How to deal with negative feelings about your diet for diabetes
Give yourself permission
People often think that
following a diet for diabetes means giving up foods they like and having to eat
foods they don't like. If you think a diet for diabetes means you can't eat any
of the foods you like, try the following exercise:
- As completely as you can, fill in the four
lists of foods on the
food list
card
(What is a PDF document?). - Examine your lists. Is your "bad for me" list very
similar to your "foods I like" list? Is your "good for me" list similar to your
"foods I dislike" list? If you think a diet for diabetes has only foods you
don't like, consider this.
- There are no "good" or "bad" foods. All
foods can fit into a diet for diabetes.
- You don't have to give up
the foods you like. You can learn how to fit them into a balanced diet.
- Cross out the foods in the "foods I dislike"
list. You don't have to eat them. You can eat any of the foods in the other
three lists. You may need to eat some of the foods (high-sugar foods) in the
"foods I like" list in smaller amounts and less frequently to prevent high
blood sugar.
Recognize your feelings
From the list below, check
all the feelings you have about a diet for diabetes. Add any other negative
feelings you have about following the diet.
- ___ Confused
- ___
Afraid
- ___ Angry
- ___ Deprived or
resentful
- ___ Resistant
- ___
Other___________________________________
Identify what you may be afraid of, angry about, or
resistant to in the
feelings
diary
(What is a PDF document?).
Don't judge yourself by your feelings. It is what
you do with them that matters.
Let go of your negative feelings
Just identifying
why you have a negative feeling is not enough to rid you of it—you will need to
do something to let go of it. Complete the section of the feelings diary about
how you plan to deal with each negative feeling .
You can let go
of negative feelings by:
- Writing about what you feel and reading aloud
to yourself what you have written.
- Talking with your family, a
friend, or your diabetes specialist. You may learn that your negative feeling
is based on something that is not true.
- Joining a diabetes support
group. Most people with diabetes have had negative feelings and are willing to
share how they dealt with those feelings. Call your local affiliate of the
American Diabetes Association to find support groups in your
area.
- Getting counseling. If a feeling continues to get in your way
of taking care of yourself, talk with a health professional about
counseling.
Test Your Knowledge
Complete the following sentence.
To deal with your negative feelings, you need
to:
- Just forget about your feelings.
- Eat only foods on your "dislike" list.
- Accept your feelings.
- Talk yourself out of eating "bad" foods.
Continue to
Where to go from here
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Diabetes: Coping with your feelings about your diet