|
Getting Fat Starts In
The Home
By VIRGINIA PORCELLO, Ph.D.
Director, Solutions Weight Management Program
Part of the reason why people are fat today
is because of certain family “food rules.” We all know the
parent whose child comes home after school and tells her she
is hungry – and mom says, “You can’t eat now. Wait until
dinner or you’ll spoil your appetite!” Or the mother who has
told us to clean our plate because of starving children in
China.
In working with compulsive eaters, one of Virginia
Porcello’s approaches is to help clients go back in time and
explore the following kinds of recollections relating to
food:
1. How much was served?
2. How much was eaten?
3. Did certain foods have to be eaten
first?
4. Was there a reward given if you
cleaned your plate?
5. Was dinner always served at the same
time?
The problem is that, as we get older, the
eating behavior becomes more and more ingrained, so that it
is hard to change. Virginia Porcello has found that when she
works with children at an early age, along with their
parents they can grow up free from the compulsion and
obsession with food.
But many times feeding patterns mean more than just eating.
For parents is a means to an end. A mother will shout “good”
if her child eats. Food can be used to punish and reward and
it can become a power struggle between parent and child. The
child can become defiant and create a feeling of “false
power” over the parent, thereby getting her way.
The only one reason why we should eat is to satisfy physical
hunger. That is the key to living your life as a thin
person. Unfortunately, most people eat for many reasons that
have nothing to do with physical hunger. They eat in
emotional comfort, when they are anxious or feel stressed,
angry, lonely and bored. They eat because it’s noon, and
noon time is when you are supposed to eat lunch. They eat
because it tastes good. And these are the messages that are
passed on to our children, who grow up with the same
guilt’s, obsessions and compulsions as their mothers have.
While parents have a responsibility in raising their
children to be healthy, upstanding individuals, who can
become independent and happy, the issues around food and
weight, can keep the child from feeling good and living a
productive life with a high sense of self esteem.
Parents, who put their children on diets at an early age,
are setting them up for a life of “yo-yo dieting”, guilt and
self-hatred. There are other avenues to help children grow
up free and live with a good body image, and not feel
ashamed of themselves.
In her “parents” workshops, Virginia Porcello teaches
mothers and fathers how to bring up children without such
eating problems as anorexia nervosa, bulimia, and compulsive
overeating. Parents learn to break those old family “food
rules” and acquire healthier, more constructive tools to
help their children grow up with a good body image, high
self-esteem and free from the obsession with food and
compulsion to overeat. |