
24 Jul Surprise! Nagging to Lose Weight Backfires
Ever wonder why your partner eats too much, even when you warn him or her not to? It could be precisely because your admonitions put your partner into a state of reactance, causing them to go against your advice just to prove their independence.
Reactance is a state of mind that arises when people feel that their freedom is being restricted. It can be triggered by random events — when a food is not in stock at a grocery store, some people will be upset that they’ve lost the ability to purchase that food, even if they didn’t care that much about the item previously. Public service announcements, or PSAs, can trigger reactance, too. Lecturing people on what they should or shouldn’t do can create backlash, when people do the bad thing just to prove they can’t be controlled.
When I first learned about psychology reactance, I thought about my older brother. It was a cold Minnesota day (sorry for the redundancy), and my then 9-year-old brother was staring longingly at a ribbon of ice that had wrapped itself around a metal railing. My parents, reading his mind, warned him not to lick it. He promptly took a lick, and his tongue stuck to the frozen metal like it planned to remain there until April. My parents rescued him by pouring lukewarm water over the railing.
The lesson? Sometimes the worst way to keep people from engaging in harmful behaviors is to tell them to avoid those behaviors.
Read the full article by Peter A. Ubel M.D. here…
Supporting others with compassion and empathy is always the best approach. With the prevalence of Obesity rising in Australia we should consider that negative messaging about food, behaviour and nutrition are not successful in improving the wellbeing of people with Obesity.
ACFED offers professional training courses for people who might encounter clients who suffer from poor body image, obesity and weight stigma.