Why is it that despite our best weight loss efforts, there seems to be a part of our psyche that totally undermines us?

I am talking a total INNER REBEL part of us that will:

  • Convince us to celebrate with food when the scale is down
  • Talk us out of waking up to exercise
  • Convince us time after time that we will be PERFECT tomorrow, so why not eat everything that isn’t nailed down today??

If you have wished that you had more control over this wild child within, guess what?

TODAY is the day!

In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

What your inner rebel is and how to tame it so you can lose weight

How to identify the different parts of yourself that want to sabotage your weight loss and how to overcome them

Thin thinking strategies that overcome the parts of you that want to stay the same

Links Mentioned in this Episode

You can stop self-sabotaging your weight loss when you understand that the real battle isn’t with food or the scale – it’s with the short-sighted, impulsive part of your mind I call the inner saboteur.

Have you ever noticed this pattern?

You honestly, deeply want to lose weight. You know exactly what to do. You’ve read the books, watched the videos, maybe even counted the calories.

And then…
You find yourself in front of the pantry.
Or in the drive-thru.
Or saying, “I’ll start again on Monday,” with a slice of pizza in your hand.

That isn’t a character flaw. That’s your subconscious programming and your brain’s reward system (hello, dopamine) doing its thing.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through:

  • What the inner saboteur actually is
  • The three most common rebel “characters” that show up around food
  • How to shrink their power with a playful mental technique
  • How to use my “Think It Through” Strategy to choose long-term results over short-term cravings
  • How to turn these tools into a lasting weight loss mindset

You’ll learn how to partner with your mind instead of feeling like you’re fighting yourself every single day.


What Is the Inner Saboteur That Keeps Ruining Your Weight Loss?

Your inner saboteur is the part of your subconscious mind that wants everything to stay exactly the same – even if “the same” is making you miserable.

In the Shift Weight Mastery Process, I talk about two main parts of the mind:

  • Conscious mind (about 12%)
    • Knows everything about diets, calories, macros, “shoulds” and “shouldn’ts”
    • Says things like, “I want to lose 30 pounds” and “I should stop snacking at night”
  • Subconscious mind (about 88%)
    • Runs your habits and emotional patterns on autopilot
    • Wants familiar routines, even if they don’t serve you
    • Hates change and will quietly (or loudly) pull you back to the status quo

Over time, your subconscious can develop a rebellious inner saboteur – a clever, emotional, persuasive “voice” that learns exactly how to derail your best intentions:

  • “You’ve been so good all week – you deserve this.”
  • “Just start over tomorrow.”
  • “Everyone else is eating it – why shouldn’t you?”

The important thing to understand is this:

There is nothing wrong with you for having an inner saboteur; anyone who has struggled with weight over time has one.

The problem isn’t that this part of you exists. The problem is that you’ve been trying to fight it head-on instead of learning how to lead it.

The more you push against your inner rebel, the more it digs in its heels. So instead of going to war with it, you’re going to learn how to see it, name it, and work around it.


Why Does Your Brain Keep Choosing Instant Gratification Over Your Goals?

Your brain keeps choosing instant gratification because the dopamine reward system is wired to chase “feel good now,” not “feel great in three months.”

Your inner saboteur is largely powered by dopamine – the brain chemical that lights up when we anticipate pleasure. Dopamine is not evil; it’s simply:

  • Powerful
  • Short-sighted
  • Very persuasive

When dopamine is driving, your brain is focused on:

  • The taste of the cookie, not the regret later
  • The comfort of the couch, not the satisfaction of finishing your walk
  • The joy of a creamy pasta dish, not the bloated, overfull feeling afterward

In one famous kind of study, rats were given sugar water while their dopamine centers were stimulated. They kept drinking – even to the point of physical harm. That’s the raw, unfiltered drive dopamine can have when it’s not balanced by higher-level thinking.

In humans, this can look like:

  • Grabbing snacks while watching TV, even when you’re not hungry
  • Ordering fries “on impulse” at a drive-thru
  • Saying yes to food at social events because it feels fun and bonding
  • Raiding the pantry when stressed, lonely, or tired

Then later, the conscious mind wakes up and says:

  • “What was I thinking?”
  • “Why did I do that again?”
  • “I must be weak… broken… hopeless…”

You’re not hopeless. You’re simply dealing with a brain that’s wired to love instant pleasure, and a lifetime of patterns that have trained it to use food for reward and relief.

The solution isn’t more willpower. The solution is to work with your wiring:

  • Understand the rebel parts of you
  • Create some distance from them
  • Give your brain a new definition of “reward”

That’s exactly what the next sections will help you do.


Who Are the Inner Diva, Inner Child, and Inner Con Man Around Food?

Your inner saboteur often shows up as different “characters” in your mind. Naming them makes them easier to spot – and much easier to manage.

1. The Inner Diva

The inner diva is the star of your inner food show – your personal Food Network host.

She says things like:

  • “You’re really going to take away my treats?”
  • “Food is my joy – don’t you dare ruin this for me.”
  • “Life won’t be fun if I can’t eat what I want.”

Deep down, the diva is terrified of deprivation. She believes:

  • If you eat less, life will lose its color
  • If you say no to treats, you say no to joy
  • If food isn’t special, nothing will be

She only sees the front end of the experience – the excitement, the flavor, the fun. She ignores the back end: the frustration, the tight jeans, the shame.

2. The Inner Child

The inner child doesn’t care about the number on the scale. The inner child cares about comfort right now.

They say things like:

  • “I feel bad and I want something to soothe me.”
  • “They get to have it – why don’t I?”
  • “I deserve a treat; I’ve had a hard day.”

This part of you is often:

  • Whiny, needy, and emotional
  • Sensitive to stress, loneliness, and anxiety
  • Convinced that food is the only safe way to feel better

Again, the inner child only looks at the start of the story: the creamy, carby, sugary comfort. Not the ending: more anxiety, more guilt, more feeling out of control.

3. The Inner Con Man

The inner con man (or con woman) is the smooth talker and deal-maker.

He whispers things like:

  • “Start over tomorrow – just enjoy tonight.”
  • “You’ve been so good; you deserve a little extra.”
  • “This is a special occasion anyway.”

He’s the part of you that:

  • Talks you into “one more slice”
  • Suggests “just this once” – again and again
  • Sells you the fantasy that Monday You will be an entirely different person

In reality, “tomorrow” brings more overeating and more empty promises. Then comes the shame spiral: “Why did I fall for that again?”

You may have other rebel characters too, but these three are incredibly common. The first step is simply to notice:

When you can name the voice (“Oh, that’s my inner diva talking”), you stop confusing it with your true self.

Now let’s talk about how to change your relationship with these parts.


How Can You Start Changing Your Relationship With Your Inner Rebel?

You start changing your relationship with your inner rebel when you stop seeing it as you and start seeing it as a separate, slightly ridiculous character you can lead.

One of my favorite tools is to turn your inner rebel into a character outside of you. This comes from a story in my book From Fat to Thin Thinking, where I worked with a client named Tom.

Tom’s pattern was familiar:

  • He would start a diet
  • Do well for a while
  • Then go out with friends, eat and drink a lot, and tell himself he’d restart on Monday
  • Once he “fell off,” he’d stay off until he regained all the weight

He described it as “having a devil on his shoulder.” I called it his inner rebel.

Here’s what we did together – and you can do the same:

Step 1: Pick a Character

Ask yourself:

  • “If my inner rebel were a character in a movie or my life, who would it be?”

Maybe:

  • A slick salesperson
  • A seductive movie star
  • A goofy cartoon character
  • A friend who always talks you into “just one more drink”

Tom immediately thought of the car salesman who had just upsold him into a more expensive truck: smooth, persuasive, full of “You work hard – you deserve it.”

Step 2: See Them Clearly

Close your eyes (or soften your gaze if you’re not able to close your eyes) and imagine:

  • What are they wearing?
  • How do they stand, move, gesture?
  • What’s on their face – a smirk, a pout, a wink?

The more vividly you can see this inner rebel outside of you, the less power it has to feel like your identity.

Step 3: Hear Their Favorite Lines

Pick one or two classic sabotage lines they use, like:

  • “Go on, you’ve earned it.”
  • “You can start again on Monday.”
  • “Everyone else is having dessert; you don’t want to miss out.”

Now you’re ready for the fun part: shrinking their power.


How Do You Shrink Your Inner Saboteur’s Power in the Moment?

You shrink your inner saboteur’s power by turning them into something so small and silly that your wise inner coach can’t help but smile.

This is a blend of hypnosis-style imagery and neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) – playful, but incredibly effective.

Here’s the process you can try (not while driving, please):

Step 1: Give Your Rebel a Ridiculous Voice

Take your character and have them say their favorite sabotage line in a cartoon voice, like:

  • Homer Simpson
  • Marge Simpson
  • SpongeBob SquarePants
  • Any voice that makes you giggle

For example, instead of a sultry, serious “You’ve worked so hard, you deserve the cake,” you might hear:

“Yoooou deserve it!” in a squeaky, silly tone.

Instantly, the seduction loses its edge.

Step 2: Shrink Them Down

Now imagine your inner rebel:

  1. Standing in front of you at normal size
  2. Getting smaller and smaller
  3. Shrinking down to the size of a doll… then a toy…
  4. Then finally tiny enough to hide behind a blade of grass

They’re still there – but much less intimidating.

Step 3: Put Them to Bed

Imagine telling your inner rebel:

  • “Thank you for your opinion, but I’ve got this. You can take a nap now.”

See them curl up, yawn, and fall asleep.

Then visualize placing them gently in a small box behind your head – at the back of your brain. You’re not killing them off; you’re just putting that part of you in the background.

You can use a similar process with your inner critic, too:

  • Give it a silly voice
  • Shrink it down
  • Tell it, “You’ve worked hard today – you can go on vacation.”

This playful imagery works because it changes the emotional coding of the inner voice. It’s no longer big, looming, and powerful. It’s smaller, softer, and easier to ignore or redirect.

Now that you’ve shrunk your inner rebel, you need a way to handle the real-world moment of temptation. That’s where the Think It Through strategy comes in.


If impulsive urges still feel loud in the moment, you might also enjoy Episode 173 — Stop Impulsive Eating with these 3 Mind Controls, which teaches practical mental tools you can use right when cravings strike.


What Is the “Think It Through” Strategy and How Do You Use It?

The “Think It Through” strategy is a simple cognitive tool that helps you out-seduce your inner rebel by walking your brain through the real ending of each choice.

Your inner rebel is brilliant at marketing the first ten seconds of pleasure. The Think It Through strategy helps you:

  • See the full movie, not just the trailer
  • Feel the difference between short-term comfort and long-term pride
  • Use dopamine for your future self, not just your impulses

Here’s how to do it.

Step 1: Take a Shift Breath

Pause for a moment and take a slow, deep breath:

  • In through your nose
  • Out through your mouth

This brings your inner coach online – the wiser, calmer part of your mind.

Step 2: Think Through the Rebel’s Path (All the Way to the Pain)

Ask yourself:

“If I follow this urge all the way through… how will I feel three hours from now?”

For example, you’re at the checkout and your inner con man says, “Grab that big bag of M&M’s – you’ll just have a few.”

Think it through honestly:

  • You open the bag “for a taste”
  • You keep going, because dopamine is lighting up
  • Half the bag disappears
  • Three hours later you feel:
    • Foggy and in a sugar coma
    • Bloated and uncomfortable
    • Guilty and disappointed

Let yourself feel that future body feeling:

  • Heavy
  • Lethargic
  • Regretful

Your brain starts to associate the “treat” with that outcome, not just the first bite.

Step 3: Think Through the Healthier Choice (All the Way to the Pride)

Next, ask:

“If I make a healthier choice instead, how will I feel three hours from now?”

Maybe you skip the M&M’s, go home, and eat a balanced dinner.

Three hours later, you might feel:

  • Light in your body
  • Clear-headed and calm
  • Proud, connected, and in integrity with yourself

Again, feel it in your body:

  • Your stomach is comfortable
  • Your clothes feel easier
  • Your heart feels proud

Now your brain is comparing:

  • Path A: Short burst of taste → long stretch of discomfort and shame
  • Path B: Short moment of saying no → long stretch of comfort and pride

You’re not just resisting temptation; you’re redefining reward.

Tom’s Restaurant Example

Let’s go back to Tom. He was heading to an Italian restaurant with friends and his inner rebel immediately fixated on the fettuccine Alfredo.

The inner rebel said:

  • “That fettuccine is incredible – we have to get it.”
  • “We never come here; it would be sad to skip it.”
  • “Your friend is paying – go big!”

Using the Think It Through strategy, Tom did this:

  1. Thought through the rebel choice
    • Imagined himself eating a whole plate of creamy pasta
    • Saw himself that afternoon: bloated, uncomfortable, waistband digging in
    • Felt the heaviness and regret of adding more fat around his middle
  2. Thought through a smarter choice
    • Imagined ordering lemon chicken and veggies
    • Ordering a small side of fettuccine to share
    • Savoring a few bites, then pushing it to the center of the table
    • Leaving the restaurant feeling light, satisfied, and proud

He didn’t have to be “perfect” or “all-or-nothing.” He just had to think it through and make a more balanced decision.

That’s thin thinking in action.


How Can You Practice These Tools Daily for Lasting Weight Mastery?

You turn these tools into lasting weight mastery by making them part of your daily mental routine, not just emergency strategies when you’re already in front of the fridge.

People who keep weight off long term don’t rely on a perfect diet. They build skills:

  • They know their inner rebel
  • They plan for their triggers
  • They practice thinking things through in advance

Here are practical ways to weave this into your life:

1. Morning “Vision” Check-In

Take 3–5 minutes each morning to:

  • Picture your day: meals, social events, tricky moments (evenings, TV time, drive-thru routes)
  • Notice where your inner diva, child, or con man is likely to appear
  • Pre-play the Think It Through strategy:
    • See yourself tempted
    • Feel what would happen if you give in
    • Feel how good it will be to make a healthier choice

You’re rehearsing success in your mind – a powerful hypnosis-style practice.

2. Name Your Rebel in Real Time

Throughout the day, when you feel pulled to self-sabotage, say to yourself:

  • “That’s my inner diva wanting excitement.”
  • “My inner child is feeling stressed and wants comfort.”
  • “My inner con man is promising I’ll start over tomorrow.”

This tiny act of naming the part creates distance and makes it easier to choose differently.

3. Use the Shrink-and-Box Technique on Repeat

Whenever a voice feels loud and bossy:

  • Give it a cartoon voice
  • Shrink it down
  • Put it in the box at the back of your mind

You might even imagine opening that box later, when you decide – not when it barges in.

4. Celebrate Every Time You “Think It Through”

Each time you:

  • Pause
  • Think through both paths
  • Choose the one that serves your long-term weight loss

Give yourself credit:

  • “That was a powerful choice.”
  • “This is how I rewire my brain.”
  • “This is me becoming the boss.”

That’s how you retrain your dopamine system to see pride, lightness, and self-respect as the real rewards.

5. Get Support for Your Subconscious

Because so much of this is subconscious, tools like:

  • Hypnosis
  • Guided meditations
  • Coaching
  • Courses focused on the weight loss mindset

can accelerate your progress. You don’t need another harsh diet; you need consistent support for your inner world.


FAQ: Self-Sabotage and Weight Loss

Why do I self-sabotage even when I truly want to lose weight?

You self-sabotage because different parts of your mind want different things:

  • Your conscious mind wants health, energy, and confidence
  • Your subconscious mind wants comfort, familiarity, and the same old soothing patterns

When you learn to recognize and manage your inner rebel, you stop seeing this as weakness and start seeing it as brain wiring you can change.

Is my inner saboteur a sign that I’m broken or lazy?

No. Your inner saboteur is not a moral failing. It’s a collection of:

  • Old habits
  • Emotional associations with food
  • A brain that loves dopamine and comfort

Once you stop shaming yourself and start working with this part, it becomes much easier to lead yourself.

Can hypnosis really help with self-sabotage?

Hypnosis is a powerful way to:

  • Relax your nervous system
  • Speak directly to your subconscious mind
  • Install new beliefs and mental “scripts” around food, cravings, and self-identity

When paired with practical tools like Think It Through and the shrink-and-box technique, hypnosis can help you rewire your weight loss mindset from the inside out.

What should I do right after I self-sabotage?

Right after a sabotage moment, the most important thing is:

  1. Pause the shame spiral
    • “I’m human. This is a pattern, not a verdict.”
  2. Get curious, not cruel
    • “Which inner rebel was driving this?”
  3. Think it through retroactively
    • Replay the moment and imagine how you could respond differently next time

Treat it as data, not drama. Every episode is a chance to understand your inner saboteur better and plan for the next time.

Do I have to give up my favorite foods forever?

No. In fact, telling your inner diva “you can never have this again” is a fast way to trigger rebellion.

Instead, use:

  • Planned treats
  • Smaller portions
  • Sharing dishes (like Tom did with his fettuccine)

The goal is to enjoy food consciously, without handing the steering wheel to your inner saboteur.

How long does it take to change these patterns?

It varies, but many people start to feel a shift within a few weeks of:

  • Naming their inner rebel
  • Practicing Think It Through
  • Using imagery to shrink the saboteur’s power

The key is consistency, not perfection. Every time you practice, you’re strengthening the neural pathways of thin thinking.


What’s Your Next Step to Outsmart Your Inner Saboteur?

Your inner saboteur isn’t going anywhere – but its power over you can shrink dramatically when you:

  • See it clearly
  • Give it a name and a character
  • Play with its voice and size until it feels small
  • Think every tempting choice all the way through to how you’ll feel later
  • Practice these skills daily until they become second nature

You don’t need to be stricter, harder, or more perfect. You need to become the calm, confident leader of your own mind.

If you’re ready to go deeper, keep exploring tools that support your weight loss mindset – especially hypnosis, guided practices, and education that focus on the inside-out transformation of weight mastery. You can start by revisiting the Thin Thinking podcast episode this article came from and exploring the resources at Shift Weight Mastery for more support on your journey.

Remember:

The key – and probably the only key – to unlocking the door of the weight struggle is inside you.

You’ve just taken a big step toward turning that key.

Want to learn more? Check out my free masterclass, How to Stop The “Start Over Tomorrow” Weight Struggle Cycle and Start Releasing Weight For Good.

If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy this related Thin Thinking episode:

Rita Black: Have you been perplexed by the fact that you know, all there is to know about losing weight and you truly desire to lose weight-really, really, truly want it so bad. And yet there seems to be that part of you that sabotages your, every attempt at weight loss and you’re sick of it. I hear you. In today’s episode of Thin Thinking we are going to dive into ways to take that wild child within and really get them working with you and not against you for your weight loss goals.

Rita Black: Did you know that our struggle with weight doesn’t start with the food on your plate or get fixed in the gym? 80% of our weight struggle is mental. That’s right, the key to unlocking long-term weight release and management begins in your mind. Hi, there I’m Rita black. I’m a clinical hypnotherapist, weight loss expert, best-selling author, and the creator of the Shift Weight Mastery Process. And not only have I helped thousands of people over the past 20 years achieve long-term weight mastery, I am also a former weight struggler, carb addict, and binge eater. And after two decades of failed diets and fad weight loss programs, I lost 40 pounds with the help of hypnosis. Not only did I release all that weight, I have kept it off for 25 years. Enter the Thin Thinking Podcast where you too will learn how to remove the mental roadblocks that keep you struggling. I’ll give you the thin thinking tools, skills, and insights to help you develop the mindset you need. Not only to achieve your ideal weight, but to stay there long-term and live your best life.

Rita Black: Welcome. Come on in and get comfy here. We are in mid June and it feels like the summer is going by fast. I’m sure you’ve heard that a million times before. What is it about June? There is just so much in June that for me, there’s my anniversary. There’s birthdays. My son’s birthday, my brother’s birthday and my mother-in-law’s birthday. And a lot of friends have birthdays in June and, you know, last summer it went by slow. It just felt, you know, it went by as slow as molasses, but the summer just feels jam packed with a lot of things. We’re going to go see relatives. We’re going to go get my daughter settled in school and we’re also taking my son to summer camp. So I just know this summer is going to fly by, but I hope that you’re excited about your summer.

Rita Black: I’m looking forward to this wild and crazy summer. So we have some awesome strategies to talk about in today’s episode, but before I do, I just wanted to make sure you knew about the new contest that we are running this month. Yes. We love contests here at Thin Thinking. So during the month of June, we are having a review contest for reviews for the podcast. So if you write a podcast review at any time in the month of June, you can send it to me at rita@shiftweightmastery.com. You want to send a screenshot or you can send a copy of it and be entered into a drawing, just posting it is you need to kind of let me know that you did it. And I need to know your name. Just posting it won’t be enough just because we want to know who you are.

Rita Black: Because a lot of times the name on your review doesn’t necessarily match who you are. So now the three lucky winners of the drawing will win my Weight Mastery Express downloads, five fabulous coaching sessions, exercise, mindless eating, stress, drinking less for weight loss and portions. And if you don’t know how to review something, just check the show notes or check the podcast website for instructions. They’re all there for you. All right, now, let’s move on and talk about that inner saboteur, that part of our psyche, that gets in the way of our most sincere weight release efforts.

Rita Black: Now in the shift weight mastery process, I talk a lot about the two parts of our mind, the conscious and the subconscious and how they work together to either work with us for weight release or work against us. And the conscious mind is that 12% is a very small part of our mind, but it’s very smart part of our mind. And that part of the mind knows everything there is to know about losing weight, why we should lose weight, how to lose weight, but then there’s that part that just wants things to stay pretty much the way they are. And that we’ve called the subconscious mind. And over time we develop quite a rebellious inner saboteur tour in our subconscious that really has become quite skilled at destroying any weight loss attempt that we go on consciously have India noticed. Um, so we work hard to work against this part of ourselves, but it seems the harder that we try to change the harder we bounce back in the end.

Rita Black: Now, the problem is that we blame ourselves and we re really see that this is a character flaw within us, that we can’t control this part of us, that we have this devilish aspect of ourselves and that it, you know, it just acts out against us. And it really makes us feel insane at times because consciously we know everything we should be doing, but in yet, this part just keeps seams seeming to undo us. But I want you to understand that anyone who has struggled with weight over time has an inner rebel, and here’s the thing. There is nothing wrong with you, but the more that you try to work against this part of you, the more it bites back. So the key is to create a different relationship with this part of you to really start to separate yourself out from this part of yourself, and really find ways to tame their rebellion, and to really get to see them in a different light to learn, to manage them before they manage you.

Rita Black: So I’d like to just take a moment to introduce to you to your inner rebel, a little more, our inner rebel is shortsighted and really driven by the dopamine part of our brain, the reward center in our brain. It’s a very powerful driving force and dopamine wants what it wants when it wants it. And it doesn’t care about the consequences. So that makes that part of our mind, that that craving part of our mind, that impulsive part of our mind, that part, that, and does us as really driven by that very powerful neurotransmitter dopamine. And, you know, like they gave rats sugar water and they stimulated. So this was a study and they stimulated the dopamine center in the rat brain. And the rat continued to drink sugar water until its stomach exploded. Like that’s how aggressive and an impactful dopamine can be. So, so dopamine, I call it kind of the dumb child or the child that is like putting his hand finger in the socket that looks like fun.

Rita Black: It sees the instant gratification part of a scenario. It’s not really necessarily thinking things through and it will, and it’s smart though. It knows it. So it’s not really dumb, but it’s clever, it really knows how to get you to do something even against your own best interest. And often our inner rebel takes on different personalities that work against us when we’re trying to lose weight. I’m gonna walk through a few of the main ones that I see repeated over and over again, both within myself and with my clients and you know, the people that I work with. So one aspect of the inner rebel, I would call the inner diva. Now she is the star of the food show, your own inner food network, your own inner barefoot Contessa, who is a foodie extraordinary, and absolutely loves and adores food, and is absolutely outraged that you’re going to take away her treats and fun.

Rita Black: When you go on a diet, no way, you don’t know who I am, I must have my rewards and I’m going to make your life hell for you. Are anyone who takes them away. Now, deep down the diva is only reacting out of fear. The fear of the idea of you’re taking away the food. She feels like if you take away food, life is not going to be the same life will lose its color. It won’t be fun. It won’t be worth living and she will feel deprived little. Does she know that the foods that seemingly create joy and fun actually deep down can cause her great pain because obviously when we’re overeating and filling out overweight and out of control, obviously deep down that works against us. But like I said, she’s only looking at the, the front end and the fun part of it.

Rita Black: And her fear is you’re taking away, her fun and life. Isn’t going to be worth living. Now, there’s this other aspect of ourselves, which I would call the inner child. Now. They don’t care about being thin. They just want to feel that instant comfort when they are feeling bad or stressed. And the comfort is more important than being thin on the beach this summer, this aspect of our inner rebel, that whiny, they get to have it. Why can’t I, I feel bad and I need something to soothe me, but little does it this aspect of ourselves? No, that ultimately overeating the carby foods, the sugary foods, the foods that seemingly ultimately create more anxiety and more stress about our weight, about our health at the end of the day. Again, it’s really only looking at the front end of each scenario. Now, the last aspect that I’m going to discuss with you, I am, and I’m saying that I’m discussing three, there might be, you might have a lot of other different aspects to your inner rebel.

Rita Black: But the other one that I find really interesting is the inner con man. He’s more like the seducer and the deal-maker. This is the smooth talking bastard part of our inner rebel that will seduce you and convince you in any way. He knows how you should start over tomorrow in order to get that head mystic pleasure today, whether it’s ripping down the drive-through and getting on that impulse, a drive through spree or the impulse buy at the checkout stand or eating a few more slices of cake or more slices of pizza after we’ve had one go on, you’ve been doing so well, have a bit more. You can pull things together tomorrow and tomorrow only tomorrow brings more eating empty promises, making us feel bad about our willpower and forgiving in, and the shame, the shame, the shame, the shame that we feel for allowing ourselves to be seduced by this clever character again and again, why did I let him do that?

Rita Black: So you’re in trouble. Rebel may have other aspects, like I said, of his or her personality. But what I want you to do is to start to notice, to get conscious of this aspect of yourself, to start to get one eyes and shift your inner rebel. I’m going to teach you a way to start to separate yourself out from these aspects of yourself and get your inner rebel to lose some of their power and to, so you can start to manage them. In fact, I’m going to read you an excerpt from my book from fat to thin thinking where I tell a story about leading a client through to mind techniques to begin to manage his inner rebel. And I’m going to lead you through one of these techniques, and then I’m going to walk you through how he managed the other technique. And it’s a pretty straightforward technique.

Rita Black: So I know you’re going to get this too. So I think these two techniques are going to be very helpful for you to begin to attain and have some more power over this inner rebel aspect of yourself. So I’m just going to read from this chapter called the inner rebel. And managing your inner rebel is actually a skill of weight mastery. And you know, I have three, uh, three areas of skills in, in the idea of weight mastery. And these are really taken by studies of over 200 studies of people who have taken weight and kept it off permanently. So, really people who have long-term sustained weight management have learned to manage this part of themselves. You know, like they, that there’s a skill to this. It just doesn’t happen overnight that we really, the more we get to know these aspects of ourselves, um, the more we can have power over them.

Rita Black: Tom thought that being able to finish an entire pizza was a sign of manhood. My friends and I would consider you a wimp. If you left a piece of pizza on the plate, if you ate it all you, Tom said at our consultation meeting, Tom grew up in Southern California and had been in the construction industry for a good part of his life. He had been a customer of the diet industry. Tom had tried every weight loss program, fast and cleanse out there twice. My mom always dieted and took me to my first weight Watchers meeting when I was eight. He shared with me when I asked him what his biggest challenge to long-term success was. Tom answered, I’m not sure I’m very good at following a diet structure and releasing 30 of the 50 pounds.

Rita Black: I need to lose, but somewhere along the way, I get bored of the diet, or I go out with the guys and I eat pizza and I drink beer. It’s the devil sitting on my shoulder. And he’s pretty hard to say no to when he wants something. I like to call that devil your inner rebel. I said, ah, whatever you call it. Once I give into it, a part of me snaps, and it doesn’t want to return to the strictness of that diet. It’s off and I’m off until I regain all the weight. Well, tell me one way your inner rebel tries to seduce you into sabotaging your weight release efforts. I asked Tom just one. Okay. If I started a diet and the weekend comes, I may go out with my family for dinner. If I see ribs on the menu, my inner rebel says, Hey, you worked hard this week.

Rita Black: Let’s have the ribs and a beer and a side of fries. We’ll pull it together tomorrow. In reality, that means restarting my program on Monday, after eating a ton of food over the weekend, I asked Tom to close his eyes and imagine that his inner rebel was a character outside of him, a character in a movie or from his life Tom smiled. I know exactly who my inner rebel is going to be. I just bought a new truck and the guy sold it to me. The guy who sold it to me was the ultimate salesman. I went in there wanting to buy a pre-owned model. And he talked me into buying a brand new model with a bunch of added details. This guy was smooth. He kept saying, you work so hard. You deserve it. I believed him. And I didn’t know what hit me until I was driving home.

Rita Black: Hmm. Well, could you imagine the smooth talker saying, go ahead. You work so hard, eat whatever you want and you can start again on Monday. I asked. Sure. Easily. Okay. So now imagine that voice, that, that guy’s voice becoming really silly and distorted like the voice of Homer Simpson or SpongeBob square pants. Tom laughed. I asked him, does it take the edge off the seduction a bit? Sure. I feel like I can hear my inner rebel from a mile away. He’s not going to catch me daydreaming again. Tom said, so you can see, what Tom did and what I’m going to lead you through now was you, you start to separate yourself out from that inner rebel aspect of yourself. And, and you do that by giving them a character. You really do create them as you see them, you see what they’re dressed as you see how, how, what they look like, and that they’re, they’re separate from you.

Rita Black: So you can start to have a dialogue with them. You can start to say no to them. You can start to hear them like that used car salesman, um, from a different aspect. And it doesn’t because often what we hear is just that voice in our head, like, go on, you deserve it. And, and it is, we think that it’s part of us. So, I’d like to now just take you through. Okay. So now it’s time for you to show your inner rebel who’s boss. I’m going to just walk you through, this exercise so that you can try it out too. So if you’re in a rebel where a character in a movie, what character would he or she be, or maybe just choose a very seductive person from your life to play the rebel. So just kind of imagine that that could be any movie that you’ve seen. I think of those black and white forties movies, because I used to watch those with my dad. And I imagine like Jane Russell, who’s like just super seductive and come on sailor. And she’s like this very seductive voice. So what does your inner rebel look like? Like I said, mine is kind of this seductress, who’s a little wild and unkempt looking and has a cigarette hanging out of her.

Rita Black: And now what is a seductive phrase that your inner rebel uses to sabotage you? For me, one was like, oh, go on. You work so hard or go on everybody. Else’s having eating. You can too, you know, that those were something that my inner rebel loves to say. Okay, good. So now close your eyes and imagine you’re in or not. If you’re driving your car, don’t close your eyes, but otherwise close her eyes. And just to manage your inner rebel saying that phrase, but in a silly voice, like Homer or Marge Simpson are sponge Bob square pants.

Rita Black: Good. And now thank your inner rebel for his opinion. And, and I want you to imagine shrinking your inner rebel down. So like, imagine them going from that, the normal size in your brain to like teeny tiny, smaller, and smaller, smaller until you can barely see them hiding behind a blade of grass and then tell your inner rebel to take a nap. So just imagine them laying down and taking a nap. And then I want to you to imagine that you’re putting them in a little box behind your head. So what you’re in the back of your brain. So just imagine that there’s a little box in the back of your brain and you’re, you’re putting your inner rebel in that box. So you’re separating yourself out from them, distorting that voice. So it sounds silly to you. So you’re starting to play with these.

Rita Black: These are neuro-linguistic programming techniques and you’re actually shrinking them down. So you’re shrinking down their importance. You’re telling them to go to sleep and you’re putting them in the back. And this is a great exercise to do with your inner critic as well. Um, you know, when we start to make our inner critic sound silly, it also, our inner critic can start to lose our power. I’m I often will tell my inner critic, Hey, you’ve worked really hard today. Go ahead and take a nap or you can take vacation. I don’t need you right now. Okay. So that’s one way you can start to play around with your inner rebel and shrink their importance. Now, I want to teach you this other thing called the, think it through strategy, and I’m going to read to you from the book again. So your inner rebel is very good as seducing you away from your weight release intentions.

Rita Black: The good news is that even though the seduction dance you do with your inner rebel is a powerful pull. Ultimately it is predictable. A typical inner rebel seduction attempt might be convincing you that you’re too tired to exercise coming home from work when you’re hungry and overeating overindulging at social outings, restaurants and parties seducing you to get treats from the kitchen while watching TV at night. The way to shift out of the seduction is with a cognitive behavioral technique that I call the, think it through strategy. It involves turning the tables and seducing your inner rebel into making the healthier choice for you. According to psychologist, Philip David, our thoughts and the language we use to express them can be, can remind us of bad consequences and guide us to other actions and reinforce the value of success. So what I’m talking about is counter seducing your inner rebel with an offer.

Rita Black: She or he cannot refuse. Remember most of what drives our brain forward is the idea of perceived reward. That dopamine, the inner rebel is a master at making his reward seem better to you than sticking with your healthier option. But what if you started marketing your healthier option in a more enticing way? So this is how to think it through this techniques allows you to shift your mind out of fat thinking, impulsive pleasure, seeking to thin thinking healthy action, taking. So one, you take a shift breath and harness your inner coach. So you just bring that powerful. You get present and bring that powerful inner you that nurturing wise you within now think through how taking the inner rebels path will feel three hours from now after indulging. So if you’re sitting there at the checkout counter and you see, you know, the pound size of M and M’s, and they’re like thinking, oh, well, I’ll just buy this and have a few, um, think it through to the fact that you probably will eat more than just a few and you’ll keep eating them.

Rita Black: And then you get halfway through the bag and you start to feel sick and woozy. And then three hours later, you’re feeling bad. And in a sugar coma, there’s think about how that would feel in your body, how that would feel that, that sugar coma filling foggy, filling gross, filling, stuffed lethargic, and in your heart regretful remorseful. Why did I do that? So, so you just think that through, in your mind all the way through, and you think through to the feeling part of it, right? Like how it feels, cause a feeling will trigger the brain that will start to leverage that dopamine in a different way. Cause the brain is going to start to go, oh, that doesn’t feel good. We don’t want that. All right. So next you want to think through what would happen if you made the healthier choice, how would you feel three hours later in your body light, lean energized?

Rita Black: So like if you passed on the M and M’s, you went home, ate a healthy lighter dinner, and how would you feel three hours later going in going to bed, filling in light. Like you really took care of yourself that you ate healthfully proud of yourself. And you’re really thinking through to that feeling like how would that feel in my body? So you’re giving yourself those two different feeling choices. And what you’re doing is leveraging dopamine. You’re leveraging. So you’re giving that you’re saying, okay, in our rebel, we could eat all those m&ms how’s that really gonna feel three hours from now versus, you know, taking a healthy choice. How’s that going to feel? Because ultimately that higher level feeling of feeling proud of yourself and connected to yourself is something that we ultimately want more than instant gratification. So when you start to get your brain thinking forward, like that, thinking it all the way through, you will often take that healthier option.

Rita Black: And this is a skill that you can begin to develop. So I’m going to read to you what Tom did. So let’s look at how Tom used the, think it through strategy with his inner rebel during his morning vision meditation, to prepare for an upcoming social outing and in the show, the book from fat to thin thinking, there’s this morning meditation that you get as a recording with the book and hypnosis too, but the meditation kind of helps you think your day through. So he was using that morning vision meditation prepare for an upcoming social outing. Tom thinks forward to the lunch meeting. He is having with his friends at their favorite Italian restaurant. And as Tom thinks about the lunch, he immediately thinks about the restaurants, fettuccine alfredo that he loves, Tom’s inner rebel rears has had thinking about the creamy noodles Tom’s inner rebel says, wow, that fettuccine is so good.

Rita Black: Let’s get that today. Come on. We never go to that restaurant. And your friend Joe is paying. I don’t want to sell it. That’s for sure. A salad would just be sad. Tom takes a shift breath and begins to think through the inner rebel choice. Tom says to himself eating a plate of fettuccine would be amazing in the moment, but this afternoon I will feel bloated and gross with that fettuccine, adding to the fat around my middle and pressing over the top of my pants. Do I really want to feel that way later? Tom’s inner rebel response. Yikes. Since you put it like that, maybe not Tom now paints a seductive picture of a healthier option as he romances his inner rebel, he says, well, I can order the lemon, chicken and veggies instead of a big plate of fettuccine Alfredo, but I can order a small side of fettuccine and I can have a few bites and experience with fantastic flavors.

Rita Black: And then I will put the plate on the table, in the middle for the others to share. And that way I can have the pasta and not become bloated. And I can feel good about myself and good when I’m done eating because I ate healthfully too. Okay. So do you get that? So you’re, you’re starting to really use your mind just in a different way. This is thin thinking at its best. We’re really rewiring ourselves and rewiring the way we perceive things and especially leveraging the power of dopamine when it comes to our inner rebel. So next time that you’re feeling seduced like Tom, take your inner rebel through the two choices, think that the less healthy or the, the seductive, uh, fattening choice all the way through to the pain of overeating and feeling stuffed and bloated, and then guide your inner rebel through the healthier choice, feeling light, feeling connected to yourself because that’s the higher level, uh, emotion, that’s higher level feeling.

Rita Black: That’s a higher level place that we want to get to. This is such a great way to begin managing that part of you without having to fight it. And that my friends is the beginning of you being the boss and not the of your inner rebel. Okay. So now a last reminder, if you write a review for the Thin Thinking podcast, anytime in June, and you send it to me at rita@shiftweightmastery.com, the information is all in the show notes, you will be entered in to the drawing. You can take a screenshot or you just send me a copy and paste it and send it to me. Three winners will win the Weight Mastery Express downloads, five fabulous downloads and coaching. And if you don’t know how to leave a review, check it out, it’s all in the show notes. My friends, that’s it have an amazing week. And remember that the key and probably the only key to unlocking the door, the weight struggle is inside. You keep listening and find it have an amazing week, and I will see you next week.

Rita Black: Do you want to dive deeper into the mindset of long-term weight release? Head on over to www.shiftweightmastery.com where you’ll find numerous tools and resources to help you unlock your mind for permanent weight release, tips, strategies, and more, and be sure to check the show notes to learn more about my book From Fat to Thin Thinking: Unlock Your Mind For Permanent Weight Loss.

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