Friday, January 4, 2013

Discipline vs. Deprivation

A friend recently complimented me on being able to make it to the gym at night. He recently began working in production and is finding it challenging. He said, "Production's exhausting, how do you make it here at night, it's really commendable." While flattering, I replied with, "Dude, what I lack in discipline I make up for in stamina." I am not a hugely disciplined person. I see this in many areas of my life. What concerns me recently is the lack of discipline with food. I can't be bothered to measure, I can't be bothered to ask for dressing on the side, I can't be bothered to steam some greens, the list goes on. I could blame the holidays but that would not be the truth. This is not new or holiday related territory. 

I think often I confuse discipline with deprivation. I get very protective over my food, routines, and resist changing them. I immediately fear feeling deprived or like I am on a diet. I use this fear as a way to delay change. Oh I dunno if I give that up I might react poorly. Fear isn't reality and if I don't try it I'll never really know now will I. Holding myself accountable and being honest about my intake is not the same as being deprived. I mean lets be real I want for nothing, what baby wants, baby gets. I am quite possibly the furthest thing from deprived. I can eat whatever I want whenever I want, but I think I do not push myself hard enough to find out what my limits really are. I stay safe in my routines, I draw my lines in the sand of I am NOT willing to part with x. I really have no idea if this is the truth or what I want anymore. Is dark chocolate at night really worth more to me then feeling strong, healthy, and comfortable in my body? Am I really gaining or winning anything by holding on to these things? I think not. 

I went shopping recently and got so frustrated by my reflection. Not because of my weight, or my body shape, but because of lumps and bumps. I immediately would think about what shapewear I could bust out to alter my reflection, what layers could I work in to skim over what I did not like,  and what annoyed me most is I have the power and ability to alter that reflection. I do have the skills and capability to get rid of that back fat that drives me bananas. What I am lacking is the discipline. I know all to well how this all works and yet I just ignore that key piece of information. 

I'm worn out for sure, but I think what I am worn out mostly from is treading water. It's the soothing of myself that where I am is okay and don't get me wrong it is. I like myself, I like my body, I value it, I think both me and my form are pretty cool, but I don't have the energy to pretend like I'm done, or completely satisfied with it. 

That being said so far what I am going to try is bringing my lunch to work so I know exactly what I am eating, and I stepped up my training to 3 times a week. I want to push myself to think more in terms of discipline and what is a pro-goal and pro-me choice and not immediately default to feeling deprived. I am not a child at the dinner table anymore who's mom is saying do you really need that? There's no judgement or rules, so I cannot lose sight of my goals and what I want for myself because of old baggage. Discipline's voice can be louder then baggage's. 














6 comments:

  1. This post really hit home for me. I feel like I am still suffering from "Diet Exhaustion" and it makes me resent eating a salad, which I KNOW will taste good, over eating something like Pasta or a Burger or something else "Heavy", which I KNOW will make me feel like crap. If that makes any sense at all?

    I commend you for putting, or rather, taking back the responsibilities, and the independence that we have when we chose to eat.

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  2. Oh, I know all too well what you mean! I just started cooking up a weeks worth a food on Sunday to prevent me from dining out during the week. And I like to blame the holidays...but it's really my lazy ass that has no self control!! And I love food. I realized on so many journeys of "trying to get myself to where I think I need to be" that I just can't live a life of deprivation. I have to let myself enjoy food and drinking on occasion. In moderation of course.

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  3. Bringing lunch to work is a priority for me. It's difficult and eats into my free time, but it's key in keeping me on track with healthy eating. I have a killer chili recipe that I make on Sunday afternoons and bring in to work for 3 or 4 lunches each week. If you're interested, let me know. I also have a great chicken salad recipe that you might be into.

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  4. Amie- Oh how well I understand. Even when you know it will make you feel better mentally and physically it just feels like punishment or a chore. I think because being checked in and accountable is A LOT harder then just not caring. I think that's where the exhaustion stems more from. It's the staying on top of it all, water, snacks, choices, exercise, it's a lot. It's much easier to not give a shit, eat what you want, laze on the sofa, and not prep a damn thing.

    Jessica- Ha! Knowing thyself is super important. I am with you though. I may not be the skinniest of ladies because sometimes I like and enjoy a cheeseburger and a glass of wine. It's going to happen and I am not going to feel bad about it. I am however not going to do it every day.

    Samara- Please, please, please send me the recipes! Would love them.


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  5. I loved this piece! I am 5 months into a weight-loss project (I refuse to say "journey") and doing well. I hang out on an online weight loss community and it irritates me when people say "I don't deprive myself." I've found have to deprive myself of lots of things if I expect to lose weight! The trade-off is worth it to me. Hm, maybe I'm just hangry. But I appreciated your piece on discipline vs deprivation. Thank you!

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  6. I loved this piece! I am 5 months into a weight-loss project (I refuse to say "journey") and doing well. I hang out on an online weight loss community and it irritates me when people say "I don't deprive myself." I've found have to deprive myself of lots of things if I expect to lose weight! The trade-off is worth it to me. Hm, maybe I'm just hangry. But I appreciated your piece on discipline vs deprivation. Thank you!

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