January 2012

My previous post is password protected. If you’d like to read it, please email me at  karen{at}KCLAnderson{dot}com.

As you know, I will be giving away a week at Green Mountain At Fox Run in a couple of weeks. In the meantime, Annabel, who writes Feed Me I’m Cranky and who also recently spent a week at GMFR is also giving away a week.

And Mara, who writes Medicinal Marzipan, will be announcing a similar giveaway on February 6.

Both of these women have written about their GMFR experiences.

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This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Chapter 1

I walk down the street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I fall in. I am lost … I am helpless. It isn’t my fault. It takes forever to find a way out.

Chapter 2

I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I pretend I don’t see it. I fall in again. I can’t believe I am in the same place. But it isn’t my fault. It still takes a long time to get out.

Chapter 3

I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I see it is there. I still fall in … it’s a habit. My eyes are open. I know where I am. It is my fault. I get out immediately.

Chapter 4

I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I walk around it.

Chapter 5

I walk down another street.

By Portia Nelson

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I believe that the practice of understanding, accepting, and nurturing oneself leads to healthy and permanent weight loss. I really and truly believe this. I’ve lived it.

Others believe that losing weight is a battle. Yet others believe that concrete goals accompanied by rigid eating plans with inflexible exercise schedules are the only way. And that’s okay…that’s what makes the world go ’round.

One of the things that makes Green Mountain At Fox Run so special is that all of the above are welcomed and accommodated. While the entire staff embraces this ideal, there is one in particular to whom I want to introduce you. Her name is Darla Breckenridge. To call her a psychologist who specializes in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is accurate but it doesn’t get at the heart of who she is. At GMFR she is part therapist, part den mother, part comedienne, part BFF, part teacher. Her best quality is Darla-ness.

She teaches classes like Changing Your Thinking, Nurturing The Whole Self, Beyond The Binge, Limits & Boundaries, and Messages From The Past…you know, classes where you reflect, dig deep, and have your assumptions about the way things are challenged (gently).

Here are some things I learned (either for the first time or again, but in different words) from Darla:

  • The words you choose create your reality.
  • You only need enough guilt to prevent you from torturing and killing other people.
  • Dieting is a Band-Aid for a deep wound.
  • Change occurs in the moment.
  • Abusing food cuts our heads off from our bodies.
  • Criticism (from others or from oneself) never motivates.
  • It’s not the food that hurts you, it’s the self-loathing.
  • If you keep saying, “I can’t eat ________” or “If I eat ________, I’ll never stop” or “I can’t have ________ in the house or I’ll eat it all” those things will be true.
  • Once you label yourself, you look for experiences that will prove it.
  • In order to protect ourselves from outside criticism, we start doing it to ourselves.

On why the making head-heart connection must be part of any weight loss/healthy eating/fitness endeavor:

“On a most basic level, what everyone wants is love, acknowledgement, and safety. But if you don’t receive it and/or can’t articulate it and give it meaning, you will feel empty and will constantly look outside yourself for it. For many of us, food is the easiest way. It doesn’t talk back, it’s readily available, and it literally fills us up. But it also disconnects our heads from our bodies.

The head-heart work (aka Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) shows us how to satisfy these basic needs for ourselves. It helps reconnect our heads to our bodies so we’re more likely to want to care for them. This is what self-acceptance is…it’s the opposite of complacency.”

Here’s my take, based on my experience: It’s not about what I should do, it’s about what feels good. But if I’m stuck in a cycle of self-loathing (the opposite of love, acknowledgement, and safety), what I should do will ignite my inner-rebel and what feels good will most likely be self-destructive and punishing, not nourishing and healthful.

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A place to nourish eyes, nose, mouth, stomach, cells, mind, and heart

 

A place to move your body...

Another place to move your body...

 

About to move my body...

 

Another place to move your body...I didn't move my body here. It's all about options!

 

One of many spaces to learn and dig deep...

 

A spot where I did a lot of learning and deep digging...

 

A place to connect...

 

A place to learn discernment...

 

A place to find and heal yourself (photo courtesy of Green Mountain At Fox Run)

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