading the work of Marion Woodman, an author and Freudian analyst who's well known for her writings on addiction and eating disorders. In much of her work, she talks about how literal the b...
 
 
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10:11 AM on 08/06/2010
Your experience is a manifestation of your emotions and thinking. A bad experience is evidence that you are not connected to the source of life. You are likely living in fear and doubt about the world around you. Balance yourself and embrace your eternal soul, the blessed, magnificent being you are. Meditate, love yourself, and live in confidence that you are special.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
12:38 AM on 08/10/2010
Great advice; thanks for sharing ~
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
12:53 AM on 08/06/2010
Did you see the item this week that says America is in an "epidemic" of emotional eating? We are a nation of hungry ghosts with cravings that can never be sated. If the country ever woke up to what's eating them, there would be a revolution.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
12:37 AM on 08/10/2010
Hi Tulka,

That's a great image: "a nation of hungry ghosts." Yes, I agree, and I believe we are waking up; here we are, all of us, talking about it on this page and others. We're nowhere close to a tipping point, but that may start to change. Thanks for your comments.
10:25 AM on 08/05/2010
Marion Woodman is a Jungian, NOT a Freudian. There's a world of difference. What she's talking about is seeing the world, ourselves and our symptoms as metaphors for the deep longings of the soul. Women have been forced by the patriarchy into ignoring our bodies - even when we obsess about them. We're not really listening, as you say. That's the first step in reclaiming our real freedom - to own our own bodies.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
11:13 PM on 08/05/2010
I know, it was a tragic typo (Freudian slip?) on my part. She's definitely Jungian, and it's definitely different. We don't really obsess about our bodies. We single out body parts and flog ourselves for their perceived imperfections. We obsess about how our thighs look like lumpy porridge, or how our bellies hang over the rim of our jeans. We obsess about what we look like in a bikini or jeans, or what our husbands will think of us when we stand naked in the bathroom. Meanwhile, we don't give a second thought to what our bodies feel like to live in. Are they healthy, comfortable places for our souls to live? That's really the bottom line.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hollywooddeed
Bagger, please.
09:54 AM on 08/05/2010
When I was a child, my mom would make me macaroni and cheese when I was sick.

Now, whenever I'm coming down with something, I crave mac and cheese. I'm 58 years old and realize it's not the mac and cheese. I want my mom.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
11:06 PM on 08/05/2010
Exactly. For me, it's the Hostess Ho-Hos. I got one in my lunch every day, along with a little note and funny drawing from my mother. It was a tiny bit of solace in the middle of what was often a long and wretched day in third grade...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hollywooddeed
Bagger, please.
09:51 AM on 08/06/2010
This made me laugh out loud! Mac and cheese and Hostess Ho-Hos. It couldn't have been celery sticks?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MerrieWay
04:55 AM on 08/05/2010
What a craving...I ate the last cookie at the dinner table, smiled at the onlookers and felt no guilt. Loved the notion of trying to sit 10 minutes...and contemplate. I lasted two minutes...and ate the bon-bon. Yummy!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
11:07 PM on 08/05/2010
At least you lasted two minutes ~ and made the effort!
09:38 PM on 08/04/2010
Journaling through craving chocolate...
i want chocolate, raisinets or reeses or hersheys. a lot of it.
why? I feel overwhelmed. too many books to read. too much to study.
i want a break. i want to feel that delicious taste in my mouth if only for 1 min.
thought comes to mind of a guy I likes lips. kiss to mouth.
i need sweetness. i need to come. i need love. im little girl trapped in big girl. overwhelming.
i want to cry but can't. if i dont have chocolate im going to cry. dont want to cry.
what am i crying about. im lost. its too much. i dont have control .
i dont know if im good enough. i dont know if i want to be here. i just want to rest on his chest.
rather have his chest and lips than the chocolate.
in the meantime will chocolate do? i will want all of it till its gone.
it hurts. my heart hurts. im crying crying crying.
do i want the chocolate anymore? its the same as alcohol. its useless. it wont take the pain away.
im not so overwhelmed anymore after tears came out. now im just dead tired.
i want my head on his heart. i want him to pet my hair and tell me its going to be okay.
i dont want an escape. i want to feel this. i want to sink into my bed and take a nap.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
11:05 PM on 08/05/2010
Wow, That pretty much sums it up...sometimes, we don't want to be here. Some days, it takes courage and commitment just to get out of bed. We want something, anything, to make the pain go away. That's when the chocolate is like the alcohol....perfectly stated...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Ed and Deb Shapiro
07:20 PM on 08/04/2010
Hey lovely Lisa - brilliant post

You are a wonderful addition to HuffPo community :-)

I look forward to your blogs!

Keep them comin'

Ed
04:56 PM on 08/04/2010
I was raised a "grazer", my mom was a grazer. Now I was raised decades/eons ago. But my mom also didn't keep any sweets/ sugar in the house. Now this was before sugar-coated breakfast cereals and maybe that is why to this day I hate cornflakes. Sweets were really a surprise treat.

My pantry is filled with existence foods, as I really do need to eat, but n junk food, chips, etc. If I get a "craving", then I make sure that I "really" have a craving, so I wait a couple of weeks. If the craving still exists, then I go buy whatever it is I am craving.

The craving is usually Ice Cream, and I eat it about once every 2 years.

Maybe that explains why I am 5'4" and weigh 110 pounds (and have for decades)!

I am all for cravings, but if you set appropriate limits, ie. "test your craving", you may find that it goes away. Sadly in our instant gratification society, some do take action immediately. And yes, I am a lousy dinner party guest as I don't feel obligated to eat just because food is placed in front of me.
I was also raised in a small desert town that didn't have access to all
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
02:08 AM on 08/05/2010
Re your comment about postponing instant gratification, yes! That's where we create the space in which we can notice the craving, explore it, and decide if it serves us. I am all for cravings, too. They're an important feedback mechanism, both physical and spiritual ~ Thanks for your comments ~
11:55 AM on 08/04/2010
Sometimes, luckily very rarely, I crave canned macroni and cheese, which tastes disgusting, it is probably the closest thing to eatable glue/paste.

Now I am worried.
01:16 PM on 08/05/2010
I think Jello is *actually* glue.
08:53 AM on 08/04/2010
This is a powerful topic that really resonates with many people. I was certainly touched. Thanks so much for posting this. I look forward to learning more.

~~Allow me to share with you a newly released healing recovery book for those suffering with drug addiction, alcoholism or eating disorders: "Little Gifts of Sustainable Contentment," By C.J. Good. Check it out, (look inside for free), read it, then please pass it on to others you care about...:) http://www.sustainablecontentment.com

A wonderful addition for a library, treatment or recovery center.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
02:05 AM on 08/05/2010
Hi Jan, thanks for sharing this great resource, and for your warm comments ~
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babybelle
PureBread Mutt LOL
08:12 AM on 08/04/2010
My bod cries out for mangos. Must be cause these taste soooo goood !! :)
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
02:03 AM on 08/05/2010
That's the happy-tastebud type of craving, or what we sometimes call recreational eating!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
02:03 AM on 08/05/2010
And it's a really good thing when your body craves nutritious foods...
02:05 AM on 08/04/2010
The type of food you are accustomed to eating has a significant impact on what you crave. By that I am not talking about palate preferences either.

After I gave up the Standard American Diet and switched to unprocessed, organic, whole foods, I then lost those dissatisfying cravings (and IBS) via a series of two-week water only fasts.

Now I have rare, distinct desires for certain natural foods, but I am completely satiated when I have them. I eat less food too.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lisa Turner
02:02 AM on 08/05/2010
So true ~ for example, for many people, eating sugar sets up a cascade of craving more sugar. And as was mentioned below, certain nutrient deficiencies also create cravings. Those are the physiological sort, which are quite a bit easier to understand and explore ~ the emotional cravings are a bit more slippery. Thanks for pointing it out ~
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Susan Orlins
Writer and author of blog Confessions of a Worrywa
01:07 AM on 08/04/2010
What an interesting article--I'll think twice about depriving myself the next time I go out to dinner and I'll also ponder why I want to order lasagne! I used to worry a lot about my weight. Then I discovered that I crave what I eat. If I eat a salad with vinaigrette dressing every day at 4 pm, soon I begin to crave it. If I manage to stop eating chocolate every day, soon I lose the craving (though if I see a chocolate bar all bets are off). I worry about health and other things on my blog, www.confessionsofaworrywart.com.
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gardengranny
Ever-hopeful for the best; preparing for the worst
08:35 PM on 08/03/2010
As someone who suffers from IBS, I know when I cannot eat raw fruits, salad and veggies.

A switch to starches like potatoes, rice and pasta, along with sweets that I usually avoid, makes all the difference in my recovery.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MoreDimensions
10:51 PM on 08/03/2010
Have you supplemented digestive enzymes and different types of intestinal flora? It may help.
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gardengranny
Ever-hopeful for the best; preparing for the worst
10:57 PM on 08/03/2010
Good suggestion.

I do rely on Greek yoghurt instead of the "advertised" probiotics, which cause me more distress than otherwise.
07:42 PM on 08/03/2010
The body requests Scotch.

Who am I to object?