I will be praying for you, but please see a doctor about this, it seems very serius. I completely understand some of this.
I too hate eating. I don't like the taste of food, or the texture. I get no enjoyment out of anything I eat. With that said, I force myself to eat up to 6 small meals a day. I call them meals, but they really aren't. Example: My morning starts with an Ensure Meal replacement drink and a big ass cup of tea. Truly the only thing I love and want all the time. At , I make an English muffin with butter. For lunch I munch on raw veggies and fruits.
At 3 I have another cup of tea and have a handful nuts. For dinner, I make a salad and eat some form of meat in a very small portion 2 oz. Before head I eat a banana. But I also wonder about why I hate food.
I've asked my doctor, who sent me to a psychiatrist. We never found out why. And I stopped going after a year of no answers.
My guess, the same reason why people are "foodies" is the same reason other simply HATE food. Smart man. I simply hate food. In this story you clearly just hate certain kinds of food. Push for alternatives you enjoy, but are healthy enough to convince your grandfather to let you eat. I'd talk about rude if I were you. Why don't you get off your high horse, and try to see things from someone else's point of view.
I can relate to this story. I too have trouble eating. I literally have to force myself to eat every freaking day. I wake up, I feel sick, so I have to force something down. The whole time I'm eating I feel nauseous, even though I rarely ever throw up maybe once a month. You try eating when the whole time you feel sick just at the thought of food. It's not easy. Both can cause painful sores on the mouth and tongue.
Because of pain, some people reduce their food intake or completely lose the desire to eat. Talk to your doctor if you develop nausea or loss of appetite after beginning treatment. Your doctor may prescribe a separate medication to help you cope with nausea. Loss of appetite in people with AD has several possible explanations.
Some people with AD battle depression which causes them to lose interest in food. This disease can also make it difficult for people to communicate pain. As a result, those who experience oral pain or difficulty swallowing may lose interest in food. Decreased appetite is also common with AD because the disease damages the hypothalamus, which is the area of the brain that regulates hunger and appetite.
A change in appetite may start to develop years before a diagnosis, and become more apparent after a diagnosis.
Anorexia or loss of appetite can cause complications such as unintentional weight loss and malnutrition. Here are some tips to practice throughout the day when your appetite is low:. Call you doctor if anorexia causes significant weight loss or if you have signs of poor nutrition, such as:.
Poor nutrition makes it harder for your body to function properly. In addition, lack of food can also cause loss of muscle mass. Since different illnesses can reduce appetite, your doctor may ask several questions regarding your current health. These can include questions such as:. Tests used to diagnose an underlying medical problem may include an imaging test X-ray or MRI which takes detailed pictures of the inside of your body. Imaging tests can check for inflammation and malignant cells.
Your doctor may also order a blood test or a urine test to examine your liver and kidney function. If you show signs of malnutrition , you may be admitted into the hospital and receive nutrients intravenously. If the strip tastes bitter, it means I'm a supertaster, and that I have especially sensitive taste buds.
I taste nothing, which Brissette explains, means I'm not particularly sensitive to anything and so should be open to eating everything. I'm cool as a cucumber when it comes to kale, so being disinterested in food because of a dislike for particular flavours doesn't apply.
Brissette brings up a couple other possible factors. We need it to mix food and drink to bring flavours to the taste buds. A dental hygienist once told me that I salivate a lot true story , so that's not it. The second: the nose.
I don't have the greatest sense of smell, but I do have one … so maybe this is all in my brain. York University professor Caroline Davis studies the psychobiological factors that affect food consumption — biologically based personality traits, such as acting on impulse or without inhibition and not anticipating future consequences. She describes eating as very primitive and very complex: "There are so many factors that influence any complex human behaviour, and there may not be many things more complex than eating.
Unlike, say, putting down a glass once you're done drinking from it which Davis says is a simple, almost automatic, action , the behaviour of eating starts long before the food goes in our mouths. We have to learn what we like, what we don't like; then, we have to remember them," she says. The brain's reward centre is triggered in multiple ways by food. Because we ingest it, it affects our pleasure pathways as drugs do, but it also affects our emotional brain through our senses.
There are several factors that can affect our eating behaviour, and stress — "whether from pleasure or not," Davis says — is among them. Even if I don't buy, I love the process of looking. And I used to find if I was really hungry but went shopping, the hunger disappeared because I was in another rewarding environment. She also recounts an anecdote about her daughter who lost weight while she was going through a divorce.
Very simply, she says, some people are just not motivated by food. Being busy with other interests can mean that food doesn't become a central motivating factor. I identify with her explanation — I'm a self-employed journalist with a side business, and I travel a lot, all of which are rewarding and can be stressful.
Often I don't have time to grocery shop, let alone get excited about planning a meal. But there's something else affecting my brain's reward centre. It's not that I don't get hungry, it's that I'm apathetic as to how that hunger is satiated — protein bar?
Steak frites? With anorexia and bulimia previously mentioned eating disorders , one adheres to a strict dietary regiment to meet a desired physical expectation. Here biological symptoms develop, such as nausea and bowel irritation your body preventing the thought of food intake.
Finally, though it isn't the same as hating "food," some people just dislike the "taste" of certain foods, like dark vegetables and meat. This can be preferential or, again, associated with a negative memory. Regardless of the reason, it's important to maintain a healthy diet to combat negative feelings from your mind and body.
Anonymous April 12th, pm. You don't, you hate what it means to you. Food it's neutral. So it's in your hands to question your feelings towards it.
Anonymous March 8th, pm. Some hate food for reasons they cant explain, either the taste, the texture, the pleasure or the guilt. What is best to do is to not think of food as an enemy and instead think of it as something that helps you to survive but cannot hurt you. Anonymous June 7th, am. The reason that u hate food might be because of the taste or texture of the food I could be the mess at the end or it might be that u could have a bad reaction to the food and are afraid to ask or try for your own risk.
You may be hating food for many reasons. Perhaps you simply do not like the taste of it, if that's the case, try different meals and explore your taste. Maybe you hate food because you feel guilty for eating. You may be thinking eating will make you fat and ugly, but that's not true. Eating healthy foods can actually help you lose weight, and make you stronger.
It can clear skin, make your hair look shinier, and improve your energy levels. Not eating food, on the other hand, can actually make you gain weight.
Your metabolism will increase, and your body will store the food you eat for 'safe keeping. Anonymous January 27th, pm. I hate food because I am a slave to it.
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