Aside from being introduced to loads of amazing new
nutrition products (and a few free samples!), I left the event feeling my
appetite for deep thinking had been whet as well. Working as a health coach, I
spend a fair bit of my time thinking about what makes people tick when it comes
to achieving / maintaining a healthy weight, and, more importantly, how the
heck we might go about getting people living well on a population-level scale. This
was the focus of many of the discussions at Food Matters Live, with one panel
session in particular getting the cogs whirring for me: a forum on the psychology of food choice.
Yes, somewhat counter-intuitively, the answers to these big
questions about population-level change start with the individual, with the
internal factors that influence what and how we choose to eat. Eloquently
stated by Bee Wilson at this event, we humans have an ‘invariably complex
relationship with food’ and are ‘prisoners of’ this when we make food choices. In
other words, our choices are deeply intertwined with our emotions, memories and
experiences, such that it’s often impossible to separate these. However, as Pierre
Chardon notes, we often forget that our
food choices are tied up with our emotions, instead rationalising that we ‘were
hungry’ or ‘liked’ the food we chose.
In reality, the complex underlying processes that influence
our food choices include our upbringing (with messages such as ‘you should
always clear you plate’ being particularly problematic), the variety of foods
we have been exposed to across the life-course, the effects of traumatic
events, and our emotional states at any given time. Many of these things we
have no control over, yet some of us are more health-conscious and seemingly in
control of our diets than others. Bee Wilson commented on this, noting that she
used to fall into the latter camp and now considers herself fortunate to be in
the former. Why is this? What makes some of us more aware and able to control
what we eat than others, and what gives us the ability (or not) to change this?
As one of those people who has made this transition, this
got me thinking about my own passage to conscious living and healthy eating. How
did this process begin? What triggered it? Which of my personal qualities and
past experiences were instrumental in making this happen, and how? In what ways
do all of these factors interact with each other? I certainly don’t purport to
know all the answers to these questions, at least not fully, but I have some
thoughts that I feel ultimately shed light not just on my own experience but on
one of the keys to a widespread shift towards healthier living on a global
scale.
My own quest to live more healthily began 5 or 6 years ago with
a desperate attempt to feel better after a relationship breakup. I did some reading
online about ways to boost my mood, and quickly started to learn of the impact
nutrition has on our mental state. I began eating
more of the foods that were
said to improve mood, and this proved to be the start of an ongoing and unending
search for the healthiest possible version of myself. I became interested more
widely in the functions that different foods fulfil, and in the other ways in
which my lifestyle would impact my mind and body. Bit by bit I built (what
Derren Brown would describe in his fantastic book Happy as) a ‘considered life’ filled with meaningful pursuits and
healthy choices.
Eating more raw vegan food is one of the steps I've taken to a healthier me |
This rings true of the experience of Bee Wilson who I mentioned
earlier. She described her own transition from health unconscious to healthy
eater as being a ‘meal by meal’ process - an incremental lifestyle change – ‘not
just going on a diet’. This, I think, is the crux. On top of our individual
psychology often being stacked against us, and an obesogenic environment
tending to steer us towards less healthy choices, we are bombarded with
messages that ‘dieting’ is the road to health. Cut out this food group; take
that supplement; buy those meal replacement shakes. The result? Aside from
those of us who have made a concerted effort or simply been lucky enough to
enter the world of healthy lifestyle enlightenment, we are left with unrealistic
expectations, unsustainable diet plans and no solid knowledge of what our
bodies actually need.
Being plastered with unrealistic and inaccurate messages only
serves to further embed the often unhealthy relationship with and
thoughts/feelings about food. The losing battle we’re already fighting becomes
tougher and tougher, and we fall deeper and deeper into habitually poor
lifestyle choices. That is, until something clicks, snaps us out of it, puts us
on the road to control over our own lives and health. That thing will be
different for all of us; for me it was improving my mood, for other it’ll be
looking better, some people will look to be alive for longer to see their kids
grow up. The common denominator is that we will only ever change if something
is intrinsically valuable to us.
Healthy choices come from within |
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