Friday, May 9, 2014

Our Body's Innate Intelligence by guest blogger Lesley Wirth


Our Body’s Innate Intelligence
By  Lesley Wirth
When you are gearing up to fuel your body what part of yourself are you listening to? Many of us get caught up in the cravings that our mind has, be it for sweets, caffeine, or alcohol.  We do not listen to what our body wants.  What if we took a moment and got in tune with what our body is craving? What if we listened to it as though it is its own entity separate from our emotional and mental wants? 
I remember a couple of years ago asking my body what it wanted.  What came through surprised me a little. This is what I heard:  I am your temple. I want acceptance. I want love and nurturance. I want clean air, movement, and for you to respect me. I want you to honor me by feeding me nutrient dense foods that will replenish me and make me strong. I want a highly alkaline diet so that I can perform optimally. When you eat meat, please make sure the animals were treated humanely.  This is important to me. I want what goes in me to be treated with love and want you to treat me with love.
I thought I was going to get some answer like, “stop eating Cheetos and could you please add more greens?”  I guess not.  I found out there was so much more information and wisdom for me to be paying attention to.  Today I smile as I write this because this answer was much different than what my mind wanted at the time.  I wanted to know exactly what to do and how to do it; a roadmap with all the correct turns and shortcuts. I also wanted a genie to grant me the wish of making all the changes in my diet easy for me. A Siri of sorts. In other words, I knew I was not happy with the way I had been eating but I did not want to have to make sacrifices, change, or feel challenged in any way.
Although there was a huge part of me that wished for better eating habits, there was a larger part that wanted to be jolted with caffeine and sedated with chocolate and wine. And this part that wanted to check out was afraid to fully listen to what my body wanted.  To be honest the part that wants to check out still exists in me.  It has just lessoned more and more over time.  The more inner work I do, the less it pops up.  My practice has become accepting the part of me that wants to check out. If I make it wrong and fight it, it just gets worse. If I can accept this exists within me, I soften around the whole thing; I stop judging and making myself wrong. By accepting that there is a piece of me that wants to tune out, I take my power back from it.
Food and eating has been an on-going place of growth for me. As I have continued to do my inner work, the way I eat has evolved and what I organically want to be eating and doing continues to shift. I balance pleasure and allowing myself to have things that may not be the very best for my body, with eating very nutritiously.  I do this because I want to honor my body’s guidance while also continuing to live life in a way that is not taking everything so seriously. It really is okay to allow myself the pleasure and joy of things that may not be considered the healthiest. My motto is everything in balance and as I am balanced inside my food is balanced on the outside.
The simple exercise of asking our body what it wants provides us with a wealth of information.  The next step becomes working through whatever may be in the way of us being able to step more fully into honoring it.  It has been my experience that it is never about willpower. It is always about fears.  If these fears are addressed and new ways of coping can be integrated a radically different relationship with food is possible; one that integrates honoring our body as well as our mental and emotional self.  I am here to tell you that it does not have to be either or. It really can be both. You can have it all my friend!
The head does not have the answer.  But your body’s wisdom does. Use your heart, your inner-guidance, and your intuition to lead you to the people who can help you discover the way to create an empowering relationship with food and your body. Trust those who make claims that are actually worth trusting. If someone “has all the answers,” then be weary. Why? Because YOU are the only one with your body, mind, and life circumstances that influence your relationship with food. All of this must be taken into consideration for lasting change to occur. Otherwise you might as will hit the repeat button.  I say it is time to try something new. It is time to become your own health advocate. Only you can say “yes” to investing in yourself and in your health.
If you would like to learn more about the approach that has transformed my relationship to food after 14 years of every type of eating disorder a person could experience (from anorexia to bulmia to compulsive eater) please visit me at http://www.lesleywirth.com.

Lesley Wirth, MA Spiritual Psychology
Transformational Coach and Spiritual Counselor

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