Reblogged, author Yoni Freedhoff, MD
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People often come to me wanting to lose weight or improve their lifestyle, but their moods are anything but well.
Sometimes, when I ask them about it, they’ll say that their weight is what they think is causing them to struggle with depression or anxiety.
I always tell them the same thing.
Setting yourself up to struggle with weight loss by attempting to affect intentional changes when your mood is squarely in the way is not only unfair, it might make matters worse
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Mood comes first.
Intentional weight loss requires the very things that mood disturbances often preclude – the ability to consistently, plan, organize, and motivate. Setting yourself up to struggle with weight loss by attempting to affect intentional changes when your mood is squarely in the way is not only unfair, it might make matters worse by giving you something to feel guilty about when you’re understandably and realistically challenged. And it’s also important to note that your mental health is far more important than your weight.
So regardless of your weight, whether its working with your family physician, your employee assistance program, reading books, talking to friends, or looking into community based counselling resources (many of which offer sliding scales for payment), mental health should be your first priority.
First mood. Then weight.
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Yoni Freedhoff, MD @ weightymatters.ca
Family doc, Assistant Prof. at the University of Ottawa, Author of The Diet Fix, and founder of Ottawa’s non-surgical Bariatric Medical Institute – a multi-disciplinary, ethical, evidence-based nutrition and weight management centre.
Keep it Real
Photo by Amy McTigue