888-772-4363
 
Articles : Health
Last Updated: Aug 31, 2011 - 8:08:10 AM


Size and Self-Acceptance for Achieving Healthy Weight

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Green Mountain at Fox Run (Vermont)

If we let ourselves, we may start to believe that magazine cover girls (whose photos are air-brushed and trimmed in, mind you!) are the norm and that the rest of us are somehow deeply flawed. What we get then is the soundtrack "I hate myself" or "I hate what I see in the mirror" playing over and over again in our heads, fueling our endless dieting cycles and painful frustration.

"If you are caught up in not liking yourself because of your size, it quickly starts whittling away at your motivation," says Marsha Hudnall, MS, RD. "That inner voice makes you feel helpless and hopeless."

Self-Acceptance: The Key to Achieving a Healthy Weight
If we are to have any measure of success, it is crucial that we permanently press stop on that soundtrack and work to genuinely accept our sizes and, by extension, ourselves. Hudnall, who has more than 20 years' experience in the weight management field, knows this can be a tough sell for women with lifetime struggles with weight. But she's not suggesting that size acceptance means denying the importance of healthy weights.

Denial is not acceptance. Rather, self-acceptance means adopting a non-judgmental attitude toward yourself. It's the ability to see things as they are in the moment without harmful, self-critical voices interrupting your view of yourself. Hudnall has seen it again and again in women who come to Green Mountain: Self-acceptance is instrumental to reaching your healthy, natural weight. "Size-acceptance means focusing on the things you like about yourself while working to modify what you don't like," she says.

For women who have been listening to the self-disgust soundtrack forever, size acceptance is also pretty scary. Does accepting yourself the way you are imply that change may be impossible? Mimi Francis, behavioral health therapist, has a simple response to those doubts. It should resonate even with the most diet-savvy cynics. "How well has not liking yourself worked so far?" she asks. The truth is, it hasn't. In fact, if you dislike your body, it's that much easier to abuse it.

So the aim then is to get your attitude to work for you, not against you. Self-acceptance means acknowledging where you are now, and not repeating the mantra "I'll like my body when." or "If only I looked like...." One helpful definition comes from Annette Colby, RD, author of Eating Peacefully, an online newsletter. She suggests that self-acceptance means unconditional appreciation and support for who you are now, including all the elements that you want to change.

Silencing Your Inner Critic
This view of self-acceptance respects the diversity of healthy, beautiful bodies, rather than the pursuit of an idealized weight that may come at dangerously high physical and emotional costs. The pursuit of the impossible, all the while disparaging the actual, is one of the most formidable stumbling blocks we put in our way. The self-critical reflex is a difficult one to subdue. But silencing it is a crucial component to living a healthy, fulfilling life, and attaining healthy weight and fitness goals.

Start loving yourself today!



Jul 8, 2008 - 7:57:40 AM
© Copyright 2008


Top of Page

 
Follow Us on Facebook

 

 

Enter Your Email Address to SignUp for DSG News

 
DSG Logo


Health
Latest Headlines
Beating the News Blues
Spirituality For Good Health at Any Age
Doggone Healthy
Wellbeing Tips from Chiva-Som
2012 - The Ultimate New Beginning!
Take Charge: Your Path to Wellness
Meditation for a Change
Reduce Holiday Stress
Secrets to Surviving Uncertainty
Not Your Mother's Mid-Life