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  • "Mindful Eating vs. Cognitive Defusion for Food Cravings"

  • Mindful eating is the practice of being fully present for a meal.

  • This may involve slowing down the pace, savoring every bite,

  • and starting to get in tune with your body's fullness cues.

  • When you're distracted, you tend to eat faster and longer.

  • For example, men and women randomized to eat while watching TV

  • averaged an extra slice of pizza and 71% more mac & cheese,

  • totaling nearly 300 additional calories.

  • That alone could bump your weight like 8 pounds a year.

  • This may help explain why one survey found

  • overweight individuals reported they ate nearly half their meals

  • while watching television.

  • Stanford researchers found that on the weekends

  • about a quarter of kids' calories may be consumed in front of the TV.

  • Similarly, study subjects told to eat while giving their full attention

  • to a radio conversation or a detective story recorded

  • on cassette tapes (like an old-school podcast)

  • ended up eating significantly more;

  • for instance, up to 77% more ice cream compared to undistracted eating.

  • Even just engaging in conversation,

  • eating with friends can inadvertently boost intake.

  • Distracted eating may also affect subsequent consumption.

  • Have people play computer solitaire while eating a fixed-calorie meal,

  • and they eat nearly twice as many cookies a half-hour later,

  • as if they hadn't fully consciously registered how much they ate

  • when they were distracted.

  • Conversely, if you have people listen to an audio clip

  • encouraging them to eat mindfully, focusing on the looks, smell, taste,

  • and texture of the food, hours later they eat fewer cookies

  • than those either eating in silence or listening instead

  • to some neutral audiobook content.

  • Attending to the sensory qualities of food and our body's reactions

  • is just one aspect of mindful eating.

  • Mindfulness has been described as a moment-to-moment awareness,

  • cultivated by paying attention in a specific way, in the present moment,

  • as nonreactively, nonjudgmentally, and openheartedly as possible.

  • Just being aware may not be enough.

  • Practicing mindfulness to deal with cravings is said to involve

  • three skills: awareness, the ability to monitor one's cravings;

  • acceptance, the ability to refrain from judging yourself;

  • and then something called disidentification,

  • or cognitive defusion,

  • the ability to separate oneself from your cravings.

  • When we're struck with a craving, a typical reaction is instead

  • what's called cognitive restructuring, a psychological term

  • for challenging your thoughts

  • and replacing them with alternative thoughts.

  • For example, if you're hit with the thought

  • "I need to eat some chocolate," instead of just reaching

  • for a candy bar, a restructuring response might be,

  • "No, I don't.

  • I can have something healthier instead."

  • This rarely works.

  • More than a hundred self-identified chocolate cravers

  • were randomized to an hour of cognitive restructuring instruction

  • and then given a bag of chocolates to carry around with them for a week

  • to see how well they could resist the temptation.

  • And they didn't do much better than the control group

  • that tried it after no instruction at all.

  • In contrast to cognitive restructuring,

  • the mindful eating approach called cognitive defusion

  • involves teaching people to defuse their thoughts

  • as merely thoughts, placing mental distance

  • between themselves and their cravings.

  • A defusion response to the thought "I need to eat some chocolate"

  • would involve simply observing the thought,

  • ("I notice I'm having the thought that I need to eat some chocolate"),

  • and thanking one's mind for the thought, ("Thanks, mind").

  • A "mindbus" metaphor is used, in which people are taught

  • to imagine themselves as the driver of a bus

  • and their thoughts as mere passengers.

  • You visualize yourself taking control and being like,

  • "Thanks for the feedbacks, folks, but this is my bus,"

  • as you stop the bus and let the negative passengers off.

  • Cognitive defusion was tested head-to-head

  • against cognitive restructuring in the same chocolate experiment,

  • and those who got an hour of defusion instructions

  • had three times greater odds of remaining chocolate abstinent

  • in the face of a week of constant temptation.

  • Then defusion was put up against acceptance:

  • instructing people to observe a thought or feeling,

  • accept its presence, and build up a degree

  • of tolerance for uncomfortable feelings.

  • Study subjects were randomized to less than a half an hour

  • of coaching on defusion, acceptance, or a control group

  • that spent the time learning a muscle relaxation technique.

  • They were then asked to carry a bag of chocolate candy

  • around for five days, untouched.

  • The acceptance group failed to beat out the control group,

  • but the defusion group did.

  • Of all the mindfulness skills, cognitive defusion

  • appears to be the most effective,

  • a simple and efficient approach to manage food cravings.

"Mindful Eating vs. Cognitive Defusion for Food Cravings"

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