ManifestingWellBeing.com

Manifesting Well Being for Health and Success

  • Oct
    31

    lose weight mindfulnessWhat did you eat today? Chips? A hamburger? Cookies? An Apple? Most of us are aware of what food we eat on a given day. Some people also pay close attention to other ways of tracking what they ate, such as how many “points” the consumed or how many calories. The fact is that in addition to eating food, we also eat to suppress our emotions. As a result, because we are emotionally eating instead of to fuel our body, we may overeat, or eat foods that are less than healthy for us.

    To see if you are “eating your emotions,” first, look at what events happen before you eat. Pay special attention to the times when you eat between meals. Look at the events that happen before you eat, or the events that you are thinking of, before you eat. What was happening? Were the kids acting out, did you have a fight with your spouse, or did you have a stressful day at work? Any emotion, such as anger, frustration, disappointment, anxiety, excitement, can cause us to over eat or eat foods that are not healthy for us.

    The next step is to become aware of what you are doing when you over eat or choose less than healthy foods. Are you watching television, talking on the phone, on the computer? To help you eat more consciously, here are some suggestions that will help to improve your digestion and support you in avoiding the temptation to overeat:
    Eat slowly
    Try to not do other activities while you are eating
    Pay attention to the texture and flavor of what you are eating
    Think kindly of yourself
    Appreciate the food that you are eating

    Preliminary results indicate that being more mindful may help to reduce weight. So the next time you find yourself feeling stressed and reaching for something to eat, it may help to take a deep breath and notice what is happening . . . .

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.
    www.ManifestingWellBeing.com
    Manifesting Well Being for Health and Success

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  • Oct
    3

    reservoir-sceneWhy do you eat? Seems like a silly question, doesn’t it? Most people would answer, “I eat because I am hungry!” Yet for many people, truth be told, this is often not the reason why they eat. Many people eat out of habit, for reasons other than to nourish their bodies, and over time this can result in weight gain. When we consistently eat for reasons other than to fuel our bodies, it is hard to lose weight. Here are some of the common situations in which people eat out of habit:

    Some people eat because they have nothing else to do at the moment. Often, eating at a moment like this is a way to avoid feeling boredom, sadness or depression.

    Sometimes people eat out of an association with a particular activity. For example, if you have a favorite show on television that you like to watch at 8:00 p.m., eating a snack at that time might be a fun thing to do. It provides entertainment for you tongue and it gives your hands something to do, while your mind is entertained by the television.

    Eating between activities or projects during the day is an easy habit to get into. For example, maybe at work you have a coffee break around 10:00 a.m. before the staff meeting at 10:30a.m., and having a donut with your coffee may seem like a nice treat.

    Often eating is a reward for people. If you have had a long day at work, reaching for food from the refrigerator or pantry maybe feel like a soothing treat.

    It is very easy to fall into the habit of eating because others are eating around you. For example, if you feed your children early in the evening, it would seem natural to eat with them. However, if when your spouse comes home later in the evening, eating again with your spouse could result in you eating more food than your body actually needs.

    A final common reason that people eat is because eating can temporarily reduce stress that we are feeling. In an effort to feel better the quick fix of a snack or treat may temporarily relieve stress.

    I am not saying that it is not okay to eat at times other than meal times. Nor am I saying that food can’t be a source of enjoyment and pleasure. It can be and it is! However, remembering that the primary reason to eat is to fuel your body with high quality nutrients is essential. Let food do its job and don’t over use it for purposes such as a reward or to avoid boredom.

    To help you become more conscious of eating, identify the reason why you are eating. If you are eating to cover up a belief that is not serving you, such as “I’m not worthy,” “I can’t handle this,” or “If I don’t eat now I will feel deprived,” look for a way to affirm the more empowering truth such as, “I am worthy and I can find ways to acknowledge myself, other than with food.”

    Honor yourself by feeding yourself healthy food. It will make you feel better about yourself and it will nourish your body physically.

    Find ways to reward yourself in a positive way such as by taking a walk, reading a good book, playing fun music and dancing around the room. You will feel better about yourself and your body will be able to lose weight more easily.

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    www.manifestingwellbeing.com

    Manifesting Well-Being for Health and Success

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  • Jun
    6

    medical symbolThe World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute for Cancer Research have a report outlining suggestions for the prevention of cancer. This is exciting to see research going into prevention, instead of purely cures for illness once it has already occurred. As I read the main points of the report I noticed that many of the suggestions are very good for those interested in releasing excess weight or maintaining weight.

    I suggest that you visit the site for the full report. http://www.dietandcancerreport.org/

    Here are the main points for the prevention of cancer:

    1. Have a lean, but not underweight body.
    2. Exercise for at least 30 minutes a day.
    3. Avoid excessive high fat/high sugar/low fiber foods, including sugar-filled drinks.
    4. Fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fiber-rich foods are beneficial for your diet.
    5. Avoid eatting a lot of red meat and processed meat.
    6. If you choose to drink alcohol, it is best for men to stop after 2 drinks and women after 1.
    7. Work to get your nutrition from foods instead of supplements.

    I would be eager to see them include suggestions for decreasing stress and increasing positive emotions in the next report. Authors such as David Simon, MD in his book Return To Wholeness have highlighted the benefits of mediation, visualization, journaling and laughter in the face of cancer. What other suggestions would you think might be beneficial?
    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.
    http://www.weightlossforwellbeing.com/
    www.DeborahBarnett.com

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  • Jun
    1

    What is causing your weight gain?

    The first step is to identify what you have done to gain excess weight. In most circumstances, your weight gain happened over many months, if not years. This step is not to beat yourself up, but to do a check-in of where you are so that you know what behaviors you would like to improve. There are several possible habits that may contribute to your excessive weight. For example you may not have been exercising regularly. Maybe you  have a tendency to eat foods that promote weight gain, or perhaps you habitually and often excessively eat. Times of habitual, excessive eating may occur when you get home from work and are standing in the kitchen deciding what to have for dinner, when you watch television, or once you get into bed at night. Even the thoughts you think such as “I am fat” or “I can’t lose weight” are habitual thoughts that are unsupportive of your weight loss effort. Not only do they feel bad and are unkind to think about yourself, but they also program you, subconsciously, to gain weight.

    Choose new behaviors to help you lose weight

    The second step is to replace the old habit(s) with new, healthier behavior(s). It takes about 28 days to change a habit. To learn a new behavior requires doing it over and over and over, until it becomes a new skill. The key is to be consistent. (You can do it!) So, if you find that you have an eating habit that does not serve you, look at what you are eating, how much you are eating and when you are eating. Say you munch chips mindlessly when you get home from work. What alternate behavior can you do? What will feed you emotionally and nourish you after work that does not involve taking in an excessive amount of calories?

    The third step is to be aware of the thoughts you are thinking and make sure that they serve you and your weight loss effort. Praise yourself when you make a healthy choice for yourself. (“Good for me!)” Acknowledge the progress you do make. Find ways to accept yourself even if you are not yet at your ideal weight. By setting yourself up for success with new healthy behaviors and the right mental and emotional attitude, you will soon find yourself well on the way toward achieving your ideal weight.

    For support in attaining the ideal beliefs and emotional attitude to reach your ideal weight, in the comfort of your own home, click here.

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    http://www.manifestingwellbeing.com/manifest/

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  • Apr
    25
    Mindfulness May Help to Reduce and Maintain Weight
    Mindfulness May Help to Reduce and Maintain Weight

    There are many reasons that people want to lose weight. Most commonly, at least one reason is to look or feel better. I have suggested in the past that it is always good to start with your “why” – your reason for losing weight. American Chronicle has has a good post on the your why of losing weight.

     Releasing excess weight gain is not an easy task for many people. Maintaining one’s ideal weight is often just as challenging. Often however, the challenge is not the amount of calories one eats, the correct diet, or the perfect exercise to “burn off” the fat. Often the issue is why the excessive or emotionally reactive eating is happening in the first place. I had a client who told me that she has always felt a “void” in her life, and she wondered if her emotional eating was a symptom of this.

    Eating is a common attempt used to fill the void that many people can experience. Unfortunately  the attempt to fill the void with food never works. The void can’t be filled with food, because the void is not physical. It is emotional and/or spiritual. The key then is to become more aware of the emotional triggers of eating, eating excessively and feeling out of control about one’s eating.
    Mindfulness based meditation is being researched for its effectiveness at helping to increase self-awareness, regulate mood and increase the ability to have an internal source of control. The Duke Center for Integrative Medicine conducts research on using mindfulness based meditation to help individuals maintain weight.
    To help soothe stress and anxious moods as a part of your effort to release excess weight you can utilized techniques such as the Emotional Freedom Technique used by Dr. Deb in her weight loss video.
    Deborah Barnett, P.h.D.
    www.Deborah Barnett.com

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  • Mar
    27
    beyonce knowles

    beyonce knowles

    Beyonce used the “Lemonade Diet,” also known as “The Master Cleanse” to to lose weight for her role in the movie “Dreamgirls.” The Master Cleanse has gained a lot of popularity for its ability to help people lose weight quickly. But it has its drawbacks. Reportedly Beyonce admitted that she was cranky while on the Master Cleanse and that after she went off of the Master Cleanse she gained back the weight that she had lost.

    Dangers of the Master Cleanse and other quick detox diets include dehydration, acidifying your blood, causing metabolic acidosis, vitamin deficiencies, low blood sugar, potassium and sodium levels, and muscle breakdown, according to nutrition experts. On the MSNBC blog Dr. Nasir Moloo, a gastroenterologist at Capitol Gastroenterology Consultants Medical Group in Sacramento, Calif. was quoted as saying, “There’s no evidence that these types of diets are necessary or helpful.”   

    Certainly a healthy diet and exercise are beneficial to losing weight. However, when choosing a diet it is important to think of the overall impact on one’s health and not just the end (and sometimes temporary) result of weight loss.

    Other important factors in weight loss include one’s mindset toward losing weight and reducing one’s stress level. To find out more about both, go to
    www.weightlossforwellbeing.com

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    www.ManifestingWellbeing.com

    www.DeborahBarnett.com

    3 Comments
  • Mar
    13

    Spring is just around the corner, even it that is hard to imagine for those of you living in the more northern states. Yet it is true. Down here in the South, the daffodils are up  and the trees are starting to bloom. That means that bathing suit season is around the corner.

    What’s your reaction to this news? Did you roll your eyes or jump up and down? If you didn’t jump up and down, why not? Is the idea of bathing suit season a scary one for you? If it is, what would make it not scary? If you could wave your magic wand, what would have to change in order for you to be so excited about bathing suit season that you jump up and down in eager anticipation?

    For some people the idea of bathing suit season would be exciting if they weighed a little less or could easily release a few pounds and 3 dress sizes. That is the key, isn’t it? Being able to easily release a few pounds. Because for too many people attaining their perfect weight feels like far away goal, or an arduous task. I’d like to suggest that the eye-roll factor, that feeling of “ug, I have to lose weight,” is what makes it difficult to lose weight. If losing weight and attaining your perfect weight were easy, wouldn’t it be more fun?

    What would it take make attaining your ideal weight fun? If you knew that you could easily slip into a dress 3 sizes smaller 3 months from now would you get excited? If you could easily stay focused, eat foods that support your health and avoid eating the entire bag of chocolate chip cookies wouldn’t that be nice? If from now on, you thought kind thoughts about yourself and no longer criticized yourself would you get excited?

    A great deal of your weight loss success is based on your attitude. A positive attitude is a key tool to possess on your journey toward discovering a more slender you. By focusing on your success and feeling optimistic along the way, you will be well on your way toward losing  3 dress sizes and being more excited about bathing suit season.

    For ease in maintaining a positive attitude, eliminating blocks in the way of your weight loss success and a discovering more slender body, visit
    www.manifestingwellbeing.com/manifest
    Here’s to your success!

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    www.ManifestingWellBeing.com

    www.DeborahBarnett.com

    1 Comment
  • Mar
    2

    A friend of mine, Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) specialist Bruce Stewart of www.psychologyofplace.com recently posed the idea to me of weight change, versus weight loss. As Bruce highlighted, the idea of “loss” has a negative connotation. When we think about losing something, it usually does not feel good. However, thinking about changing, transforming or even releasing, has a more positive ring to it.

     I thought about how the end result losing weight, or changing one’s body size to a smaller size, is very exciting and uplifting. The end result is one of physical, and often emotional transformation.

     Bob Proctor has a book entitled The Science of Perfect Weight. Certainly attaining one’s “perfect weight” is an uplifting comment. A wonderful summary of Bob’s book is posted at  

    http://www.ehow.com/how_4783866_release-weight-not-just-lose.html

    One of the key concepts of Bob’s book is training your mind to focus on being at your Perfect Weight. This creates an image in your mind and your body then responds to that image. By using this method you are working on changing your habits, attitude and mind.

    Using the online video that I have created, you will be able to change your mind and body to increase your health. By addresssing and neutralizing the limiting beliefs that keep you from releasing your excess weight, you will successfully find your perfect weight. Go to http://www.manifestingwellbeing.com/manifest/ and start moving toward your perfect weight.

     

    Here’s to your success!

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    www.ManifestingWellBeing.com

    www.DeborahBarnett.com

     

     

    1 Comment
  • Feb
    21

    hoodia may help weight lossHoodia gordoniiis an African cactus from Namibia and South Africa.In Africa’s Kalahari Desert, hoodia has traditionally been eaten by the San Bushmen, to ward off hunger and thirst on long journeys.

    Many people are interested in hoodia for its possible weight loss benefits. Supposedly hoodia works because it tricks a part of your brain, your hypothalamus into thinking that you are full. A role of the hypothalamus is to determines if appetite needs to be increased or suppressed by reading the blood glucose level. The active component in hoodia is p57. The molecule P57 “talks” to the hypothalamus in your brain. Reportedly, p57 can signal to the hypothalamus to suppress the appetite even more strongly than one’s blood glucose level. 

    A few possible side effects from hoodia are reported. It could impair liver function or cause blood sugar level to drop too low. Unfortunately, scientifically strong, published research on hoodia is sketchy. Most of the “research” on hoodia is from websites selling a hoodia product. If you are going to buy hoodia, be careful. Some products out on the market claiming that they contain hoodia, when tested do not contain any hoodia!

    Other points to consider are:

    1. Every human is different and just because it works for some people, it is not likely to work for everyone.
    2. There is no clinical evidence yet on its interactions with other drugs that a person may be taking, such as cholesterol or diabetes medicine.
    3. Remember that excess weight is a symptom of an imbalance within the body on the physical or emotional level. Taking hooida, or any other weight loss supplement will not address the underlying factors of what caused the weight gain in the first place. As a result, if hoodia is discontinued and the factors causing the weight loss have not been address, the excess weight is likely to return.

    For an online video addressing the beliefs and emotions that lead to weight gain, visit www.weightlossforwellbeing.com

    Here’s to your success in releasing excess weight!

    Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.

    www.ManifestingWellBeing.com

    www.DeborahBarnett.com

    1 Comment
  • Feb
    12

    When I think back into the past, I realize that weight loss was a very tough task for me to accomplish. I was always concerned about my deadlines at work and I was always very, very tired. When I arrived home, I didn’t want to have to make any additional decisions. All I ever wanted to do was to go home, kick back, watch the TV and eat Doritos, Cheetos or some other snack that started with the letters “chocolate bar.” I was exhausted from the mental anguish of having to make important decisions at work and just wanted to be entertained by the television at night. I was overweight and felt awful about myself. I thought of myself as being FAT.
    I didn’t believe in the weight loss options that I typically saw advertised, such as surgery or having to go on the strictest of diets.  My mental dedication just wasn’t up to “par” when it came to dieting.  I had dieted before and had always gained the weight right back as soon as I took any liberties in the selection of the foods I was eating.
    After meeting Dr. Deb, I realized that the most important part for me to learn concerning weight loss was truly the mental process, not the eating process. Until this time I hadn’t realized the impact that my thoughts and beliefs had on my weight. Once I was able to reduce my negative thinking, I was able to easily decide how much and what I chose to eat.  I was also able to easily begin a new dietary program that has kept the weight off for close to two years now. I realized this never would have happened without the procedures and advice that I received from Dr. Deb.
    There were dramatic changes in my mental and emotional states, especially in the arena of over-coming mental obstacles. One of Dr. Deb’s techniques that changed my life forever, including weight loss, is something I continue to use often as a regular part of my life. You can find this technique at http://www.weightlossforwellbeing.com  Truly, the mental part of starting a weight loss program is just as important as the food we put in our mouth.
    One of the nice parts about getting into the right “mental state” of mind is that it creates lasting effects instead of temporary results. Remember, I was the person who was the chronic yo-yo dieter. Up 20 pounds down 20 pounds, up 10 pounds down 10 pounds. This was a typical “month in” and “month out” pattern for me. This created mental anguish for me, as I failed to keep my weight off. I often see others who are in the same pattern that I was in. I would highly recommend Dr. Deb’s techniques for anyone who has tried traditional dieting or used the yo-yo techniques and been disappointed.
    Here is my update on how things have been for me since using Dr Deb’s secret techniques.
    • I have more energy than at any time in the last 20 years
    • I have been able to maintain my goal weight
    • I eat a variety of foods.
    • I don’t feel like I’m punishing myself
    • I feel congruent and happy knowing that I’m in control of my weight
    • I am much more proud of my body
    • I have much less fear about how I appear in public concerning my weight
    If you want to lose weight and you feel your story is similar to mine, give Dr. Deb a try.  Go to http://www.weightlossforwellbeing.com and start creating your new life TODAY!
    Tom Troughton
    www.BeClearToday.com

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Deborah Barnett, Ph.D.
    

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