Archive for the ‘Food Cravings & Overeating’ Category

TELL ME WHAT YOU ATE and I WILL TELL YOU HOW YOU ARE FEELING

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Avoid these at all cost

If you think that the foods you eat and how you feel have nothing to do with each other, it’s time to open your mind, and close your mouth, to certain foods, that is.

I remember my recent visit to Spain, where, for the umpteenth time I heard my own mother complain about how crappy she is feeling pretty much all the time.

And for the umpteenth time, I told her to stop eating so much bread, pasta, potatoes and sugary foods, or quit whining.

Her response is always the same:

Don’t be silly, we’ve always eaten these foods – she said.

Always? – I asked.

Yes, all my life – she insisted.

And how long have you been feeling crap? – I enquired.

Oh, for years now. But what can I do? – She asked.

Quit eating so much bread, pasta, potatoes and sugary stuff – I repeated.

Yet, she still won’t give up the source of her problem. Why?

Because as family therapist Virginia Satir once said:

Most people think that the will to survive is the strongest instinct in human beings, but it isn’t. The strongest instinct is to keep things familiar.

Sometimes, we make something so familiar, that even if it’s bad for us, we stick with it. Instead of engaging in a new behaviour, we keep doing the same thing. Even if it kills us.

The truth is that for millions of years, we humans existed on a diet of animals and vegetables. It was only with the start of agriculture about 10,000 years ago that we began ingesting large amounts of sugar and starch in the form of grains and potatoes into our diets.

However, about 99.99% of our genes were formed before the start of agriculture. So, in biological terms, our bodies are still those of hunter-gatherers!

As a result, societies that transitioned from a meat and vegetable diet to one high in cereals show a reduced lifespan, stature, increases in infant mortality and infectious disease, and higher nutritional deficiencies.

Modern humans don’t have evolved mechanisms to incorporate carbohydrates from starch- and sugar rich foods into our diet. We are consuming far too much bread, cereals, pasta, corn, rice, potatoes and sugar with serious consequences to our health. To make matters worse, most of these carbohydrates are processed.

So, if you, like my mum, are experiencing symptoms such as: excess weight, bloating, lethargy or frequent sleepiness, brain fogginess and confusion, low blood sugar, high blood pressure,  depression…  chances are that you’ve been consuming too many of those.

We all need a certain amount of good carbohydrates, of course, but, through our addiction to grains, potatoes, and other starchy and sugary foods, we are consuming far too many.

Grains and sugars suppress the immune system, contributing to allergies, and they are responsible for a lot of digestive disorders. They contribute to depression, and their excess consumption is, in fact, associated with many of the chronic diseases, such as cancer and diabetes.

As a coach, I could kid myself and my clients by solving the surface symptoms by simply hypnotising them. But then what? They go to back home and unless new healthier behaviours are implemented, the chances are it’ll all go awol again.

So, if you look or feel unhealthier than you should, whether the symptoms are showing themselves in your face, body, bones, energy, or mind, chances are that the excess sugars and grains in your diet are the primary cause. Still sceptical? Give them up for a week and notice your energy levels soar, your mind clearing up, and your face glowing!

How to survive the weekend without piling on the pounds

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Stay active!

1/ SHOP NOW!

But not for clothes girls, sorry! For food! Buy your groceries before the weekend so that you have the right foods in your fridge and cupboards.

Use the PSP system: Plan-Shop-Prepare.

As with anything in life, the more prepared you are, the better chance you have of staying on track. Taking a bit of time to prepare a couple of meals in advance so you can just tuck into them when you need to can make all the difference.

2 / PLAN YOUR “CHEAT” MEAL

Think! If you know that you are going to a garden party on Sunday afternoon, then avoid a full Irish breakfast on Sunday morning. Sticking to your food plan until the party will be worth it because you will be able to socialise and get stuck into those bbq ribs just like everyone else. So, it’ll feel good.

A cheat meal means enjoy, not binge eating to the point where your stomach stretches to the size of a swiss ball. Take the time to savour your treat to the last bite, cos you won’t be seeing it again till next week!

3/ STICK TO YOUR HEALTHY NUTRITIONAL PLAN

Whenever possible, choose vegetables, raw nuts, and fruit as your snacks and as the foundation of your meals. Make sure to stock up on these and always bring some with you in your bag wherever you go.

By doing this chances are you’ll start to make the right choice more often, therefore decreasing feelings of guilt. We don’t like guilt..

Get enough good quality sleep and water! It’s proven, by me J, that having a good night’s sleep and being well hydrated can make a big difference in the food choices you’ll make during the day.

Lethargy and dehydration often lead to fake feelings of hunger!

4/ START THE DAY RIGHT

And this doesn’t mean with kellogs…

The best thing you can do first thing in the morning is hydrate yourself as during sleep we sweat about a pint of water, even if you don’t see it.

Coffee is not hydrating; in fact it has the opposite effect!

Then, have some good quality protein in the form of eggs, fish or meat, and some vegetables. Yes, vegetables.

We have been so brainwashed by big food companies with powerfully effective marketing campaigns to think that cereal is the best breakfast food that people look at you weird when you eat a carrot on the way to work. Ridiculous! Carrots are food, cereal is not. It’s just manipulated stuff. You can’t grow rycicles in your back garden.

5/ HAVE REALISTIC EXPECTATIONS

Whenever I make a “to do” list a mile long, and I only get through half of it, I feel bad – even if I managed to get a lot done. It’s usually because I’ve set unrealistic expectations for myself.

There is nothing wrong with aiming high, but if you expect to eat organic veg. at every meal, you may disappoint yourself and go on a guilt trip all weekend. Remember, we don’t like guilt…

So again, plan, shop, and prepare – because if you go to the shops and there is no organic veg. left, what are you going to do? Give up on veg. all together, or eat whatever veg. you can find?

One of the reasons a lot of people fail on their nutrition plan is that they have an all or nothing attitude. This is not about all or nothing; this is about being clever and making it work for you.

6/ STAY AS ACTIVE AS POSSIBLE

Be a kid, go on… Think about how they run around at the beach, or at a party rather than sitting around for hours on end. Don’t just lounge around sipping boozy drinks and gossiping all day. A little rest is fine, but get your butt off the lawn chair for a few hours each day.

Go for a hike. Play Frisbee. Do some odd jobs around the house. Ways of staying active, burning some cals, and having lots of fun:

- Badminton = 300 calories per hour
- Basketball/football game = Up to 500 calories per hour
- Cycling = Up to 600 calories per hour
- Bodyweight exercises = Up to 600 calories per hour
- Canoeing = 400-600 calories per hour
- Interval Training = 10,000 calories per hour (Ok, maybe not that much…)
- Darts = 200 calories per hour
- Fishing = 200 calories per hour
- Frisbee = 200 calories per hour
- Golf (carrying clubs) = 350 calories per hour

So use your body for what is meant for – moving – rather than a garbage disposal for junk food.

7/ HANG OUT WITH THE RIGHT PEOPLE

If you hang around people who eat crisps while roasting up a round of hot dogs while drinking a 6-pack of beer, unless you have the will power of an athlete, you’re in trouble.

I’m not saying ditch your friends, but different friends may be doing different things at the weekend. Simply choose to mingle with those who are doing healthier more active things.

8/ BEAT THE BOOZE

If you’re like me, you might end up at a friend’s house on a Saturday night for a spot of dinner, or a bbq.

Of course, that means junk food and booze. Or does it? Here’s a plan for any event that involves alcohol.

  • Eat a healthy meal before that fits your nutritional plan. That means protein, fiber, healthy fats, and water. For example, salmon with sweet potato and broccoli.
  • Take some raw nuts in your bag to your friend’s house.
  • If you’re going to drink, take with you what you like. Choose beer or wine instead of mixed drinks. A beer or glass of wine contains up to 150 calories, but a mixed drink contains 150 calories from alcohol plus whatever mix you add in. So it could be double, triple, or more, empty calories from mixed drinks.
  • Alternate between alcohol and water. So, drink a beer, then get a pint of water and don’t drink your next beer till you finish it. Snack on the nuts you brought rather the pizza, chips, or whatever else is sitting around.

9/ DECIDE WHAT YOU WANT MORE

Do you want chips more than a flat stomach? If yes, then eat chips and don’t feel guilty. If your answer is no, I want a flat stomach more than I want a stupid bag of oil and salt, then good news, cos you have nuts in your bag J

See, you need to be in the right mindset. You must commit. Commitment means there is no way back. You don’t get married to change your mind the following day (at least most people don’t), or have a kid and then decide you don’t want it (at least most people don’t).

10/ TGIF! ENJOY THE WEEKEND!

Want to know more about how you can get in the best shape of your life quickly, with no gimmicks, fad diets, or pills? Join us at the EMERGENCY BEACH BODY WORKSHOP tonight!

Click here for more information and to book your seat now


Hope to see you there!


Anna

anna@delite.ie

5 GUARANTEED WAYS TO SCREW UP YOUR WEIGHT LOSS

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Do you insist on screwing up your weight loss efforts and making sure you stay overweight and unhappy forever?

Here’s 5 ways you may have been doing this:


1/ WEIGHING YOURSELF EVERY DAY:
It is completely unnecessary and you will only be disappointed and frustrated. When you step on the scales, you are weighing much more than just body fat. The numbers that come up reflect the weight of your bones, muscles, tendons, organs, brain (which on its own weighs about 7 lbs!), fluids, jewellery, clothes…

If you want to get into your favourite pair of jeans, effortlessly slip into that summer dress, or look in the mirror and like what you see, you need to step away from the scales now!

2/ COUNTING CALORIES AND FAT: You can count until you drop, but which one do you think will make you fat: 1000 calories of broccoli or 1000 calories of chocolate cake? When you eat high sugar foods you raise insulin levels. Insulin is a storage hormone; too much and you’ll store that sugar as body fat.

Cutting off all fats? Big mistake! You need certain fats to produce hormones like testosterone. Not only is testosterone important for your libido (that’s male and female libido) it’s also vital for fat loss. Testosterone helps keep your muscles active and strong and as muscles equal your metabolism, it’s important to keep your muscles actively burning calories 24/7.

3/ NOT EXERCISING OR JUST DOING AEROBIC EXERCISE: It may sound harsh but it is true. Whether you don’t like exercising or like to make excuses as to why you can’t make time to work out, unless you exercise regularly the chances are you will struggle with your weight for the rest of your life.

Too much aerobic exercise has been shown to raise cortisol. This stress hormone breaks down muscle and uses it for energy. It also is directly related to your belly fat. The higher your cortisol the more belly fat you have. So, it doesn’t matter how many calories the treadmill tells you you’ve burned in your session, if your cortisol levels are off then that belly fat won’t shift.

4/ NOT HAVING A WELL FORMED GOAL AND A PLAN OF ACTION:

If you are not planning to succeed, you are planning to fail. If you don’t have a goal, how will you know when you’ve achieved it? Most people fail at weight loss, not because of lack of desire, but because they don’t have a clear and specific idea of what they want to achieve.

“I don’t want to be fat”, “I want lose weight”, “I’d like to be thinner”, “I wish I could get rid of my fat belly”… keep thinking on those terms and prepare to be disappointed, because by focusing on what you don’t want you’ll get more of what you don’t want.

5/ LACKING THE RIGHT MIND SKILLS: What are you going to do when you’ve had a hard day at work and you’re too tired to work out? What’s going to happen when you are hungry and walk by your favourite bakery? What if you have a string of barbeques or dinner parties coming up that you are expected to attend?

If you don’t know how to get yourself motivated whenever you need to, if you don’t know how to deal with temptation, or eliminate cravings, or how to plan a well formed outcome so you can have the body you want and have a life too, then you are missing out on key ingredients to your success!

TIPS TO AVOID OVEREATING

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Summer has oficially arrived! At least for the next couple of days if the weather man is right… and with good weather come flip flops, Teddy’s ice cream and barbeques. For the next few days Ireland will be perfumed with the hunger inducing aroma of charcoaled  sausages, chicken and burgers. Buns will come out too, together with salads and copious amounts of beer and wine.

How can you avoid overdoing it with such culinary delicatessen on offer? How do you get to enjoy the sunny season’s celebrations without overeating or destroying all the hard work you’ve put in the gym for months?

All is not lost! Here’s how you can enjoy your bbqs without too much collateral damage:

1. Always eat breakfast. Not just at the weekends, not just when you have time… always! Get your metabolism burning fat from the moment you get up. Eat eggs, vegetable soup, or a salad and notive your energy levels soar and stay up throughout the day.

2. Keep well hydrated throughout the day with good quality filtered or bottled water. I recommend Evian, and one litre per 40 pounds of body weight.

3. Avoid sugary, fizzy or caffeinated drinks that dehydrate you and make you feel fake hunger. The same goes for alcohol.

4. Pack your meals full with fresh foods (fish, meats, vegetables, fruits, nuts) as opposed to processed foods that often come in super sized boxes and are packed with sugar, salt and cancer causing chemicals.

5. Eat using a dessert plate as opposed to overly sized bowls and plates.

6. Put your cutlery down on the plate after every bite. It’s easier to notice whe you are satisfied and you’ve had enough.

7. Chew your food thoroughly. The digestion process starts in the mouth. Health and effective fat loss starts with a healthy digestive system.

8. Drink small sips of water (not sugary or fizzy or caffeinated drinks) with your food.

9. Avoid eating in front of the telly, while working at the computer, or while reading a book or a magazine. Basically, concentrate on the task at hand.

10. Make your meals a sacred ritual. Pay them your full attention. Take the time to enjoy the whole experience: the colours on the plate, the taste of the food and how good you feel after you’ve eaten healthy foods.

11. Always carry with you small snacks of fruit, vegetables (carrots and celery sticks are great snacks) or nuts, so if you get hungry you can resort to them straight away. A portion of nuts consists of the amount of nuts you can fit into a closed fist. A portion of fruit is one average piece of fruit.

The worst thing you can do is skip meals during the day in anticipation of a bbq or a party. That will contribute to your metabolism slowing down and you storing more body fat.

Stick to your every day meal routine. This way you won’t be starving when you get there, which means you will be able to make better choices easily.

Enjoy the good weather while it lasts!

Anna

anna@delite.ie



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IS YOUR CHEAT MEAL TURNING INTO A CHEAT WEEKEND?

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Losing the weekend battle?

So you are ok during the week. You’ve done your food shopping for the week, you’ve even pre-cooked a few meals, you’re filling out your food journal nicely and sticking to the plan is actually easier than you once thought.

Then, the weekend arrives. There are after work drinks at the pub on Friday, a birthday party on Saturday night, and Sunday is supposed to be your cheat day.

How are you going to make it to Sunday unharmed?

It’s ok during the week, but once you have a drink, or sit down for a meal, or have some “mean” person offer you a piece of cake, the monster takes over, and it’s impossible to stop!

Or is it?

How can you avoid your cheat meal turning into a 3 day cheat bonanza?

1/ Your cheat meal is moveable! I know what you’re thinking… No way! Well, yes way. It doesn’t have to be the same day every week, even though this may help from an organisational point of view. But if you want to have dinner with friends on Friday night, or you have a birthday party on Saturday, and let’s say your cheat meal is  supposed to happen on Sunday, wouldn’t it make sense to move your cheat meal to Friday, or Saturday? Notice I said OR. OR means one or the other, not one and the other! Choose what tickles your fancy the most and allow yourself to fully enjoy the experience. The following day, simply keep sticking to your food journal as planned.

2/ Fully enjoy your cheat meal. A square of bitter 90% cocoa chocolate is not a cheat meal, and, if I know you well, it’s not what you really really want to have. Your cheat meal is the time to have anything you want, I repeat, anything you want, and allow yourself to fully enjoy it. This is not a time to be careful and tip toe around food. Guilt shouldn’t be a part of it. Imagine that! And if guilt shows its ugly face even for a second, you want to punch the crap out of it, and then keep enjoying your well deserved treat. The more you enjoy it, the easier it is to just get back on track and keep following your nutritional plan.

3/ Be human. “I know I’m human Anna, what’s your point”. My point is that if you are human, and most of you probably are, then you are not perfect, whatever your idea of perfection is. And the thing is, you don’t need to be. While it’s useful to strive to do your best and be the best you can be, mister perfectionism could be sabotaging your efforts. So, what if you overdid it on the profiteroles, or had a few too many slices of pizza? Does that mean that all of a sudden you are going to turn into a ball of fat? Does that mean that all your workouts and all the healthy meals you’ve eaten to day are in vain? Or that you’ll never be able to be the size you want to be? You know it doesn’t make sense. And if it doesn’t make sense, as Judge Judy says, it’s not true.

As long as 80% of the time your diet consists of healthy, wholesome and nutritious foods, 20% of the time there is room for treats.

The most important thing is that you never ever give up.

Your ability to quickly get back on track will largely determine your success.  So, avoid dwelling on the past. Maybe you cheated on your nutrition plan, skipped some workouts, or maybe you have had a more serious lapse in your behaviour for whatever reason. Beating yourself up isn’t the answer and it isn’t going to get you any closer to achieving your fitness goals.

What will help you is to tell yourself “so what!” and start afresh as you continue to keep in mind the end result you are working towards.

Whether you want to be leaner, stronger, more toned… whatever your objective is,

What can you today in order to get one step closer to achieving your goal?




Anna

anna@delite.ie




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TIPS TO BUST FOOD CRAVINGS

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Are you losing the battle against chocolate? Do you crave specific foods at certain times of the month? Do you pig out on your favourite treats only to feel not only bloated but also guilty and disappointed in yourself?

Here’s some of the secrets me and my clients use to kick those nasty cravings to the kerb quickly and effectively:

1.    Ask yourself  “am I  really hungry”? Often that “hunger” feeling is a signal that you are thirsty. Drink at least 2 to 3 litres of clean water a day. Preferably filtered, or bottled.

2.    Distract yourself. If sitting on the couch at the same time every evening makes you think you need chocolate, avoid that couch as through habit it may have become an automatic trigger for that craving. Take yourself out of the situation for 30 minutes to an hour. Do something different like taking a bath, or going out for a walk in the fresh air.

3.    Avoid situations that can lead to cravings. Get rid of all crappy foods stored in your kitchen cupboards, avoid that trip to the supermarket or the petrol station shop on your way home from work. If you buy the stuff it’s because you are planning to have it. So, the old saying “out of sight, out of mind” really works here.

4.    Work out 3 to 4 times a week. For effective fat burning, go for intensity versus length. You can get an amazing workout in as little as 12 minutes. The trick is to really get out of breath. Exercise outdoors, as the extra oxygen, vitamin 3 and feel good endorphins produced when you do this will make you feel great. And when you feel great, you tend to make better decisions regarding food.

5.    Relax. Take a few slow and deep breaths. Most people are so stressed out that they breathe very shallow, therefore taking in little oxygen to the lungs, body and brain. This can also lead to cravings.

6.    Listen to your body. If you crave salty foods it could be a sign that you are lacking certain minerals and salts in your body. If you crave chocolate for example, your system could be low in magnesium or serotonin.

7.    Brush your teeth! Part of wanting to eat is the taste. Nothing tastes good straight after you’ve brushed your teeth and gargled.

8.    Choose a healthy substitute. If you want popcorn or crisps, go for Brazil nuts, almonds, pecan nuts… any nut except peanuts (they are not a nut, but a legume). If you are wondering about the portions, a fistfull will do. Avoid low fat or fat free versions of your favourite treats. They are often packed with sugar, aspartame and other carcinogenic chemicals.

9. If after doing all of this, you still have to have that bit of chocolate or whatever you crave, eat it while looking at yourself in the mirror. This technique works wonders with my clients, who often report it impossible to eat chocolate or cookies while looking at themselves in the mirror. I hear the words “disgusted”, “ridiculous” and “impossible” a lot!

10.     Get educated. There is so much information out there on what we should and shouldn’t eat, it can be overwhelming. Yet most of that information is issued by disinterested brands with huge marketing campaigns that couldn’t care less about your health. They are certainly not health experts. If you really want to reclaim your shape, you need nutrition education from a trustworthy source.

11.     Turn off your TV. Not only is TV loaded with food ads, but it also takes precious time you could spend doing something constructive and healthy, such as exercising, writing down your healthy food shopping list, or planning and preparing your meals for the week.

Try this tips out and let me know how well they work for you!

Soon, more tips on how you can quit overeating for good.

Anna

anna@delite.ie

One of my craving busting weapons



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Getting through food cravings and overeating

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In order to get through food cravings and overeating it is useful to make sense of this.

When we talk about food cravings we are talking about a compulsion to eat certain foods. Overeating tends to be a habit; something that we get used to doing all the time, and it becomes automatic.

We form habits through repetition. We do things over and over again until they get so ingrained in our subconscious and we don’t even realise we do them.

A lot of people who overeat don’t realise they are overeating until someone else points it out. “Wow, are you going to eat all of that?” Even if they are overweight because of it, they don’t make the connection between the weight and the food.

This is because they eat unconsciously.

We also attach powerful triggers to food, which make breaking habits difficult, unless you have adequate mental training. TV is one of them. Do you know someone who can’t sit on the couch and watch a movie without gulfing down a packet of cookies? They’ve done it enough times that in their mind, TV equals chocolate time, or popcorn time, or whatever unhealthy food time.

This is why we are being told more and more often to go back to the way things used to be years ago:

Eat your food at your kitchen table, with no distractions, so you can pay attention to what you are eating and the amount of food you are eating. So you allow yourself to enjoy eating nutritious foods and notice when you are already full, and how good you feel after you’ve eaten healthy foods.

When you do this, don’t be too surprised to realise you have left food on your plate!

A lot of people who have bad food habits somehow find a way of getting out of what they know they should do.

“I should start eating healthily but it won’t happen this weekend as I’m going to a party. I’ll start on Monday” Does this ring a bell?

So, on Monday they try to break the habit through will power. By Thursday, they’ve found a new excuse to get out of it. Then they get disappointed because “it doesn’t work”. This happens, because will power doesn’t work for most people.

When you think about cravings, think that you have other strong desires that you don’t act upon. Like when you are standing at a queue at the post office, and it’s moving so slow you just want to yell at someone, but you don’t do it. Sometimes you want to slap someone badly, but you don’t so it.

This means you can control your desires.

If you want to be able to control your desires around food and build new healthier habits, you need the right mental preparation.

You need to build new more useful beliefs and more powerful desires. You need to become more determined. And for this to be effective and lasting, it needs to happen at a subconscious level.

See, will power has nothing to do with it. And your imagination has everything to do with it.

Anna

anna@delite.ie

Ewwww!



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Your cravings are not your fault!

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Don't... eat it...

Take a look at the history of food marketing and find out how it has affected you and why your cravings are not your fault!

In the early twentieth century several US retailers hired a man called Edward Bernays to advise them on how to boost sales in a post war economy.

Bernays (non other than Sigmund Freud’s nephew) taught them to link the purchase of goods to people’s ego needs: status, success, prosperity, sex…

Before this, people bought things for practical purposes only. You wouldn’t buy a pair of shoes unless the pair you had were completely worn out. And most people’s food habits had nothing to do with ours today. They had more to do with survival than entertainment.

Bernays helped turn this behavior around though. He taught sales staff to make people who bought the “right” brands of food feel successful, more prosperous, sexier and more worthy. And those who bought the “wrong”  brands feel not good enough.

In today’s economy, advertisers use far more complex and subtle marketing techniques to make us buy the “right” foods, regardless of the health implications.

We are continually bombarded with subliminal and sometimes direct messages such as:

- Feeling down today? Drink this and you will feel great in no time!

- People who eat this food are more attractive…

- Only the most successful people buy this special product.

These messages are often accompanied by images and sounds that deeply anchor them in our subconscious. So, every time we see or hear the advert, or the product, an emotion is automatically triggered.

What do you feel when you hear the brand names:

  • Snickers
  • Ferrero Rocher
  • Carte D’or
  • Coke

Every year millions of euro are invested in advertising so these messages become even more powerful. Everything, from the shape of the product, the packaging material’s flashy colours, the highly addictive ingredients… to the aisle and the shelf you find them on at the shop… everything is meticulously premeditated so you find them harder and harder to resist.

Things that in the past were luxuries are now considered necessities. Foods that were once available only to the  very rich are not consumed by everyone, all the time. Our minds have been influenced to the point that we  can’t imagine living without these foods any more. We just can’t  give them up.

This is why fighting food cravings with will power alone is practically impossible. And this is why NLP is been proven so effective at getting to the heart of the matter, that is your subconscious. NLP can help you by reprogramming your subconscious with new and healthier messages about food so you can bust those nasty cravings for good.

If you have found this post helpful, feel free to post your comments or any questions you may have.


Thank you,

Anna



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Cravings no more!

Friday, October 30th, 2009
Apple
Yummy apple!

Whether you have a soft spot for chocolate, salty stuff, take-aways or other… how hard  do you find  giving these up solely on will power?

Have you ever wondered why this is?

Well, a few weeks ago I was lucky enough to have a chat with world leading nutrition expert, Phil Richards.

When you read my post “Looking Inside” , you can find out what happened when he examined my live blood.

I found this experience fascinating. I learnt that if your blood is not healthy, your cells get diseased and often grow a type of yeast that is hungry for crap food.

You know when you get those uncontrollable cravings that make you do just about anything to get the foods you crave? Well, It’s not you going crazy. It’s your blood cells!

Using NLP techniques, I often help people get rid of life long cravings in as little as one session.

My clients tell me they have tried everything in their power to stop eating these harmful foods without success. Yet, 90 minutes later things have changed. They tell me they feel different. That they can’t put their finger on it, but that something has happened within them.

The proof is in the pudding though (how ironic!), and it’s usually after 4 weeks or so that I get an email saying they are absolutely amazed and that they haven’t had any bad foods at all since.

They tell me they are delighted, they feel healthier and fitter than ever, they have lots of energy, and they are generally happier.

As a result of our sessions, they have been eating healthy foods and exercising and they don’t have cravings any more.

What a lot of people don’t realize is that during that 4 week period they have been living healthily, their blood has also been getting healthy, and the yeasty aliens have probably shrunk or completely disappeared!

How cool is this?

What I have achieved with many of my clients is short of miraculous and sometimes I am as shocked as them!  Just read Elaine’s amazing success story at:

http://www.delite.ie/testimonials.html

If she did it, so can you!

Anna :)



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