
How can increasing your
awareness of tasting, craving, and satisfaction be a tool for healthier
eating? Here's what psychologists have to say.
Deborah Hill used to think she was skinny. Her 5 foot 9 inch frame
could take on a lot of weight without making her look out of shape. But
last year she was shocked to discover that she weighed over 210 pounds,
which classified her as medically obese.
“It was just crazy,” says Hill. “I’d never had a problem with weight.”
Hill is one of a growing number of Americans—over 35 percent,
according to the Center for Disease Control—who are considered obese,
having a body mass index of 30 or greater. Obesity increases health
risks like heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, to name a few, and the
health care costs to treat obesity-related illness are skyrocketing,
with CDC estimates in 2008 reaching $147 billion dollars.
But now there is a new prescription for combating obesity, one
that goes beyond ubiquitous diet and exercise regimens: mindfulness, the
moment-to-moment awareness of our thoughts, feelings, and surroundings.
Researchers are learning that teaching obese individuals mindful
eating skills—like paying closer attention to their bodies’ hunger cues
and learning to savor their food—can help them change unhealthy eating
patterns and lose weight. And, unlike other forms of treatment,
mindfulness may get at the underlying causes of overeating—like craving,
stress, and emotional eating—which make it so hard to defeat.
Mindfulness has definitely helped Hill. In the last year, she has
lost 40 pounds and developed a much healthier relationship to food and
eating.
“Mindfulness has been huge for me,” she says.
Why mindfulness?
Jean Kristeller, a professor emeritus of psychology at Indiana
State University, is a pioneer in the field. She first became interested
in applying mindfulness to eating issues when working as a clinician
with overweight college students who were compulsively eating large
quantities of food—or “binging.” She thought her students had an
underlying dysfunctional relationship to food that was being ignored in
the clinical community in favor of dieting, which “didn’t mesh” for her.
But when she encountered Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress
Reduction (MBSR) program, she says, “more than a light bulb” went off
for her. She wondered if it could be possible to teach people with
eating disorders to become refocused on their internal hunger and signs
that they were full—and develop a more accepting approach to food and
eating.
“He was taking a tradition of cultivating awareness and an
accepting way of our experiences—both inner and outer—and encouraging
people to bring themselves into better balance,” says Kristeller. “This
fit with my theoretical model of reconnecting people with their inner
experiences.”
With the help of a doctoral student, she created a program called
Mindfulness-Based Eating Awareness Training—or MB-EAT, based on
Kabat-Zinn’s MBSR—that teaches people how to taste their food, recognize
their levels of hunger and fullness, and be more accepting of their
food preferences. One exercise involves eating a few raisins slowly,
paying close attention to their flavor sensations and how they change
with time.
“When most people do the raisin exercise, they are stunned by it,”
says Kristeller. “They see that if they eat a few raisins mindfully
they can enjoy them as much or more than if they eat a whole box.”
Of course, even Kristeller admits that it’s easier to get people
to regulate their intake with health foods, like raisins, than “problem
foods,” like chocolate brownies. So, the program doesn’t stop with
raisins—it teaches people that, once they learn to pay attention,
brownies can be best experienced and savored in a smaller number of
bites.
Many obese people, says Kristeller, have developed a particular
pattern: They try to control their eating through avoidance or
limit-setting, thinking “willpower” is what they need. Then, when their
plans go awry—as they inevitably do—they tell themselves that they’ve
“blown it” and give up.
From a mindfulness perspective, she says, there is never a point
of no return: One can choose to eat mindfully at anytime, even after
“blowing it.” In addition, since the program teaches people not to avoid
foods but to savor them, people don’t feel as deprived. Kristeller
tries to take the guilt out of enjoying food and to help people honor
their food preferences.
“We try to help people cultivate their inner gourmet,” she says.
What the research says
Kristeller tested her MB-EAT program in a pilot study with a group
of 18 binge eaters. The women participated in seven sessions of a group
treatment program, which included assessments prior to and following
treatment.
At the end of treatment, binges dropped from slightly over four to
about 1.5 per week, with only four participants still meeting criteria
for Binge Eating Disorder when the researchers followed up with
questions after treatment. In addition, the women demonstrated a better
relationship to food and eating, and their depression and anxiety
decreased.
In a second study, conducted with Ruth Quillian-Wolever of Duke
University, Kristeller tested the MB-EAT program on a group of obese
binge eaters, comparing the group at one month and four months
post-treatment to two control groups, one of which went through another
educational program.
Although both the educational and MB-EAT groups reduced their
binging behavior, those in the MB-EAT group showed signs of greater
overall self-regulation and balance around eating, and sustained
improvement in binge eating. Plus, the degree to which the women
incorporated mindfulness practices into their lives predicted much of
this improvement and the degree of weight loss they experienced.
She hypothesizes that mindful eating strengthens this same area of
the brain, making it easier for people to cognitively process their
desire to eat, rather than feeling victim to the emotional center that
often drives eating.
“This study showed that success wasn’t just about group work and
getting support,“ says Kristeller, “but that their success at losing
weight was directly related to the degree to which they used mindfulness
techniques.”
Currently there is no data that shows what is happening in the
brain when people practice mindful eating. But Kristeller points to the
large body of research on MBSR showing that people who use mindfulness
increase the size and function of their pre-frontal cortex, the area of
the brain connected to decision making and long-range planning. She
hypothesizes that mindful eating strengthens this same area of the
brain, making it easier for people to cognitively process their desire
to eat, rather than feeling victim to the emotional center that often
drives eating.
“We are interrupting the reactivity cycle,” says Kristeller.
Stress in eating and obesity
Elissa Epel, the founder and director of the Center for Obesity
Assessment, Study, and Treatment at the University of California, San
Francisco, has been researching the role of stress in overeating. One of
the biggest, most reliable paths to obesity, she says, is high stress,
because it changes our appetite, stimulates overeating, and makes us
more insulin-resistant, a factor that elevates blood sugar and can put
as at risk for Type 2 diabetes.
“Stress affects the same signals as famine does. It turns on the
brain pathways that make us crave dense calories—we’ll choose high fat,
high sweet foods, or high salt,” says Epel. “When we have a ‘stress
brain,’ food is even more rewarding.”
Epel notes that surveys show 50-60 percent of women eat for
emotional reasons rather than because of hunger. The stress of difficult
emotions dampens the reward response in the brain and causes craving,
which is what drives overeating—as well as drug use—in some people.
According to Epel, the hunger and reward drives are the strongest drives
in the human body and very difficult to change.
“When the obese brain tricks you into thinking that you’re starving, it’s hard to fight that,” she says.
Her lab has studied the impact of mindfulness training on people’s
stress metabolism. Normally, fat distribution in women is concentrated
in the hips; but women who release high levels of cortisol, the
stress-related hormone, tend to store fat in the deep belly tissue—fat
that is very difficult to take off. Epel and post-doctoral fellow
Jennifer Daubenmier decided to test a program similar to Kristeller’s
MB-EAT program but with added stress reduction exercises on obese women
to see how it would impact the women’s cortisol levels and fat
distribution.
Results showed that the more mindfulness the women practiced, the
greater their anxiety, chronic stress, and deep belly fat decreased. In
addition, the women in the mindfulness program maintained their body
weight while the women in the control group increased their weight over
the same period of time.
“This is what we call a proof of concept study,” says Epel. “We
didn’t ask people to change how many calories they ate; we just wanted
to know if decreasing stress would have an impact by changing fat
distribution, and it did."
In a more recent study, of which Deborah Hill is a participant,
Epel and colleagues are looking at how mindfulness techniques affect
weight loss. The program aims to reduce stress, increase awareness of
external and internal cues for eating (like being in a party situation
or feeling bored), and foster more self-acceptance around food, while
teaching people about nutrition. While data from the study is still
being evaluated, Epel expresses surprise by the promising results so
far.
“Mindfulness has turned out to be much more powerful than I thought, in its ability to affect weight,” she says.
Not a panacea
Still, the research on mindful eating is relatively young, and it
is not without its critics. One concern is that the mindfulness approach
is too weak to be effective, given the overwhelming problems with our
current food environment, such as the prevalence and cheapness of
unhealthy, high calorie foods, and the marketing that pushes convenience
foods on an overly stressed population.
Michele Mietus-Snyder, co-director of the Obesity Institute at
Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., has been
studying childhood obesity in highly stressed communities, where obesity
levels tend to be highest.
As part of a study funded by the American Heart Association,
Mietus-Snyder taught mindfulness, as well as nutrition and healthy
eating, to a group of inner-city kids and their parents in Northern
California to see what impact it would have on the kids’ levels of
stress, cortisol, and c-reactive protein, a risk factor in heart
disease.
She quickly learned how “naïve” she was to think that these tools
could make a significant impact. Because of the chaotic environment in
which the study families lived, it was hard for them to participate
consistently, even though the parents and kids both seemed receptive to
the program.
“The tool of mindfulness, as valuable as it is, could just not
take root in these kids’ lives,” says Mietus-Snyder. “The entropy of
life took over.”
Results from her study found that neither the mindfulness group
nor a control group—who received exercise in place of the mindfulness
class—changed their metabolic profile by much, though both groups did
have overall reductions in anxiety and in the kids’ body mass index
scores. She hypothesizes that just bringing the parents and kids
together once a week to learn about healthy eating may have been at
least partly responsible for the positive results in both groups.
But what was most discouraging to Mietus-Snyder was the paucity of
nutrition she found in the kids’ diets, which caused their metabolic
systems to become inefficient and dysfunctional. She wonders if this,
more than anything, impacted the effectiveness of the mindfulness
intervention.
“We’re just climbing uphill with these kids,” she says.
Mietus-Snyder believes the most important thing society can do to
eliminate obesity is to improve the food environment for these kids. The
government should intercede and more closely regulate food production
and distribution, especially in schools, she says.
Epel shares that concern, but still sees the need for a two-pronged approach.
“We need to change food policies, not just focus on how people
change their response to it,” she agrees. “But we need to work from both
sides of this issue.”
No more food fights
Before Deborah Hill entered Epel’s mindfulness treatment program,
her doctor had warned her that her cholesterol and triglyceride levels
were high, a risk factor for diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. She’d
tried diets and programs like Weight Watchers, but felt that they
weren’t helping her with the emotional side of her eating.
“I’m an emotional eater,” says Hill. “I eat because I’m bored, stressed, or just because."
Through the mindful eating program, she has learned how to slow down, evaluate how she’s feeling, and make better choices.
“Now if I want a piece of cake, I really taste it,” she says.
“After four to five bites, I re-evaluate and ask myself: Do I really
want it?”
Although doing the daily mindfulness meditation has been hard for
her, she finds other ways to de-stress, and has become more
“adventurous” around eating, sometimes choosing arugula salad over fried
chicken and mashed potatoes, for example. But, she doesn’t deny herself
anything, she claims, even eating a burger when she wants to, as long
as she stays aware of making the choice and not because “it’s there.”
“I’m not on a diet; I’m on a lifestyle change,” says Hill. “I eat what I want. I don’t fight food anymore." |