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| Numerous individuals want to lose weight because they believe it will make them hurt less. They believe it will make them happier.
That is: it’s not the weight they want to lose, but rather the hurt. |
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Let’s admit it – have the diets you’ve tried up until now worked?
The Feed-Back method, the balanced eating methodology by Roni Maislish, M.S.W, Emotional eating’s therapist, will help you to take action correctly in order to develop open channels of communication and healthy relationships with people instead of being in a
“master and servant”
relationship with food.
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Lots of people are unwilling to give up on their “celebrations” with food, which fill an internal empty gap. A baguette won’t say “no” in the middle of the night. On the other hand, you’ll meet people who will. Through the process of change, one learns to fill that empty gap and to replace “celebrations”
with food with “celebrations” with people and relationships.
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If you also think it’s time to divorce the baguette, you are invited to a workshop-balanced eating
methodology-where you’ll learn to manage your feelings, recognize
Feed-Back, and understand it without eating yourself and everything around you up.
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| A participant in the proper eating workshop I conducted nicknamed me “the disco teacher”, saying that she hated making up the dance steps alone. She liked having someone else always telling her how to move. In the workshop, she agreed for the first time to
take responsibility, to undergo an emotional process which meant trying to understand why food represents such a central part of her life.
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Roni Maislish, M.S.W |
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Clinical
social work, Emotional
eating’s therapist. Roni
gives individual
counseling at the eating
disorder unit at Soroka
Hospital, leads parent
and teenager groups
within a number of
frameworks, including
the Klalit Health Fund,
in a broad range of
areas including:
emotional eating,
assertive
communications,
parent-child
relationships, emotions
management, anger
control and negotiations
management and conflict. |
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