A Food Freedom Dietitian & Certified Intuitive Eating Counselor helping women just like you take their power back through a soul-centered approach to binge eating recovery.
If you’re reading this, you are probably feeling the overwhelming struggle of emotional eating.
When you’re stressed and go to reach for that bag of chips to mindlessly eat, it quite honestly stresses you out more. Or when you are feeling sad and you grab a tub of ice cream and you are left guilty about what just happened. Or maybe you are lonely and grab a cookie and keep going back for another one, and another one, and another one…
First of all, I want to say – I’ve done all of the above. I know how draining it is to feel like your emotions are controlling your eating behaviours. Second, what if I told you that emotional eating isn’t ALL bad? Yup, I said it. We’ll dive into that a bit later, so keep reading!
I want to share 5 tips to stop emotional eating with you so that you can stop beating yourself up about it once and for all!
DISCLAIMER: if you are dealing with an active eating disorder this information could not be suited for you and I recommend seeking out help from a health professional who specializes in eating disorders.
Food IS emotional. Food connects us, brings us joy, gives us a way of celebrating, is a way of sharing love, and so many more things. It is a normal response to have emotions surrounding food.
Something that you may need to do surrounding emotional eating is a mindset shift. Think to yourself – How has emotional eating been helpful for me? What kind of joy do I find in food? How has food helped me in my life?
It’s okay to be an emotional eater, we’re human! Even as an Intuitive Eating Dietitian, I still emotionally eat from time to time, but I don’t let it consume my life anymore.
Now, emotional eating can become a problem if:
If you are experiencing these things, know that it is okay and there are strategies you can use to help stop emotional eating. Let’s keep going:
Now, it takes time and effort to develop an understanding of true biological hunger, but it’s a great skill to work on. Understanding the difference between physical and emotional hunger can be a good place to start with for dealing with emotional eating.
To tune into your true feelings of hunger a little bit more, my free guide explains how to use a tool called the Hunger-Fullness scale to recognize when you are experiencing physical hunger.
I’m going to flat out say it – the food you turn to when you are feeling emotional is the food that you tend to restrict or cut out. Did I get that right?
The act of restricting foods (especially when they are foods that bring us joy) will make you crave and desire these foods so deeply that you may feel like you can’t control or stop yourself when you get the urges to eat that food.
I won’t get into the physiological mechanisms of this in this post, but know that this is your body’s normal response to cutting out foods. If your body is feeling deprived, it will prompt you to eat more, it’s just a natural survival mechanism!
Since restricting food or having a list of forbidden foods is likely leading to heightened emotional eating, let’s stop the dieting! Nourish your body with foods that make you feel good and give you energy instead of depriving your body of the energy it needs.
Emotional eating comes from having strong emotions. It’s a beautiful thing to feel so deeply and I am thankful for my ability to have emotions.
To start feeling more in tune with your emotions, start by identifying your emotions. This can help to understand what is going on in your life and what needs of yours are not being met.
When you feel these emotions come on, take a moment and pause to feel that emotion. Try a little exercise that my good friend, Haley from Uplift Lifestyle, taught me:
Close your eyes and take a moment to pause and feel that emotion. Imagine yourself looking at that emotion and say “hello, (insert emotion, i.e. sadness, fear, stress)” and acknowledge that you see that emotion. Tell the emotion that you understand it has appeared in your life but that you don’t need it right now (if that applies).
When you feel (insert emotion: stressed, anxious, sad, lonely, bored, etc.) do you feel like it’s an automatic response that you reach for food? This is likely because you have made eating a coping mechanism to those emotions that turned into an automatic habit.
Remember when I said earlier that emotional eating becomes a problem when its your only coping mechanism? To help that, let’s brainstorm some other coping strategies together.
When you’re feeling strong emotions, try some of these coping strategies instead of automatically reaching for food:
Choose any coping mechanisms that work for you. I highly recommend seeing a therapist to figure out healthy coping mechanisms that suit your needs best, if it is accessible to you! It’s not scary, I promise.
I hope that you can take at least one thing away from this post on dealing with emotional eating and implement it into your life right now. If you have any further questions about how to stop emotional eating, please feel free to message me on Instagram or send me an email. I’m always happy to chat!
A Food Freedom Dietitian & Certified Intuitive Eating Counselor helping women just like you take their power back through a soul-centered approach to binge eating recovery.
I'm Jenn! A Food Freedom Dietitian & Certified Intuitive Eating Counselor helping women just like you take their power back through a soul-centered approach to binge eating recovery.
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Thank you, Jenn, for putting yourself and your story out there! I recently read about intuitive eating on the Cleveland Clinic website. I was looking for something–ANYTHING–outside dieting or NOT dieting and regaining weight. My story: after a year of the pandemic, I decided to get really healthy. At 76 I am in good health, take no prescribed meds, and am active. But, I have dieted since I was 15 yrs. old. This was to be my “final” diet. I signed up with NOOM. I did it! For one year I ate healthy, lost 25 pounds, exercised several times weekly–felt great! At the end of the year I thought–ok, I got this! I will trust myself. Not count calories, etc. At the end of this past year-2022–I had gained the 25 pounds back, and had felt I had no control over my triggers–chocolate and sugar. So, for 2023, what did I want to do? No going back to NOOM or any other diet. But I was certainly not happy with gaining it all back. I was feeling really frustrated…no idea what I was looking for or hoping for. And then I read, “intuitive eating”, and my whole mindset shifted. Oh. Trusting myself, listening to myself, not engaging in diet culture in any way…. This will take some time, I realize. But, dieting from 15-75 y/o and still having that extra 20 pounds (sometimes more!) is just not something I will do any longer. ENOUGH! I would have thought I got that–listening within. I know about that in so many ways. But not when it comes to food. And, I realized, not when it comes to depression or anger or anxiety that gets triggered so often by what others are doing or not doing. So now I am learning about intuitive eating, and I’m starting with just letting go of the “food rules”. In my effort to educate myself I came across your podcast and found it so helpful. So, I wanted to write and just say thank you.
Martha
I stress eat a lot there’s so much going on in my life. Plus in my head I do have a consular. But I lost over a 100 lbs but now I’m stress eating and started gaining it back now I’m dieting again no breads no sweets I really understand ur story I’m gonna try what u say. Thank you. If I can just start to write things down again I’m hoping this helps. Again thank you for sharing.
Hi Sondra, sorry to hear you have a lot going on and are struggling with stress eating. I hope that this post and these tips were helpful for you. Wishing you all the best on your journey!