Yes, being able to tell apart the feeling, that makes you crave sugar from the felling that tells you that you should eat some flesh to fix your B12 deficieny, isn’t easy.
Getting clear about the outcome that you want to achieve with your eating choices is also not straightforward.
Both are skills for which understanding biochemistry is secondary.
As far as I can tell, distinguishing between those sorts of feeling is a matter of accumulated experience. There aren’t classes of feelings, some of which are desires for things which are bad for you and others which are desires for what you need.
I’m not 100% sure because I’m not that good at making eating choicses but there are those people who make intuitive eating choices you wouldn’t eat sugared food but who eat mostly raw vegan and who their raw steak once a month to stock up on B12 when their body calls for it (or whatever the body actually calls for when he brings up the desire to eat flesh).
With cognitive thinking, there far- and near-thinking. I think that exists also for feelings. Fun would be a word that generally describes a near-feeling while life satisfaction refers to a more far-feeling.
A meditation is finished when you feel it’s finished. If you don’t have that feeling which can take years to develop you need a clock to tell you when 15 minutes are over because otherwise you might use it as a excuse to quit the meditation when things become really hard.
Yes, being able to tell apart the feeling, that makes you crave sugar from the felling that tells you that you should eat some flesh to fix your B12 deficieny, isn’t easy.
Getting clear about the outcome that you want to achieve with your eating choices is also not straightforward.
Both are skills for which understanding biochemistry is secondary.
As far as I can tell, distinguishing between those sorts of feeling is a matter of accumulated experience. There aren’t classes of feelings, some of which are desires for things which are bad for you and others which are desires for what you need.
I’m not 100% sure because I’m not that good at making eating choicses but there are those people who make intuitive eating choices you wouldn’t eat sugared food but who eat mostly raw vegan and who their raw steak once a month to stock up on B12 when their body calls for it (or whatever the body actually calls for when he brings up the desire to eat flesh).
With cognitive thinking, there far- and near-thinking. I think that exists also for feelings. Fun would be a word that generally describes a near-feeling while life satisfaction refers to a more far-feeling.
A meditation is finished when you feel it’s finished. If you don’t have that feeling which can take years to develop you need a clock to tell you when 15 minutes are over because otherwise you might use it as a excuse to quit the meditation when things become really hard.