Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I won't let my body out be outwait everything that
I'm made done, won't spend my life trying to change.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
I'm learning to love who.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
I am aga, I'm strong, I feel free.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
I know every part of me.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
It's beautiful.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
And that will always out way. If you feel it
with your hands in the air, She'll some love to
the view.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Why get there?
Speaker 4 (00:28):
Say you one day?
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Anata?
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Did you and die out way?
Speaker 5 (00:35):
Happy Saturday, Outweigh Amy here and I've got Leanne by
my side. This is part five of a Q and
A series we've been doing. I encourage you to go
back and listen to the previous weeks if you miss them.
These are questions that were sent in by you, people
like you. I put up a little question box on Instagram.
This wasn't a question, but there's a comment someone sent
(00:55):
in that said, Outweigh helped me realize I had to behaviors.
Thank you Outweigh. I got through it and over it.
And the question for today is about orthorexia, which someone
sent in, can you do an episode on orthorexia? And
I threw that comment in there at the beginning as
(01:16):
encouragement and hope that it is possible and it's through
people sharing their stories on Outway and the experts that
have come on and talked about different types of eating disorders.
And even in the original OG four part series of OUTWEG,
which wasn't even its own podcast, it was just a
four parts on four things, four different episodes, Lisa Haym
(01:38):
and I loaded them up and had people sharing real
life stories, and then we had therapists, doctors, other experts,
registered dietitians joining us that work in the eating disorder
disordered eating space, so.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
We knew we could trust their guidance.
Speaker 5 (01:52):
And I think through people sharing that stuff and even
their orthorexia experiences specifically, because orthorexia it can be a
sneaky one where you don't even realize you have disordered
behaviors because you're just quote unquote eating healthy. And that's
me summarizing it quickly. There's more to it, but that comment,
(02:14):
like she was like outwait, helped me realize. And I
don't know this person, but my guess might be that
it was one of the orthorexia shares that she might
be talking about in one of those OG episodes where
we went in depth on some of that stuff, and
that realization that aha moment. I spent years of my
life thinking I was in recovery because I wasn't purging.
Speaker 4 (02:36):
I had a very.
Speaker 5 (02:37):
Limited set amount of foods. But by society standards and
health standards, I was just living a healthy life. I
was trying to do all the right things for my body,
but it definitely got out of control and was one orthorexic.
So I have experienced the bilimia, the binge restrict purge cycle,
(02:59):
and orthorec that's my relationship with disordered behaviors. And there
are more and more that are being discovered as the
years go by and the more we talk about it.
That orthorexia is something that it's still relatively new to people.
And Leanne, I know that you have a gift for
us because this is something you've covered with our friend
(03:20):
Laura Lee before and you got a little treat.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
So we actually did an episode all about orthorexia, so
we're going to share it with you all now. But yeah,
like Amy said, it's one of those things where it's
kind of sneaky and insidious because it gets almost kind
of batched in with air quotes eating healthy and we
think that it's what we're you know, air quotes supposed
to do.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
But then we realize, like, wow, there's.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Something you kind of know it in your soul, like
you know that something is a little bit too restrictive
or confining. I'm working with somebody right now who got
on the vegan bandwagon, and what happens is and there's
nothing wrong with veganism by any means, right, But what
happens is she picked up a lot of lies that
like protein was bad and fat was bad and stuff
like that. So we had to kind to dismantle the beliefs.
(04:01):
And I think that's what happens alongside orthorexia is we
build beliefs and we give meaning to what certain foods
mean or don't mean, and those beliefs or what drive
the disorder and the behavior. But again, if we think
we're being healthy, because we're not, you know, falling into
a black and white case of an eating disorder, we
might fall through the cracks. And that's where a lot
of people with orthorexia do. So in this episode, we
(04:21):
have Laura Lee, who also experienced lots of orthorexia in
her past, and she shares her experiences. We talk about
what it is, what it isn't, how to heal it.
So we will just go ahead. You ask and you
shall receive. Can you do an episode about orthorexia? We
got you covered, all right.
Speaker 5 (04:35):
Hope y'all enjoy this, and we'll just let that episode
end and it will roll out. Leanna and I are
not going to come back and say bye. We'll just
let her episode wrap. But thank you for sending in
your questions. We'll do another Q and A sometime soon.
I like keeping it personal and connecting with y'all in
this way, and just thank you to anybody that's listened
(04:55):
and shared and even shared outweigh with other people, Like,
maybe that's a way you can support others some of
the weeks we've been talking about support. Is that way
a tool where you can send over this podcast to
someone that might need to hear it. It could be helpful,
but I guess make sure because sometimes that can be damaging.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
If you're like, hey, listen to this.
Speaker 5 (05:14):
You're trying to say, right right, here's your discretion.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
But just thankful for this community.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
Thankful for you Leanne and sharing some of your stressless
eating material with us as well.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
So y'all enjoy it.
Speaker 4 (05:28):
Bye.
Speaker 2 (05:31):
All right, we are back for another episode of the
Stressless Seeding Podcast, and I'm so excited to welcome Laura
Lee Bryant back to the show.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
Hello, Hi, so glad to be back.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Absolutely absolutely So.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
We're going to be talking about a topic today that
a lot of women may have never ever heard of.
It's called orthorexia, and it's pretty mainstream to hear topics
about eating disorders such as you know, bolimia and orexia,
stuff like that, disordered eating. We've done an episode on
the podcast on that specifically because again, you know, the
diet mentality. People don't know that that is a form
(06:06):
of disordered eating or it absolutely can be. But one
thing that comes up all the time, and it's kind
of masked under this air quotes word health is this
concept of orthorexia, right, And if you were to just
kind of look at orthorexia in a simplified manner, what
it is is it's basically this like hyper intensive, unhealthy
(06:28):
focus on eating in a healthy way. And I'm putting
healthy in air quotes, right, And so you know, it's
one of those things where yes, we want to focus
on fueling our bodies and having a really beautiful relationship
with food and nutritiously dense foods and all of that,
but if you get to it to a degree of
obsession and hyper vigilance, it's actually really unhealthy. And so
(06:53):
just like other eating disorders, it does focus around food,
but orthorexia revolves around the quality of food, not the
quantity of it, right, And it really is heightened with
terms like good, bad, right, wrong, should, shouldn't, healthy, unhealthy.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
So super excited to have Laura Lee to kind of
talk us.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
Through this conversation as well, because first of all, it's
such an important topic that nobody's really talking about, and also,
you know, you have your own experiences that I think
will be really enlightening to be shared. I know I
have mine. And then of course you are so deeply
integrated in the health and wellness world, both online and offline,
that there can be a dark side to this health world.
(07:32):
So we want to just kind of shed light on
this really important topic and also give women a safe
space to know like they're not alone, because again, this
is more prevalent than we think. So thanks for being back,
and just you know, anything before we dive in, anything
that kind of comes to your mind. And then I'd
love to just hear if you don't mind just sharing
a little bit about your experiences with your own kind
(07:52):
of like hypervigilance of the healthy foods and all that,
and then we'll get into how that's extended outward into
the health world and your career and all that, but
just kind of filling us in a little bit on
your experience of this.
Speaker 4 (08:03):
So what comes to my mind first is that this
is even more insidious in some ways than traditionally recognized
eating disorders, because, as you said, it is about the
quality of food, and it's harder to sort of quantify
because of that, and there's a lot less conversation about it,
and it can be I don't want to say just
(08:25):
as damaging. I mean, I'm not a medical professional, but
it can be incredibly damaging, and it was for me.
And it can be harder for friends and family to spot.
It can be harder for you, as the ailing person
struggling with this, to recognize. And so I'm just really
glad we're shining a light on it for that reason.
And for me, you know, that was very, very true.
(08:47):
I was living in New York. This was back in
from I guess two thousand and eight to about two
thousand and twelve, and food was the one thing I
could control in my life, out of control everywhere, but
I masked that as a problem by choosing to go
the route. I'm sure it was not sort of a
(09:09):
conscious choice, but I think it was conscious in the
sense that I knew on some level that if I
was traditionally sort of anerexic, if I was traditionally skipping
meals and not eating, people would recognize that. And I
also knew that, you know, I didn't want to go
the root of bolimia. I'd seen that in friends. That
(09:30):
seemed messy and complicated, and it seemed like there was
a lot of merit in choosing the health halo of
orthorexia as something that would be easier to get away with.
So I think that, And then I also think I
convinced myself that I was just being healthy, and so
what that looked like for me. There was definitely restriction.
(09:52):
I definitely was not consuming as many calories as I
should have been, But it was more that I up
with my own arbitrary set of what it meant to
be healthy, and then anything that was even slightly out
of my rules for health made me feel guilty. It
would incite binges. It would just go into that shame
(10:17):
spiral that you talk about a lot. But it was
so silently deadly because it just showed up as eating
a lot of salads, making healthy choices. No thanks, I
don't want the junkie reces. I'm going to have a
homemade version or whatever. You touch on so many important things.
First of all, it's sneaky and insidious.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
We don't even know that it is a dangerous paradigm
to be living in because we're being given these messages
of like, oh, healthy means like no sugar, no this,
no that, it's all of the things that you can't have,
right this the elimination side of it, the restricting of
like can't have, shouldn't have not allowed all of that
side of it too, and then focusing on the hyper
(10:58):
like again, we want to be healthy, we want to
feed ourselves with nutritiously dense foods and really, you know,
focus on nourishing our bodies. But when it's obsessive, it
can become very unhealthy.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
But there's this dark side of it.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
Because it's masked, just like you said, as health, you know,
when in reality it's a form of control that is
really like kind of covering up for something else that's
going deeper on inside of our brain, our thoughts, our
nervous system, our beliefs, our self image. It's some sort
of void that we're using some sort of coping mechanisms.
So a lot of times on this podcast we talk
(11:32):
about how binging and overeating and over consuming is a
coping mechanism, but control, restriction, dieting, hypervigilance about what you eat,
it's also a coping mechanism. It's just an opposite side
of the same spectrum, right, And it's sneaking insidious because
the world is actually validating this and complimenting you.
Speaker 3 (11:51):
For your will power.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
And I say you, as in anyone who's listening to
this that's relating to this, if you are showing up
with these orthorexic kind of tenants, in general, society is
complimenting you for your willpower, telling you how strong and
resilient and accountable you are, telling you like, oh my gosh,
you're such a great example.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
I wish I could be like that.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
Right, And a lot of the body positivity movement, and
I agree, is saying like, don't necessarily compliment somebody on
their weight loss right, because you don't know how they
got it, Are they sick, are they unhealthy? All those things?
And in so many times in society it's like, oh,
you've lost weight, you looks so great. But a lot
of times we can be actually reinforcing a negative habit
(12:31):
or something that's actually like destructive, right, And so the
same is kind of true at this We get reinforced
by other people's perceptions of like, oh, my gosh, she's
so healthy, she's such an example. But then we also
feel kind of trapped, right, because I've never met a
woman that struggles with orthorexia, and I deal with it
time and time again with my clients that there isn't
the other side of it, which is what happens when
(12:53):
they can't possibly white knuckle and willpower their way through
this any longer, that they have to go to some
sort of opposite extreme, and it's usually an extrema, right,
there's some sort of rebound. But again, society is complimenting this.
So then what they feel trapped in that set of
shame of the shame spiral, which is like, oh my gosh,
everybody thinks I'm so healthy if only they knew, And
then it becomes our dirty little secret exactly.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
And yeah, it's interesting because sort of both ends of
it is what happened to me. I quote unquote used
orthorexia to my advantage to be traditionally very thin when
I was living in New York, and I did get
all of those compliments, especially living in that city, but
I was very unwell. And then what happened is after
(13:39):
years of being orthorexic, and this is now several years
into my career as a health food chef, I was
still battling with orthorexia in the first three or four years.
But what happened was I started to have a more
difficult time fighting the cravings for whatever, but I fought
(13:59):
against it, and so what I did instead was I
would overdo it on my health foods. I had this
health food arsenal like granola was okay and almond butter
was okay, but a slice of Costco cake wasn't. So
what I would do is just try to fill that
void by eating like bowls and bowls of brunola topped
with like, you know, organic peanut butter. And honestly, I
(14:23):
gained weight eating as an orthorexic person. I gained like
ten to fifteen pounds in the last few years of
that part of my life, and it was when I
actually got divorced was the turning point for me, because
all of a sudden, I stopped living to eat and
was just eating to live and I just didn't care
about the quality of the food, which sort of long
(14:46):
term is not something I would recommend, but short term
actually to go from feeling like, you know, a bagel
and cream cheese was the worst breakfast to have to
being like, sure, I don't care whatever, Like I just
need fuel. And I built this healthy relationship because it
didn't hurt me and it didn't make me unhealthy and
it didn't ruin anything. And I actually ended up losing
(15:09):
that ten to fifteen pounds four years ago after my
divorce and haven't regained it because I let myself have the.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
Things that I want to have when I want them,
and there's a so much freedom that comes alongside it.
And I'm sure there's a lot of women that are
listening and that are like, oh my gosh, but like,
if I don't control it, I'm going to go the opposite.
I'm going to go off the deep end. I'm going
to gain a bunch of weight. And it's like, if
somebody comes up to you and is like, hey, stop
controlling the one thing you're trying to control. I'm not
saying that because it takes away all level of certainty
(15:38):
and it actually creates anxiety and threat in our brain
if somebody's like, I want you to stop controlling the
one thing you've been controlling your whole life. Right, what
I am inviting women into is learning a new paradigm
to replace it, right, but one build with structure and
free like structure as opposed to control, right, because our
brain does thrive on structure, but inviting them into a
paradigm of freedom and permission and choice as opposed to
(16:00):
voice being taken away, and not all of a sudden
just like reintroducing all of this stuff that you feel
you've been deeming healthy or unhealthy your entire life. It's
a gradual process, but part of it is and we're
going to talk about this when we get to actual
steps to healing.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
It is first.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
The reason we're having this conversation is to create the
awareness because I've never met a woman that's going and
out and gung ho about solving a problem that she
doesn't even realize that she has. And if you think,
and again this is not to shame you, but a
lot of women that might be listening to this think like, oh,
my unhealthy obsession with being healthy is actually healthy.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
And that's a little bit of a mouthful, right.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
But the unhealthy obsession with being healthy and all of
these healthy words are really in air quotes, that's the
biggest prison of them all.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
So thanks for sharing your version of it.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
I mean, for me, it was, you know, I went
from decades of not caring and not taking care of
my body to all of a sudden being that hypervigilant.
And what I noticed that came alongside the hypervigilance was
not only judgment of myself when I thought about eating
something air quotes naughty, but I was judging everybody in
my life. What I noticed that came alongside the hypervigilance
(17:12):
was not only judgment of myself when I thought about
eating something air quotes naughty, but I was judging everybody
in my life. I was looking at people's you know,
on the conveyor bell at the grocery store and judging
the crap out of everything that they were buying. I
was at restaurants, thinking, Oh my gosh, are they really
going to use the whole dish or the whole little
ramikin of salad dressing? Don't they know how much fat
(17:34):
is in there? And I was up on my almighty horse,
and I mean, shame for so many years wouldn't allow
me to even talk about what I'm sharing right now,
because again it was so shameful. But I was becoming,
along with the hypervigilance and the obsessiveness over my health,
I was becoming a judgmental jerk to the people that
I loved because it wasn't personal to them, it was
(17:55):
the way I was seeing myself. And I needed to
rewire my brain and un brainwash myself of that. Right.
But again, first had to become the awareness of like, wow,
what I'm thinking is healthy is actually super unhealthy. Yeah,
I did the same thing.
Speaker 4 (18:10):
I remember like getting really mad at my mom when
I first moved home after culinary school because she didn't
get a pasture raised chicken and you know, she was
just doing her thing, and I just remember sitting the
car like berating her for it. And you know, it's
embarrassing to think back on, but it was just this
place of intense fear and needing to have something figured
(18:33):
out that other people didn't have figured out, and oh man,
it really can take over your life. One of the
things I'm doing right now is writing my third cookbook,
which I feel so compelled to do because I feel
like it's actually really reflective for the first time of
the healthy relationship that I have with food, because looking
back at my first few books, I was still really
(18:55):
struggling with that. And yeah, no one wants to be
the judgmental jerk. Our bodies are strong. That's the other
thing is, like our bodies can handle a lot. We
have this idea first of all, like one of the
health food concepts of like detoxification, that certain foods like
detox your body. Like I mean, yes, it's sure, like
consuming fiber is you know, important to an extent to
(19:17):
help you you keep yourself regular. But this idea that
like foods make us detoxified. No, our bodies aren't naturally
detoxifying all the time. And so I think this idea
that like something bad is going to happen obviously barring
specific allergies or diet you know, conditions, diseases like celiac disease,
or you know, all sort of clitis. I mean, for
(19:38):
the most part, eatings and potato chips and ESEs. You
can handle that just fine.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Right, And that's the thing.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
A healthy nervous system can really handle anything. It's what
happens is our nervous systems are nervous, and so all
of a sudden, we have these food sensitivities and intolerances
and really and then we think like, oh, we have
a gas droo intestinal problem. But it's like, no, the
gas ro intestinal system it's literally nicknamed the enteric nervous system.
Its nickname is the second brain. It is literally dictated
by your emotions and by your o limbic system and
(20:05):
how you're feeling moment to moment. And so a lot
of the gastrointestinal distress that people are thinking is caused
by oh, I ate that race's cup. No, it's actually
your thoughts about the raze's cup that are causing your
gas rational system to be in distress. It's not the food.
It's your thoughts about the food, and it just contributes
further to the vicious cycle of the orthorexia.
Speaker 4 (20:23):
Yeah, and that's why when you're young, it's not like
your gastrointestinal system changes fundamentally from age twelve to age
twenty two. If you open up a sleeve of oreos
and you eat the entire sleeve at age twelve, you're like,
that tasted great, and guess what, You're probably not going
to be interested in oreos for a while naturally. But
(20:45):
at twenty two, where you know, when I started this
orthorexic journey. At twenty two, I would eat the sleep
of oreos, and there was just this whole world of
thoughts and meanings that I put to it in the moment.
Speaker 3 (20:58):
And then after a.
Speaker 4 (21:00):
Very long time, and I was more likely to go
for another sleep of woreos the next day or to
punish myself and not eat for a certain.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
Period of time. Absolutely, it's really our beliefs that come
alongside it that dictate our actions. Like behaviors are always
following our beliefs. Beliefs dictate our behaviors. And like even
just the paradigm that you shared, like ladies, I'm telling you,
the hyper vigilance, the orthorexia, the obsession over your health,
there is always an opposite spectrum. There's always a bounce back.
(21:30):
That is the number one cause of binging ladies. So
I know, you know, it makes you feel in control,
but the more you try to control it, the less
in control or the more out of control you'll actually feel.
And that's why it's super important, and that's why we're
here today just talking about it, shining a light on
this topic that no one's really talking about.
Speaker 4 (21:46):
Yeah, it's interesting, Leanne, I wonder I would be curious
to know from your expertise in a certain context, would
you recommend to someone who's been in an orthorexic place
to give that just sort of like, yeah, I know
you love experiments, sort of experiment for a couple of
weeks with just allowing yourself, hey, for the or just
(22:07):
a week for this week, I'm just going to have
what sounds good to me and then I can go
back to what I've been doing after a week or
anything like that. Do you have any experiments like that?
Speaker 3 (22:17):
Yeah, it's a great question. So the answer is yes.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
And the first thing is is like what brain is
running an experiment like that? So first and foremost, you know,
I always look at the strategy, but it's got to
be alongside the stories and the thinking, right, So the
strategy might be x right's the that's the content, but
what's the intent shaping it? Right? The intent might be Okay,
what can we do?
Speaker 3 (22:37):
What thoughts and beliefs do we need to overcome?
Speaker 2 (22:39):
And we get specific here and this is this is
specifically like some of the experimentation I do with my clients,
like reverse engineering overcoming carbophobia that's a big one. Reverse
engineering overcoming fat phobia, that's a big one. Reverse engineering
overcoming calorie phobia, that's a big one. Reverse engineering overcoming
the binging side book that comes alongside the hypervigilance. Right,
So there's specific experiments that we do reverse engineer. But
(23:01):
part of it is like when it comes to this
concept of listening to our bodies, that's where most women
are shut down, tuned out, numbed out. They don't even
know what that feels like or looks like because they've
been paying so much attention to a calorie count, a
carb count, a micronutrient account, something external to them that
they have no idea what it's like to actually listen
(23:21):
to their body. So part of it is like we
need to change their brain and teach them a new
system of thinking and their thoughts about food so that
they actually know, like, well, what is hunger? Am I hungry?
Or am I just bored? Am I full? Or am
I just trying to deprive and control and restraint?
Speaker 4 (23:37):
Right?
Speaker 2 (23:37):
Am I hungry? Or am I just desiring something sweet?
Like all these different distinctions. There's so many micro distinctions
within it, and so part of it is like relearning
your body and relearning like what is a want versus
what is a need? Relearning like what does my body
actually need? If I were to say, hey, just let
my body eat what I need, So an answer to
your question, absolutely, but that would come off the back
(24:01):
of this new foundation of thought processes that again, they're
in our blind spot. We can't see that, we can't
see it, we don't have a map for it in
our brain. So we need to address the stories and
the thinking. And then on top of that then we
placed a new strategy. But yes, what you just said
is absolutely right, But a lot of women are likely
and if I can't listen my body, I can't trust
(24:23):
my body, I'll go off the deep end. It's like, well,
with your current paradigm, yes, but in this new paradigm,
you've never tried it. In this new paradigm, Yeah, and that's.
Speaker 4 (24:31):
A really good distinction. It's sort of like you don't
want to put say, I guess weapon is a little strong,
but it's a very powerful tool. So you want to
put it in the hands.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
Of someone who absolutely no you said, it's got on
like it really, because here's the thing, tracking, counting, way
measuring can be an absolutely powerful tool if you have
a healthy relationship with food.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
It can become a weapon of mass control and destruction
if you have an unhealthy relationship with food. So I
think your use of that word was fought on.
Speaker 4 (25:01):
Yeah, it's like when you did you know keto for
a little while, and it was so powerful because you
have such a healthy relationship with food that you were
able to bring that into any any sort of dietary lifestyle.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
I hadn't thought about that in a while, but yeah,
like maybe I don't know, maybe like two summers ago
or so, I was just like, hey, I want to
play around, like supposedly it's good for inflammation. I haven't
done keto since I had the diet mentality. I'm gonna
do a little experiment to see what keto's like, because again,
I want to be able to speak to it to
my clients from like a present day experience. And I
did keto for like a week, and don't get me wrong,
I enjoyed it like I loved eating bacon wrapped you know,
(25:36):
turkeys with mannais on them, and so you know, I'm
just like, like it was fun.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
I enjoyed it like it wasn't. I didn't feel deprived.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
I was definitely using like a feast of mentality, not
a fast mentality. I was listening to my body. I
had the freedom.
Speaker 3 (25:49):
But I came to you.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
I remember a few days later, I was like, I
don't like this. It's not stressless because a I'm like full,
but I'm never satisfied energetically. I don't feel as good energy.
I said, I just thrive on carbs, you know. And
I was like, the reason I don't want to do
this is not because I'm not enjoying it, but it's
not stressless, you know.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
And so it was a great example of recency.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
Because again I'm not the same version of myself I
was the last time I did like a lower carb
or keto. It was called Atkins the last time I
tried it, you know, but I wanted to see and
I was like Yep, Nope, not for me carbs or
my friend, you know what I mean. So it's not
about the food, it's who were being when we use it.
Kito was used as a really cool tool of experimentation
for me a couple of years ago, versus a weapon
of control and deprivation and restriction and eliminating entire food groups.
(26:34):
So that being said, I am way more in the
kind of personal development, emotional health, mental health world. You
are a lot more integrated in the health and wellness world.
So can you kind of just peel back the curtain
for us share a little bit? How is this showing
up in the health and wellness world? What are you seeing?
I know you're a big stand and you're a big
pattern interrupt in that world. And I know there's a
(26:56):
lot of your your friends are doing it great, you know,
but there's a lot of people that you're seeing out there.
And we're not obviously here to bash anybody, name any names,
anything like that. Everybody's here doing the best they can
with what they got and I'm sure they are too,
but we're here to help people spot patterns. Right, What
are you seeing in the health and wellness world? That's
kind of being guised as health and wellness, but you
know it for what it is because you've been there
(27:17):
and you've seen it, and it's really this kind of
exemplifying orthorexia.
Speaker 3 (27:21):
What are some things that we can look out for?
Speaker 2 (27:22):
What are you seeing in the health and wellness world today?
What are you seeing in the health and wellness world
that's kind of being guysed as health and wellness, but
you know it for what it is because you've been
there and you've seen it, and it's really this kind
of exemplifying orthorexia. What are some things that we can
look out for? What are you seeing in the health
(27:43):
and wellness world today?
Speaker 4 (27:44):
Oh, my gosh, there's so much that is problematic. I mean,
first of all, if someone if you hear anyone telling
you that there is one way to do things and
that health means X, Y and z, you should run
for the hills. And I think that's an obvious way
that orthorexia shows up. So I think those people genuinely
believe that. Another way that it shows up is, as
you said, carbs and fat and calorie counting tend to
(28:05):
be I would say the top three fears that people have,
and so a lot of health food crusaders will be like, oh,
I eat all the almond butter, you know, and I
eat all the avocado, and like, I eat all the
sweet potatoes for all my carbs and whole grain bread
and I don't count calories. But they would still never
(28:28):
swap that almond butter for just like.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Good old butter.
Speaker 4 (28:31):
Or they wouldn't swap that whole grain bread for just
like some good holla bread. Or they wouldn't swap the
sweet potato for some potato chips. And you can see
through their lives that they show that they still have
a paradigm of health that has a lot of rules.
It's just that they have this you know, pretense that
(28:54):
they're healthy and they believe it because they are eating
you know, fat and carbs and they're not calori hunting.
But they're definitely still not taking any Halloween candy out
of their kids' baskets because that would probably make them
feel shameful. There's just a lot of that, a lot
of proselytizing too well.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
I was going to ask you, I remember, you know,
it's as you've been in the trajectory of like really
stepping into your own health and expressing your voice in
your cooking and your cooking classes and your cookbook you're
getting ready to you know, you're working on your.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Third one as we speak.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
There was a lot of you noticed, like you know,
what I was, The ingredients that I was using were
like overly air quotes healthy and like kind of expensive
when there wasn't a need for it, and it kind
of isolated some people too on an ingredient level. Right,
So can you kind of share a little bit about
how you've eased up on that and you've kind of
met people where they are and like kind of what
(29:46):
to look for in the recipe side of things too
when it comes to the healthy for the sake of
just calling it healthy when it really doesn't make that
big of a difference.
Speaker 4 (29:54):
You know, at this point, the more time goes on,
the more the longer I do this, the less I
have any kind of real definition of health other than
what happened, whatever happens to make you feel good on
a particular day, and that can change from day to day. So, yes,
there are some general themes that I can point out
that seem to overarchingly help people feel their best, Like,
(30:15):
you know, eating some fruits and vegetables and getting some
fiber and getting some fat and you know, some some
protein and some complex carbs here and there. I mean,
there are some general rules, but really it's so based
on biowin individuality. So instead of and I have to say,
after all these years, I don't see like massive health
(30:36):
changes in people from switching everything over to organic and
pasteurise and grass fed, you can still be healthy and
buy like generic stuff. And you can still be healthy
and just buy like regular old chicken. Sure if you
have the money for it, Like you can point you
could find some science to back up you.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
Know, any type of anything. But I just at this.
Speaker 4 (30:58):
Point one, I don't talk about that. I don't say
I say a pound of ground beef. I don't say
it has to be a pound of fasheries grassbed ground beef.
And I also happy to throw in the occasional cannon
package food and snack on things that are you know,
not considered real food, and have whole milk, God forbid
instead of you know, cashiw milk, and have you know
(31:21):
a croissant from my favorite pastry instead of trying to
make like a gluten free grain free like paleo croissant.
I just like, as you know, I mean those I
really just I am just very chill about it, and it
all has evened itself out.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
Absolutely.
Speaker 2 (31:37):
The theme here, ladies is there's no extremism going on anymore,
you know. And that's one of the things about orthorexia
or that kind of tendency to be hyper vigilant about
the quality of the ingredients that you're putting in your body.
It is a form of extremism. It is a form
of hypervigilance. It is a form of control, and control
is the opposite of freedom. Not to mention if love
(31:58):
in a warm, flaky croissant is I don't want you
to be right, ladies, what is life like if everything
that you now don't get me wrong. If you have
a gluten intolerance, if you have CELIAX, like I get it,
go gluten free. I want you to have that, right.
And I love that there's the availability of recipes that
can keep things gluten free. So we're not talking about
stuff like that where women in populations that need specific
things because of your health. But if it's about being
(32:20):
on the healthy soapbox, and I mean that with so
much love, there's a form of freedom that you're leaving
on the table, and most likely that lack of freedom
and that control and that like prison that you're in
of rules and too much structure. It is probably taking
in the opposite direction of health. Because anyone who if
we're going to talk about health, here to be honest,
(32:40):
and I mean this with so much love to anybody
who's talking about health and not talking to you about
how the nervous system is the sole dictator of your health,
I would run far and run fast. You could be
eating this gluten free, soy free croissant in a bath
of stress hormones, cortisol, adrenaline, and epinephyrin and being in
(33:00):
your sympathetic branch of your nervousism while you're eating it,
and it's going to be dictated as like, for lack
of a better way of saying it, fattening, because the
system of systems that is affected when you're in that
sympathetic branch of your nervous system. And again, it's not
about the croissant. It's your thoughts about the croissant that matter, right.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
The tail to cookies.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
Amen. Amen. So we're not here to make anybody wrong
or call anybody out in a like confrontational way. We're
literally here to just shine a light on this subject
matter that people are kind of evangelizing, you know what
I mean, and making it like this almost a badge
of honor that you've never had a gram of simple sugars.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
You know, and it's all good. I think that's the
other big thing, like the big thing.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
That's not being seen in the micronutrient and macronutrient count
of the foods that people are being, you know, super
controlling about, is the invisible judgment that's associated that ladies'
food doesn't have to be personal, food does not have
to be emotional, right, And when we assign these labels
of good, bad, right, wrong, should shouldn't? It is just
(34:06):
one lump of judgment that doesn't have to be there.
But then on the flip side, or in addition, I
should say, if your self worth and your self esteem
is dictated by how well you follow these rules, I
hate to say it, but you're screwed because you're gonna cave.
This type of restriction is the number one cause of binging.
There's going to be an offshoot somewhere right, and again,
(34:28):
if your whole identity is made up of how you
know much willpower you have or how much you're great
about eating air quotes clean, You're gonna be very disappointed
in yourself. And that's why I think it's a very
misleading label to follow, so to speak.
Speaker 4 (34:43):
Yeah, it's a losing game for sure. No, that's very
well said.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Absolutely, anything else that you want to just add on
before we wrap up. I think we really hit this
one home.
Speaker 4 (34:53):
I think we nailed it. Yeah, I mean I would
just wrap it up with you know, you don't have
to start your day with lemon water you feel good
about yourself. Yeah. Absolutely, there's actually no real science behind
lemon water. I feel like lemon water has become sort
of like the pinnacle of every what I eat in
a day YouTube video starts with that and avocado toast
(35:15):
and an apple, an apple cider vinegar exactly. Yeah, I
think this is really powerful. I'm excited to share this
with my community and listen to it myself. And there's
already a few people I want to specifically send this to.
So I'm really glad we're talking about it.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
Yeah, and ladies, just like every episode on this podcast,
we were here to create awareness and it's an awareness. Awareness,
it's the ability to have an awareness is something that
you didn't even know you have the ability to have
an awareness of and there is no judgment, there's no shame.
But part of it is like we need to name it.
We need to name what it is so that we
can call it out be like, oh, that's shame. I
know what it looks like, so I can I can
(35:50):
influence how I show up when it shows up. Oh,
that's fear, that's loneliness, this is orthorexia. And part of
it is I want to eliminate the stigma from this.
So if you are really really relating to this, I
just want you to know you're not alone.
Speaker 3 (36:03):
This is a conversation to show you like you've been bamboozled,
just like we have.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
There is multi multi billion dollar industry, multiple industries that
are throwing these terms at you to make you believe
that you are only as good as the nutrients that
you put in your body or the ability of control
or the amount of willpower. You have to not put
in air quotes junk food or things that are naughty,
You're bad for you.
Speaker 3 (36:26):
R air everything's in air.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Quotes, right, because this is the language that's being thrown
at you. So I just want to let you know
there's nothing wrong with you. If you were made to
believe that you are only as worthy as the amount
of nutrients that you put in your body, and that
if orthorexia has seeped into your consciousness, because it happened
to me, happened to Laura Le, and you would be
shocked by the millions and millions and millions of women
that are out there that are experiencing the same thing.
(36:48):
But they don't have a name for it, and they
keep it. It's their little dark secret and nobody knows.
And that's why we're here to shine this light and
let you know you are not alone. You don't have
to walk through this alone. And that's exactly why we're
here shining a light on them. Really a powerful topic.
I love that.
Speaker 4 (37:02):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
Thanks for being here to shine the light on this topic,
Laura Lee. We appreciate you, ladies listening, and we will
talk to you on the next episode. Bye.