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Self-Discovery
Through Obesity
by Deanna Waggoner
It's Monday morning, and
your alarm clock goes off. You feel more tired than usual. As you get up, your head feels
tight, your muscles achy, and your throat is sore. You stumble to the bathroom, pull out
the thermometer and take your temperature... 101 degrees! You have the flu. So you
immediately look at yourself in the mirror and say to yourself: "You idiot, look
what you've done to yourself. You have a fever, how stupid could you be? You are only
doing this for attention, a way to get out of work. You're pathetic!" Right? Of
course not. You take care of yourself. You rest. You may see a doctor. You drink a lot of
fluid. You nurture yourself back to health. If you're holistic, you recognize that fever
is a natural defense mechanism to fight off the virus or bacteria that is attacking your
body. You may even thank your body for doing such a good job.
We are conditioned in this society
to only think of the tangible, physical aspects
of the world around us, and so
the main emphasis regarding obesity for many years
has been food and diet.
And yet eating is not the issue.
Take a look at another
scenario. Your best friend has pneumonia. She has been hospitalized and you take off work
early to visit her. She is on the road to recovery, and will probably be home in a day or
so. While you are there, she has a coughing spell. It takes a few minutes before she can
catch her breath, the nurse may even have to come in and use a ventilator. After you
leave, you have dinner with another friend and your best friend comes up in conversations,
so you say: "I can't believe what she did while I was there. She went into this
coughing spell. It was so disgusting. She is really a pig. Why can't she control
herself?" Right? Of course not! You recognize that coughing is a symptom of
pneumonia and that your friend cannot help it. You probably offered her a glass of water
or maybe you were the one to call the nurse, and you expressed your sincere concern for
her with your other friend at dinner.
Symptoms vs. Cause
If we are so gracious with
flu symptoms in ourselves, or pneumonia symptoms in our friends, why then are we so cruel
with symptoms of another disorder that affects nearly 70% of the American population?
Obesity. Do we really think that someone would choose to be overweight? Do we really think
that children say, "When I grow up I want to be fat?"
Almost every `solution' to
the problem only deals with the symptoms. We are conditioned in this society to only think
of the tangible, physical aspects of the world around us, and so the main emphasis
regarding obesity for many years has been food and diet. And yet eating is not the issue.
Then, modern society changed its emphasis to exercise. Yet again, this is dealing with the
symptom. So then, what is the cause of obesity?
What is the cause of cancer?
Well, you say, there are many things that can cause cancer. True, but not every person
exposed to those things gets it. You can also say there are many different kinds of
cancer. True, and each kind is not necessarily caused by the same thing. The problem is we
want straight-forward, black and white concrete answers to all life's problems.
Uncertainties and gray areas disturb us.
As an Acupuncture Physician,
I often have people ask if I can help them lose weight. As a person who has struggled with
weight myself, I have a few thoughts to share, and some of the discoveries are very recent
for me.
Getting To Know You
First of all, no one can
help someone else lose weight. Oh, I can recommend a diet and exercise program, combined
with acupuncture to suppress the appetite, and if it works, which it may, the symptom has
only been palliated. It is like taking an aspirin for your fever and saying it cured your
flu. You know as well as I do, when the aspirin wears off, the fever will likely come
back. That's not to say that taking an aspirin may not be appropriate if your fever is
dangerously high, while you take other appropriate measures to get well.
Addressing symptoms
does not address your uniqueness.
It may be appropriate to address your symptoms
during or after you work on your self-discovery,
but no diet or exercise regime
is right for every person.
So what are appropriate
measures for obesity? I would say, at the top of the list is self-discovery. Just as you
wouldn't heap guilt on yourself for having a fever with the flu, begin to look at your
weight as a symptom of something bigger. Begin to know yourself. When did the `illness'
start? What was happening in your life when it started? Discover the patterns. Were there
times when you didn't have the symptoms? What was happening then?
As you answer these
questions, you may be able to see that just as a fever is a defense mechanism to fight an
attack, perhaps your weight was a method of protection, and that your body is really
taking very good care of you. Perhaps it is a signal that your life is out of control, and
again your body is taking good care of you by letting you know. Perhaps you are carrying a
heavy load, and in a very real way your body is reflecting this to alert you. Thanks and
appreciation may be in order. After all, your body has been taking care of you while
you've been insulting and slandering it.
As you start to treat
yourself as a friend, remember that you certainly wouldn't berate the friend hospitalized
for pneumonia. This is more than simple behavior modification, which is again another
method of treating the symptom. As there are no two blades of grass the same, your illness
is just as unique as you are. Addressing symptoms does not address your uniqueness. It may
be appropriate to address your symptoms during or after you work on your self-discovery,
but no diet or exercise regimen is right for every person. Everyone has different needs.
If you are reading this and
you have never had a weight issue, perhaps you would consider looking at your friends who
do with the same compassion that you look at someone with an illness. Offer your support
in their path to the solutions, not just symptom chasing.
Recommended book:
The
Allergy Self-Help Cookbook: Over 325 Natural Foods
Recipes, Free of All Common Food Allergens
by Marjorie Hurt Jones.
Info/Order this book.
About The
Author
Deanna Waggoner is a licensed Acupuncture Physician.
Deanna received a B.A. from the College of Traditional Acupuncture (UK), and is a graduate
of the Worsley Institute of Classical Acupuncture in Florida.
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