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Let Mindfulness Be Your Best Diet Yet
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Meg Jordan, PhD., RN, CWP -- Global Medicine Hunter (R) Meg Jordan, PhD., RN, CWP -- Global Medicine Hunter (R)
San Francisco, CA
Thursday, August 27, 2015

 

The Practice of Mindfulness May Be the Ultimate Dieting Solution

 

Global Medicine Hunter News

 

Contact: Dr. Meg Jordan

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

(San Francisco)---Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and mindfulness meditation are becoming increasingly popular strategies to reduce stress and anxiety, and help people shift behavior and mindset toward a more peaceful sense of well-being. Formal courses of MBSR are taught everywhere from worksite wellness programs to hospitals, clinics, community centers, K-12 schools and universities.

 

As behavioral scientists amount evidence about the neurochemical changes that mindfulness practice evokes, they are stretching the application of the simple mind/body exercise to areas formerly considered the domain of willpower alone. Dieting and weight loss ranks as the most frustrating endeavor for the millions who undergo repeat cycles of failure.

Now new research points to the effectiveness of mindfulness practice to tame the self-critical inner voice of dieters, smooth out the biochemical obstacles, and nurture a sustaining fuel for motivation and sticking with healthful dietary habits.

 

Health psychologist Ruth Q. Wolever, PhD, and dietician Ruth Reardon, MS, RD, LDN, co-wrote a Duke Integrative Medicine book, with Tania Hannan, The Mindful Diet: How to Transform Your Relationship with Food for Lasting Weight Loss and Vibrant Health, (Scribner, 2015). One of the supporting studies behind their strategies was published in 2011 (Kristeller & Wolever, 2011), "Mindfulness-Based Eating Awareness Training for Treating Binge Eating Disorder: The Conceptual Foundation" in Eating Disorders journal. Researchers found evidence that not only did their specifically-tailored mindfulness eating practice diminish depressive symptoms, but it decreased binge episodes and enhanced self-control

 

 The "Four Pillars of Healthy Eating" rests on the principles that healthful change requires awareness, intention, and a conscious, step-by-plan that includes decreasing the amount of inflammatory foods in the diet, restoring healthy blood sugar balance, eating whole fiber-rich foods, and eating a plant-based diet. Because most of these principles have been expressed by other good sense nutrition authors before, the uniqueness in this book is the way it teaches readers a fail-safe mindful approach to managing the emotional rollercoaster that many dieters suffer.

Rewiring the neural circuitry through the author's "mindfulness toolkit" may do more for the "monkey mind" of dieting than the countless programs stressing simple behavioral tactics (chew slowly, put your fork down between bites, use smaller plates). While those are effective for a portion of dieters, they lack the depth of dealing with unexamined thoughts and emotions and derailing the sabotaging self-critique. 

 

Try the loving kindness meditation they suggest before you eat something you swore you'd avoid just moments earlier.  In your mind, repeat the mantra: May I be safe. May I be happy. May I be healthy. May I be kind. It will serve as a compassionate, non-judgmental inner health coach. Together with 20 Breaths Practice, mindfulness practice could shift your awareness to hearing what your body truly craves instead.

 

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Meg Jordan, PhD, RN, CWP, is a clinical medical anthropologist, department chair and professor of Integrative Health Studies M.A. Program at California Institute of Integral Studies, Editor in Chief of American Fitness Magazine, and author of How To Be A Health Coachmail@megjordan.com

 

 

 

REFERENCE:

Kristeller, Jean L. and Wolever, Ruth Q.(2011) 'Mindfulness-Based Eating Awareness Training for Treating Binge Eating Disorder: The Conceptual Foundation', Eating Disorders, 19: 1, 49 – 61. DOI: 10.1080/10640266.2011.533605

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Meg Jordan, PhD, RN, CWP, is Co-President of the National Wellness Institute, author of HOW TO BE A HEALTH COACH, Department Chair and Professor of Integrative Health Studies M.A. Program at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco.  She is a medical anthropologist, and behavioral health specialist.  mjordan@ciis.edu

 

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