4.2 Article

Enjoy your food: on losing weight and taking pleasure Else Vogel and Annemarie Mol

Journal

SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages 305-317

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12116

Keywords

behaviour; self-care; food; pleasure; sensitivity

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Does healthy eating require people to control themselves and abstain from pleasure? This idea is dominant, but in our studies of dieting in The Netherlands we encountered professionals who work in other ways. They encourage their clients to enjoy their food, as only such joy provides satisfaction and the sense that one has eaten enough. Enjoying one's food is not easy. It depends on being sensitive. This does not come naturally but needs training. And while one kind of hunger may be difficult to distinguish from another, feeling pleasure may open the doors to feeling pain. What is more, sensitivity is not enough: enjoying one's food also depends on the food being enjoyable. A lot of care is required for that. But while engaging in such care is hard work, along the way clients are encouraged to no longer ask Am I being good?' but to wonder instead Is this good for me?' Both these questions are normative and focus on the person rather than on her socio-material context. However, in the situations related here the difference is worth making. For it entails a shift from externally controlling your behaviour to self-caringly enjoying your food.

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