binge eating

I have seen many post lately about binge eating and want to share how I deal with it. Today I had a binge eating episode and ate 660 calories in about 30 minutes. I did what my dietician calls a controlled binge, measure out one serving on what the food is put the container away, if I want more I measure out one serving of some other food, and continue. Today I had one serving each of frito scoops, sour cream and onion chips, cookie cereal, then I was done. My dietician said this can help control the binge because I can track it and it takes longer to weigh/measure the food so I will eat less until the compulsion to binge passes. The most important thing is to not dwell on it. Good luck everyone.
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  • how I deal with binge or excessive eating is I crowd out my schedule, preferably with interesting stuff.

    So true! When I am busy I will be much less likely to binge.
  • natreuben
    natreuben Posts: 3 Member
    It's good that you measure what you are eating. Do you find you feel guilty after wards and do you eat when you feel bad or feel you need some control or that you are bored. That's when you binge eat. Do you eat when you are stressed highly stressed and hungry. My boyfriend binge eats and I don't know why or how to help him what would you suggest. What stops you is it just the measuring.
  • Well that may be better than how I measure it. I usually weight the package or container before I pig out, then after and determine the damage.

    If I had the bag in my hand I would have eaten all of it. When I measure it out and put the bag away it avoids that.

    That has never helped me not eat the whole bag. I will go to the trouble and eventually just eat it out of the bag anyway. However I don't have a regular binging problem anymore. It used to be a daily event. Sometimes several times a day of uncontrolled, puppet on a string all out pigging out. Now I only do it around PMS time when my hormones are doing their thing. And it is never anything like it used to be.
  • cashidy
    cashidy Posts: 152 Member
    I am glad to read this. I binge really badly sometimes, and this gives me hope I can stop. I am terrified of this weekend when my binging will be worse, but I want to try your method.
  • Rebecca0224
    Rebecca0224 Posts: 810 Member
    cashidy wrote: »
    I am glad to read this. I binge really badly sometimes, and this gives me hope I can stop. I am terrified of this weekend when my binging will be worse, but I want to try your method.

    If you need someone to talk to you can add me as a friend or send me messages. I still struggle but I'm getting better the binge eating is less often and not as bad.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    cashidy wrote: »
    I am glad to read this. I binge really badly sometimes, and this gives me hope I can stop. I am terrified of this weekend when my binging will be worse, but I want to try your method.

    Perhaps more structured weekends would be helpful for you? Join a gym, take a class, go for a hike, do volunteer work?
  • katherinejoyce80
    katherinejoyce80 Posts: 2 Member
    That is good advice.
  • angelb1983
    angelb1983 Posts: 160 Member
    Im glad you posted this even though it is old. I binged last night because I had way too much junk in the house and I was tired of eating within calories. I have always wondered how to manage this especially with hormonal fluctuations (sometimes I stay in calories easy and sometimes I can eat every bit of junk I see). I like the idea of measuring it out since most of the time I plan it mentally anyway and just don't care until the next morning.
  • smolmaus
    smolmaus Posts: 442 Member

    However - this is something I have realised about myself recently - is sometimes I actually actively ENJOY binging (until after the binge of course, which is when I feel like crap). I'll know, for example, that I am going to be home alone one night, and I will specifically go to the grocery store, buy a huge bag of chips and dip and a family pack of ice-cream, and settle myself into the binge, as if it is a treat to myself. I know it's wrong, I know I am going to feel awfully sick by the end of it, but I do it anyway, because there's this voice in my head (not literally) that won't shut up until I give in. And my logic is - if I eat so many chips now that I am sick, or eat so much chocolate now that I disgust myself, I won't feel like eating it again for a long time, so in a way, the binge is actually good for my long-term healthy eating. It's a messed up mental process, I know. I want to know if anyone else experiences this?

    I can absolutely relate to this part. I'm still struggling with binging (three days clean lol) and one day a few weeks ago when I was asking myself the standard question "Why do you do this to yourself?" a new answer popped up "because you enjoy it". Which didn't feel good, as a realisation, because why on earth would anyone enjoy going to bed with a basketball in their stomach and feeling sick? But now I don't think it's the actual binging I enjoy, I think it's tied into general control issues for me (food, alcohol, behaviour in general). It weirdly helped me because I am not really "out of control" I just enjoy feeling like I am, if that makes sense? I haven't developed this whole new eating disorder, it's just the same old issues showing themselves in different ways now that I don't drink so much. It's different for everyone of course but every little "Oh!" moment you have like that gets you a bit closer to knowing what the real problem is, and closer to a solution.

    What helped me feel less shame about it was just telling people what was happening. You're never going to binge in front of them, they never need to see it and you can keep the details vague but just knowing that it's not a secret anymore removed a lot of the shame for me. You need to find the right trusted person to tell of course, who will be sensitive and supportive, for me it was my sister.

    I hope your specialist is able to give you some real solid help soon but I think you are taking the right self-reflective steps to also help yourself
  • neugebauer52
    neugebauer52 Posts: 1,120 Member
    My binge eating falls into 2 categories: The really nasty one is bread - good quality bread, that is. Fresh out of the (preferably wood fired) oven and crunchy - I can easily eat a loaf - about 1 kg or 2.2 pounds. And it wouldn't end there - all the delicious stuff I can pile onto every single slice: butter, mayonnaise, ham, salami, roast beef, cheese, smoked salmon, sardines - you name it, I can pile it up high. So bread as my worst trigger food is out; I just replace it with lots of different salads and vegetables and than I can control my portions easily. I also used to binge eat when I had not eaten a certain food item for some time. I have changed to a balanced meal plan (WITHOUT THE BREAD...) 5 months ago and don't miss anything - no more urge to binge there.
  • bernadettenz
    bernadettenz Posts: 252 Member
    However - this is something I have realised about myself recently - is sometimes I actually actively ENJOY binging (until after the binge of course, which is when I feel like crap). I'll know, for example, that I am going to be home alone one night, and I will specifically go to the grocery store, buy a huge bag of chips and dip and a family pack of ice-cream, and settle myself into the binge, as if it is a treat to myself. I know it's wrong, I know I am going to feel awfully sick by the end of it, but I do it anyway, because there's this voice in my head (not literally) that won't shut up until I give in.
    This is exactly me. I'll be heading home after work, and then I'll stop at the supermarket, buy my favourite dip and a box of crackers, a family sized bar of chocolate or a packet of biscuits, and something to wash it all down with and away I go. Thoroughly enjoy myself. Until the next day when I have a food hangover and I can't poop properly 😒 But I know I'll do it all again in the near future. It gets tiring to be honest.
  • MichelleWithMoxie
    MichelleWithMoxie Posts: 1,817 Member
    Thank you for this thread.

    I have a severe problem with binge-eating as well. I recently started to see a specialist about the issue, but I think she is hesitant to diagnose me with a full-fledged disorder. I am unsure whether this is because my symptoms are too mild (although they feel pretty uncontrollable to me at times), or whether this is because I am not overweight. I know that in India, which is where I am from, psychiatrists and specialists are a lot less likely to offer a straight-up diagnosis than they are in the US (I know of people being diagnosed with mental health issues by the end of the first session itself, in the US; conversely I know of people who suffer for years in India before a doctor takes their symptoms seriously).

    The point to my ramble is this - I think the tips on this thread to curtail a binge-episode are really useful, and the next time I feel an impulse I will certainly give them a try. Measuring portions would certainly stop me from eating too much, or at least slow me down enough that I don't eat myself to the "catastrophe" stage where I feel so guilty and so helpless that I spend the rest of the day eating junk cause "what's the point now, anyway."

    However - this is something I have realised about myself recently - is sometimes I actually actively ENJOY binging (until after the binge of course, which is when I feel like crap). I'll know, for example, that I am going to be home alone one night, and I will specifically go to the grocery store, buy a huge bag of chips and dip and a family pack of ice-cream, and settle myself into the binge, as if it is a treat to myself. I know it's wrong, I know I am going to feel awfully sick by the end of it, but I do it anyway, because there's this voice in my head (not literally) that won't shut up until I give in. And my logic is - if I eat so many chips now that I am sick, or eat so much chocolate now that I disgust myself, I won't feel like eating it again for a long time, so in a way, the binge is actually good for my long-term healthy eating. It's a messed up mental process, I know. I want to know if anyone else experiences this?

    Also, shame-eating: During the peak of my binge-eating issues, I used to find it very difficult to eat in front of other people, and a good indication that I am entering a binge-eating phase again is that I am trying to eat alone more and more; even sometimes hiding food from people. Can anyone relate?

    Girl, yes.
  • tar2323
    tar2323 Posts: 141 Member
    Never Binge Again by Glenn Livingston is free on Amazon to download. It may not be for everyone, but that book is having a huge impact on my binge/overeating behaviour. Did I mention it's free?!