What's Your Experience with Last Supper Eating?
/Some years ago, I went to see a naturopath about some health challenges I was having. As part of my treatment, she asked me to eliminate some foods from my diet, including gluten. Desperate to feel better, I agreed to do so.
I gave myself one last week to eat all my favorite gluten-containing foods.
During those last few days, I vividly recall feasting on artisanal sourdough loaves from my beloved local bread maker.
I also raided all my favorite bakeries loading up on blueberry scones, chocolate-chip cookies, veggie focaccia and chocolate-fudge cake.
The idea of future deprivation drove this intense phase of one-last-shot, now-or-never eating. I happily gorged on gluten while simultaneously grieving the end of our relationship.
Can you relate to this behavior?
It’s called Last Supper Eating.
Farewell-to-Food Feast
Before embarking on a new diet, plan or program, have you ever found yourself eating everything in sight, especially the foods that will soon be forbidden?
Or perhaps you planned one last elaborate meal featuring all the dishes that would be off-limits starting tomorrow.
If you’re a yo-yo dieter, you’re likely very familiar with this pre-dieting ritual.
Like many of my clients, you may view this period of intense, frantic consumption—which is often followed by overwhelming guilt—as “proof” that you need to restrict your eating because you simply can’t control yourself around food.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
The threat of food restriction can naturally trigger a farewell-to-food feast. It’s human nature to respond this way to deprivation.
Yet, it’s so easy to go into self-blame and shame.
How to End Last Supper Eating
Intuitive Eating puts an end to Last Supper Eating.
With Intuitive Eating, there is no deprivation. You have unconditional permission to eat whatever looks good, tastes good, and feels good in your body.
Instead of depriving yourself and eating according to a set of rules, you ask yourself: Is this food satisfying? Do I like how it tastes and how it makes my body feel? Would I choose to eat this again or feel this way again?
What Works for Me
When I started reclaiming my ability to eat intuitively, I asked myself if I actually liked the gluten-free foods I was eating.
The gluten-free bread, for example, was tolerable. It wasn’t delicious; it was simply an expensive vehicle for nut butter.
Since it wasn’t medically necessary for me to eliminate gluten (i.e., I don’t have celiac disease), I experimented with eating my beloved breads again, along with other gluten-containing foods—and my body felt just fine.
Although well-intentioned, the diet the naturopath put me on didn’t improve my health. It just left me feeling deprived and unsatisfied, which always backfires.
As an Intuitive Eater, I now determine what works best for me by staying attuned to the messages my body sends and focusing on what's satisfying.
If I skip a particular food because I don’t like how it tastes or feels in my body, I don’t view it as deprivation but rather as self-care and body kindness.
It feels really good to know I’ve had my last Last Supper.