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Raffy's avatar

This is perfectly said. I went from massive restriction and calorie counting and exercise addiction to intuitive eating. It felt like a huge relief at first, eating boxes of doughnuts and pizza and icecream and saying fuck it all! But when my body starting complaining and hurting, I wasn’t being intuitive I was still saying “fuck you!” to restriction. I hadn’t found balance or any sort of intuition. I had to really sit with a lot of painful feelings, have therapy to work through the pain instead of smothering it and now I am at a place where I can listen to myself and my nutritional needs much more. I think a lot of people react against you making posts like these, because they are still in pain, they have been hurt by dieting and they won’t allow themselves to be in a vulnerable place again, which makes perfect sense. But true intuitive eating to me, means being able to stop yourself sometimes too. Not just eating everything all the time out of anger against past restrictions, how is that freedom? It’s just falling prey to another marketing practice from the fast food companies. We have to really learn and listen to our guts.

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Kelly's avatar

Our journey from dieting to not dieting is so complex. Mine has encompassed 40 plus years. Always learning, always shifting, but also, often doubting, often tempted to retreat to old (not great) habits. There's no one way to approach this complicated healing. Thank you for sharing what's you've been doing in your recovery and how it's been for you. Keep learning!

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