Emotional eating tips?
BinaDOS
Posts: 5 Member
Hi! I’m a severe emotional eater. Any good tips for success??
2
Replies
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When you start feeling emotional, grab a friend.. go.for a walk or a run. No food in site, and talking will keep your mind of it3
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I use an app called “calm harm”. I think it’s mean for self injurious folks, but find the different strategies you can do (like distract yourself) helpful when I want to eat & know it’s emotional, not hunger based. There’s a journal feature too & over time it helped me see my triggers are loneliness in the evening. Best of luck to you!4
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*meant0
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I’m an emotional eater and I do a lot of late night snacking as well. I do my best when I have a plan in place (I thrive with structure and organization). Right now I’m doing intermittent fasting so I know that once 8 o’clock comes the kitchen is CLOSED. Starting tomorrow, I’m going to get up and go for at least a mile walk in the morning to try to form a habit and start back seeing results.5
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Tell yourself, "The only thing to eat in the kitchen is [insert a rather ho-hum food of choice that you'd only eat if you absolutely 100% hungry, like carrot sticks or apple slices]." If you are honestly able to tell yourself, "Yes, [carrot sticks] would hit the spot right now," then you're hungry and you should eat. However, if you cringe at the thought of eating something "healthy" to satisfy your supposed hunger, you may just realize at that moment you're feeling bored/happy/scared/sad/etc. and not actually hungry.
That's not to say that sometimes our bodies are intuitively telling us to eat something richer. For example, if you're low on a mineral/vitamin, maybe carrot sticks aren't the answer. Maybe your body is trying to tell you, "Eat something with iron in it." When that happens, you'll usually know that it's still not emotionally-based eating, because you're bound to feel agitated and have a very strong craving for a specific food. But, that goes back to, once again, becoming more aware of why you're wanting to eat something.
Now if your habits of eating due to emotion are that ingrained, and you still feel like saying, "I don't care that I'm not physically hungry-- I just want to eat an entire chocolate cake to myself," then that's when you should do what previous posters have suggested, and have a coping strategy in place to take your mind off of food until the urge passes. It usually takes about 15-20 minutes for something like that to pass, so if you can find something to occupy your time that lasts that long, and then reassess your feelings of "hunger" afterwards, you'll most likely find that you feel better and no longer care about eating just to be eating something.4 -
I made a vision board specifically for my fitness goals. It's in my room so it reminds me why I started my weight loss and fitness journey. This has really helped me to stay on track and not give in so easily.2
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Counseling.1
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