Holiday Eating Strategy
Sheet
by Caryl Ehrlich
“I’m glad it is over,” say many people after Thanksgiving,
Christmas, or New Year’s.
If you are the food preparer, you are most likely shopping, mincing,
dicing, and sautéing, days – possibly weeks before the event. The good
china, crystal, flatware, and serving pieces are brought out of storage.
They are washed, polished, and used once more before they are stored away
for the next special event.
If you are the attendee, you may be feeling guilty that the food preparer
did all the work, so you may be thinking of eating a second portion of
everything to show appreciation to the preparer.
An enormous amount of food is put on the table(s). People come. They eat.
They leave over an enormous amount of food. This brings us to Holiday
Leftovers.
Holiday leftovers are not to be confused with the tuna fish left on a
platter after your family has had their share at lunch yesterday. I’m
talking about vast quantities of many dishes. Leftovers are not left over
if they are eaten.
For many, part of the ritual of Thanksgiving is the 11 p.m. raid on the
refrigerator to join everyone else who is standing and eating in
pajamas and bathrobes. Is a turkey leg one item? Two? Three? Might be
more. You’d recognize the satiation component if you were eating slower
and sipping water between bites. Plates and utensils are your friends.
They keep you mindful.
You want to fit into your dress/pants at the end of the meal, at the end
of the day, at the end of the weekend, as well as at the beginning when
everyone arrives (or if you are the arrivee) and tells you how wonderful
you look. Someone said, “A goal without a plan is just a daydream.”
And I know Yogi Berra said: “If you don’t know where you’re going,
you could end up someplace else.”
There are a few things you can do during a holiday meal day that can be
practiced year round. If you set a goal to make this your new way, it
becomes comfortable year round, then when a holiday meal comes along, you
won’t be looking to make it an overeating exception. You’ll keep
feeding the smaller person no matter who you are with, what country you
are in, and what the holiday it is.
You are either striving to become a smaller person in which case you feed
that smaller person you want to be. Or, you are a smaller person, in which
case, you feed the smaller person you are.
Here’s the plan:
Almost every month has a holiday where food is the centerpiece. The
holiday eating strategies are helpful if you read the information before,
during, and after the festivities. This will help you plan ahead, execute,
evaluate, and adjust, for next time. That’s the thing with holidays –
there’s always a next time. Fill in the following sentence. Go for it.
I want to weigh __________ pounds, 365 days a year, not just when it’s
convenient. I can do it!
1. Don’t skip meals. Starving all day as an excuse to overeat at a party
doesn’t work. Plan ahead, instead.
2. In a relaxed, quiet atmosphere, envision what food and drink you’ll
be encountering and plan, in advance, in writing, what you want to do.
Just scribble a few decisions in a 3 X 5 (or smaller) card: Is it going to
be a one-item, two-item, three-item meal? How many items are appropriate?
What are they to be? Chicken? Fish? Veal? Will you choose a potato? Do you
want dessert more than bread? A salad more than a vegetable? To weigh
__________ pounds or to continue weighing what you weigh. And 2b) What
behavioral techniques do you plan to use to help lessen food-related
anxiety? Will you carry around a goblet of water during the stand up
portion of the festivities? Will you help the hostess set the table? Will
you play with the children? Food is just a part of the day. What are you
going to be doing when social anxiety and old family issues rear their
heads in the guise of best sweet potato pie. If you always do what
you’ve always done, you’ll get what you always got.
3. Wear a belt with a buckle, whenever eating and whenever necessary.
Buckle on snug. Wear a thin belt under your clothes if the outfit is of
the cover-up variety.
When an elastic-waisted pants/skirt give, it gives oh so quietly. You’re
not even aware that you’re growing back into that bigger person’s
pants/skirt. A waistband tells you at dinner that you haven’t even
digested what you had at lunch. When you reach for a second helping of
something, your waistband will tell you: “don’t do that.” And
you’ll pick up the water instead.
4. While in attendance, keep moving. Help the hostess, play with children,
and talk to everyone in the room before looking at the food. Don’t
linger near the buffet table. A wonderful three-part question to ask
before eating anytime, anywhere, is:
a). Am I hungry?
b). Am I hungry enough to put food on a plate and eat with utensils
(knife, fork, spoon, chopsticks)?
c). Am I hungry enough to make my meal – whether one or two or three or
more items – last a relaxing, pleasant, 20-minutes, or more?
5. Fill a glass with water. Carry it around and drink it. Throughout the
party and whenever necessary, relax, deep breathe, and stretch to reduce
socially anxious moments. If the dinner is to be very late, you might
consider having a cup of soup or cereal at home in a quiet atmosphere
before leaving for the festivities. Then when the flying Rumaki appetizers
make an entrance and you’re waiting for the entree, you’ll be able to
honestly say, no thanks, I’m not hungry.
6. If it is a buffet meal, walk the distance without a plate as you
identify the protein and the vegetables and whether dessert is more
tempting than the bread or the drink. Then go back to the beginning of the
table and make yourself a plate as you might be served in a restaurant.
Plan the number of items in advance. Decide, before arriving, whether
you’ll choose a bread or beverage or dessert or alcohol, rather than
deciding you’ll have all four. (Is the bread really unique, the coffee
unusual, the extra drink adding to your enjoyment?)
7. Find a place to eat where you can enjoy your meal in a relaxed manner
while using utensils. If this is not possible, or the choices are really
not to your liking, do the best that you can do under the circumstances.
It is okay to tell your hosts you don’t want a second helping of
everything. They only want you to have a good time. You won’t be having
a good time if you eat too much and your clothes become tight. Overeating
is not a reward. Fill up on the ambiance. Food is just part of the day’s
events. Food is not entertainment.
8. Eat slowly and thoughtfully. Make each meal last a relaxing twenty
minutes, or more. Put utensils down between bites, take frequent sips of
water, and intersperse plenty of good conversation between bites. Finish
chewing and swallowing each bite before inserting more food.
9. Alcohol causes lack of resolve, which may cause you to eat or drink too
much of things you didn’t plan for. Less and less alcohol is needed as
your total body weight diminishes. If alcohol is your choice instead of
bread, beverage, or dessert, toast the holiday but try to drink two or
more sips of water for each sip of alcohol. Always make sure the alcohol
is part of the meal where you will be coating the inner lining of your
stomach. Before drinking an alcoholic beverage, bear in mind, nobody said
you have to finish your drink either.
10. There will always be another meal, another holiday, another party.
Keep in mind how much more fun they will be with a slimmer waistline, a
more in control you.
11. Do the best you can. There are a lot of choices to make. The first
time, your plan may not turn out exactly as you pictured it to be. By
reading your strategies and planning in advance, in writing, what you want
to accomplish, chances are you’ll eat a little less, move a little more,
put your fork down sooner, and feel a little better than had you not had a
plan. But, no matter what happens, Get Back on The Program at the very
next meal.
12. Most of all have a nice time. Feeling stuffed, bloated, or
uncomfortable in your clothes does not enhance the enjoyment of the event.
More is not better; it is only more.
13. Rewrite this Holiday Eating Strategy Review onto a compact piece of
paper. Carry your Holiday Eating Strategy Review sheet with you to read
before, and during the party. Repeat your weight loss goals to yourself
several times during the day of the food encounter. I want to weigh ______
pounds. Any meal is not the Last Supper. It’s just another meal. When
sufficiently armed, the battle is won.
14. If all else fails, flee the city with a friend.
_____________________
This article is an excerpt from the book Conquer
Your Food Addiction published by Simon and Schuster. Caryl Ehrlich,
the author, also teaches The Caryl Ehrlich Program, a one-on-one
behavioral approach to weight loss in New York City. Visit her at http://www.ConquerFood.com
to know more about weight loss and keep it off without diet, deprivation,
props, or pills.