Guest guest Posted May 25, 2006 Report Share Posted May 25, 2006 Shalu, The longer I am on the raw journey, the less I crave cooked foods. Its been long enough for me that the smell of most cooked foods makes me nauseated. I walked past a deli / meat market in the grocery store last week-end and the smell gaged me! When I know I am going to be around people eating anything that I don't eat... I bring ALOT of my own food. Like the pineapple yesterday, I take more than I can possibly eat that way I can be sure I am " full " . Being " full " seems to reduce my temptation issues greatly. Its not part of your question but, I schedule snacks at 10 am and 3 pm so that I never get to hungry. When I get to the " starved " feeling I am much more likely to eat the first thing I find. Not good. Margaret posted about fasting and so much of it being a psychological issue, I think that applies to cravings too. Don't focus on what you can't have, but instead all the wonderful things you can have. Think about all the things that you are adding to your diet. I love the idea of eating as much watermelon as I want... The other deterrent for me is that after a couple of weeks raw I just HAD to have a Burger King Whopper with Fries. It was the worst night in my life. I was so sick with stomach cramps and trips to the bathroom, I hardly slept. It was intense enough pain that I haven't forgotten and now I have zero desire for Whoppers. Kindest Regards, Leah shalu d <shals_in_in wrote: I'm new to eating raw foods, do you ever get cravings .... i get very tempted when my friends eat any food like pizzaas... If you do what do you do abt it. Shalu Sneak preview the all-new .com. It's not radically different. Just radically better. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2006 Report Share Posted May 27, 2006 Leah wrote: > Margaret posted about fasting and so much of it being a > psychological issue, I think that applies to cravings too. > Don't focus on what you can't have, but instead all the > wonderful things you can have. Think about all the things that > you are adding to your diet. > I love the idea of eating as much watermelon as I want... Leah (what a beautiful name!): I will second your extrapolation of the comment on fasting to cravings! After all, when you are fasting, and a " food idea " floats by in your mind, what is that but a craving? Did I mention that I read cookbooks when I am fasting? I also read recipes when I have a craving. I don't know if you have ever noticed but *cravings*, although they are often for a particular food, are really for a particular taste, or a particular *substance*. If you crave, for example, Burger King Whoppers, your body might be asking you for fat. (on the other hand, if you just want that Burger King experience, with the meat on a bun between your hands, all bets are off -- but you can still use the cookbook to find something that makes your mouth water in the same way) Have you ever had a craving that feels like " I want to eat something " , but you eat something and it isn't the right something? I get those cravings once in a while (and the old easy foods picture themselves sexily in my mind, posing cutely). With raw food, if you want to make the exact thing, it can be time consuming, but, if you come to realize what the particular *substance* or *ingredient* is that you are craving, you can often take care of it in an easy, " fast-food " way -- for example - if you are craving Burger King, the fast way to get over it would be to eat some very high-fat nuts, like, maybe, Brazil nuts, or even almonds. Avocados might work, but they might give you too much of a " green " experience, when you want a " brown " experience (if you are synesthetic, you might understand what I mean, otherwise, *never mind!*) Living in New York City, the land of fast food (just about wherever you are in Manhattan, you can run downstairs and find a fast food restaurant within a few paces), it is difficult to get over fast food. (I had little problem in my year in Virginia Beach, VA, where, if you have a craving for anything at all that is not in your pantry, you have to put on presentable clothes and makeup and go in your car to buy it -- I'm lazy once I'm home and showered, and I don't like to drive, so if I didn't have a good substitute in the pantry or in the refrigerator, I had to starve <grin>) I have joked that I told my students that the crackers and " cheese* I had brought were " hamburgers, but, I have to tell you that crackers made from " oily " nuts are *extremely* satisfying, in the way that hamburgers are. Put stuff on top of them, like the curry mayonnaise/avocado/tomato assemblages I made the other night,and you might think, after a few, that you had had a good hamburger experience (no, of course, you did not *taste* the burger, but your tongue and your stomach and your system got what they were really looking for) What do I think " oily " nuts are? I'm talking about the ones that you can run through the champion after a short soaking, and they don't need more oil.... sunflower seeds and almonds are the ones I use most. peanuts would probably do the trick, except that I am not in Virginia Beach (close to peanut central!), and I do not trust the raw peanuts here or anywhere else! Margaret > > The other deterrent for me is that after a couple of weeks raw I just HAD to have a Burger King Whopper with Fries. It was the worst night in my life. I was so sick with stomach cramps and trips to the bathroom, I hardly slept. It was intense enough pain that I haven't forgotten and now I have zero desire for Whoppers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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