Articles by
Robin
Boudette, Ph.D.
Transform Unhealthful Eating Habits
Yoga in the Treatment of Eating
Disorders
Mindful Eating
Stress, the
Silent Epidemic
Eating Disorders are a Peril for Vulnerable
Young People
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Transform
Unhealthful
Eating Habits with Yoga
Reprinted from Yoga Journal, October
2007
When L. was five, she went to spend the night at a friend’s. Soon,
her mother got a call from the sleep over mom: L. had eaten 10 hot
dogs. L.’s mom was horrified. But to L., the story makes sense.
Eating the hot dogs had helped her deal with overwhelming emotions.
“What I remember is how nervous I had been about going to my friend’s
house,” says L. who's now 36 and lives in Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
“That story is my clue that I have had issues with food my whole
life.”
By 14, L. was bulimic, a condition that waxed and waned through
her 20s until, at age 30, shortly after she married, she entered
an eating disorder treatment program. There L. met Jill Gutowski,
a psychotherapist and yoga instructor, who offered yoga classes
to patients in the program. “From the moment Jill talked us through
the initial meditation, I thought, “This is a practice I need to
know more about,” says L. “I recognized that for the entire class
I didn't think about how many calories I’d eaten. To go into an
environment where I could shut off those thoughts was just incredible.”
In the years since, L. as begun to bring the calm awareness she
experiences in yoga with her to the dinner table. She has not been
bulimic for the past several years, and her relationship with food
has become more joyful; she now enjoys spending time cooking with
her husband. Like thousands of others with eating disorders as well
as many people who overeat simply out of stress or loneliness, L.
found that yoga can radically change one’s relationship to food.
In fact, at eating disorder programs across the country, therapists
are incorporating yoga and mindfulness mediation into their work−at
a time when millions of Americans are struggling to develop healthful
eating habits. According to the National Eating Disorders Association,
11 million Americans have eating disorders such as anorexia or bulimia.
As too many of us know, you don't have to have a clinically diagnosed
eating disorder to have disordered eating. A Harvard survey released
in February found that binge eating−defined as eating copious amounts
within two hours at least twice a week for six months, and feeling
distressed and unable to stop−affects nearly 3 percent of the adult
population. On any given day, 45 percent of American women and 25
percent of men are on a diet, yet nearly one-third of American adults
are obese. We eat to quell boredom, sadness, or fear, and we often
eat without thinking, finding the potato chip bag empty before we
even realize we opened it.
It’s no wonder that many people troubled by such issues are looking
to yoga for help, says clinical psychologist and registered yoga
teacher Lisa Kaley-Isley. She began offering yoga classes to eating
disorder patients two years ago at the Children's Hospital in Denver,
where she is chief psychologist. “Yoga addresses the mind, where
the anxiety and compulsion,” says Kaley-Isley. “It does so with
an emphasis on creating strength and flexibility in both.”
SLOW WAY DOWN
So far, little research has been done to verify the therapeutic
effects of yoga on eating disorders and more garden-variety eating
problems such as emotional eating or yo-yo dieting. But a few studies
do show that yoga can help. One well-known 2005 study of 139 women
by researcher at the Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito,
California, found that women who practiced yoga felt better about
their bodies, had a better sense of what their bodies were feeling,
and had healthier attitudes toward food than women who did aerobics
or ran. A 2006 State University of New York study of 45 fifth-grade
girls also found that after a 10-week program that included discussion,
yoga, and relaxation, the girls were more satisfied with their bodies
and less driven to be unhealthily thin.
Initially, yoga affects those with eating problems simply by slowing
down anxious and chaotic thoughts. “When you are anxious, your mind
is like a fan on high speed,” says psychotherapist and yoga therapist
Michelle J. Fury, who joined the staff of Kaley-Isley’s program
two years ago. “But when I asked patients in yoga class to pay attention
to their breath, to their feet on the mat, I am bringing them back
to the present moment and slowing down their negative thought patterns
down.”
Over time, that slowdown allows people to begin reconnect with
feelings that might be uncomfortable, including hunger and fullness.
At Four Winds Yoga in Pennington, New Jersey, Gutowski and psychologist
and yoga instructor Robin Boudette offer Inbodyment workshops. They
combine Forrest Yoga (a practice created by Ana Forrest and centers
on heat, deep breathing, and long-held poses) and mindfulness meditation.
In the three day workshops, each day begins breathing exercises
followed by a series of warming poses, then asanas, including hip
openers and backbends.
“When you are in a difficult pose, you want to come out of it,”
Boudette says. “But you learn to stay in it and realize that discomfort
comes and goes.”
That process has had a profound impact on G., 49, of Princeton,
New Jersey. Before she began private therapy with Boudette a year
ago, she had stopped paying attention to her hunger. Because she
traveled constantly fro her high-powered business career, she simply
ate whatever was in front of her. As a result, she gained weight,
quit exercising, and felt heavy and lethargic. “It didn't even occur
to me to ask the question, ‘Am I hungry?’”G. says. “My body and
eating had become completely disassociated.”
EAT LIKE YOU MEAN IT
To help G. connect with both her body and eating habits, Boudette
led her in an exercise popularized by mindfulness meditation teacher
Jon Kabat-Zinn. Boudette gave her a raisin and asked her to take
a full minute to look at it, to smell and feel it, to put it in
her mouth and roll it around. Then she asked her to bite into it,
to feel the texture and to experience the sweetness. “I was thinking
this exercise was ridiculous,” says G. “But then tow days later,
I would be eating something, and I would think, ‘This is really
interesting texture,’ or ‘This smells good.’ It made me think about
what I eat and how I eat. Now I catch myself and say, ‘I can just
enjoy this.’ I’m being kinder to myself.”
As yoga replaces impulse with reflection, troubled eaters can also
think differently about what it means to nourish them. Certainly
that's true for Kathy McMillan, 43, of Knoxville, Tennessee. For
six years, McMillan experienced joint pain and severe fatigue. She
says that she tried to sooth herself with food. “I’d make a big
bowl of pasta and immerse myself in a carbohydrate fog.” Finally,
the sixth doctor she saw diagnosed her with Lyme disease and, among
other things, sent her to an Astanga Yoga class. “I was the worst
student in the room,” she says. “I couldn’t lift into Downward Dog.
But I was willing to try anything.” In the two years since, not
only has she regained her strength and energy, but she has also
revamped her eating habits.
“Before, I didn’t think about what I was doing with my body,” McMillan
says. But within a month or tow of beginning yoga, she noticed a
shift. “I can feel my legs internally rotate in Downward Dog,” she
says. “The body awareness is unreal.” As that awareness grew, McMillan’s
attitude toward herself changed and, with it, her relationship to
food: “I started to respect my body more. I could see that my doctor
was helping me and that through yoga I was going to be well. So,
every time I put something in my mouth, I asked, ‘Do I really want
this?’”
What McMillan and others experience on the mat is a rising consciousness
that follows them home. Mary Taylor, a yoga teacher, chef, and coauthor
of What Are You Hungry For? Says, “Instead of coming home and feeling
the need for an emotional eating experience and then being mad at
yourself for grabbing the chips and salsa, you begin to ask, ‘What
does my body really need at this point?’”
In her slow evolution, L., too, has begun to ask such questions.
“My teacher stresses that there’s no perfect pose−the pose you do
today is perfect. If there is no perfect pose, is it possible that
there is no perfect body, and I’m not lacking anything? If so, then
I’m eating to change myself but to sustain myself. That’s a very
different way of looking at it.”
Dorothy Foltz-Gray
is a writer based in Knoxville, Tennessee. |
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