Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Eliminate Cravings For Better Health

By Frances Keith


A person may feel that he or she is spending too much time wanting a certain thing. Or he or she may simply want a thing too much for his or her own good. If so, this person may want to eliminate cravings.

The definition of a craving: a formidable urge or inner hunger that comes at unexpected times. A craving can be for something unusual that a man or woman does not normally want. It can also be for something that other people would not normally want.

A craving can cause difficulty in day to day life. It can come in the middle of the night or in the middle of a workday. It can present itself at even more awkward moments such as during emergencies or moments of high stress.

Cravings are known to occur during pregnancy. Pregnant mothers can experience them. Often these are for odd things such as pickles, turnips, or salad dressing. Often for pregnant mothers they come in combinations such as pickles with ice cream or tacos and pancakes. The odd, sudden needs of pregnant mothers can sound strange, but they sometimes indicate invisible nutritional needs. For example, a craving for pickles may indicate a need for nitrogen or sodium. A sudden taste for ice cream might indicate a need for sugar or calcium. These desires are temporary and usually disappear when the invisible temporary nutritional requirement is met.

Some individuals are affected by desires that are unhealthy. For example, a man may begin spending too much time at a tanning parlor because he desires the feeling that comes from the UV radiation. Sunlight typically stimulates a production of hormones that he may crave. Or he may need the effect the UV rays have on his circadian rhythm and biological clock. A woman may crave alcohol is she is an alcoholic. She may seek to drink booze at social functions due to stress or because of insecurity. A woman may choose to drink by herself because she is lonely and intends to experience feelings of freedom. In any case, an individual may wish to abolish his or her cravings if the cost of them starts to overshadow their benefits. If an impulse produces problems with health or financial issues, one may wish to eliminate those cravings.

A craving can be rooted in physical or psychological circumstances. Physical circumstances involve nutrition, stress, and sickness. Psychological circumstances involve depression, anxiety, and other issues. The way to eliminate unhealthy urges varies depending on whether the craving is rooted in physical or psychological circumstances.

Physical cravings can be eliminated by addressing the physical causes. If a person has a poor diet, improving that diet can eliminate the urge or desire. If a person suffers from a disease or disorder, treating that disease or disorder can result in elimination of the urge or desire. If a person suffers from stress, eliminating the stress or at least managing it can result in the disappearance of the craving.

Cravings of the psychological sort can be handled by finding the psychological cause. If someone desires a certain food in order to feel comfort, finding other ways to get the same comfort can eliminate the craving. If an individual is suffering from depression and as result craves an unhealthy food or behavior, getting treatment for that depression by way of therapy or medicine can eliminate cravings.




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