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Mindful Eating for Binge Eaters

Mindful eating for binge eaters can be a new way to deal with this challenge. To truly eat mindfully, you will need to learn to trust your body and learn to hear what your body is telling you. So many people may turn to unhealthy habits when a crisis arises, and binge eating may be a very real unintended consequence.

Let’s start by talking about mindful eating.

Summed up briefly, mindfulness is paying attention. You’re present in and focused on the moment. Your mind wanders less. You’re not dominated by stress and fear. Mindful eating, put simply, is the opposite of mindless eating.

So much has changed for most of us so quickly. Our bodies and nervous systems are working on overdrive with stress and anxiety levels rising.

Despite every attempt at self-control, certain behaviors or even old habits or self-sabotaging behaviors may be being triggered by this stressful time. It may seem like these behaviors want to resurface or dominate the day.

However, this is the time to strengthen our immune systems by turning to healthy habits and behaviors. This is the time to redirect our challenges with stress eating, overeating, or binge eating.

Instead of falling back into old patterns and behaviors, let us learn to lean in and understand our shortfalls while looking at them through a lens of kindness, compassion, and curiosity.

This is crucial when it comes to healing one’s relationship with food & unhealthy eating habits

Binge eating is more common than most people realize and affects everyone in different ways. For many, the overindulgence in more food than your body physically wants to take in can feel debilitating, embarrassing, and scary. It’s part of my story with food as well.

So, let’s talk about it…are there solutions?

In almost every binge eating case I’ve seen, food inadvertently becomes a coping mechanism, a way of finding comfort or escaping from something uncomfortable, usually intense feelings.

Instead of trying to use willpower to stop and control the habit of eating more (which can actually exacerbate the binge), you have to take the time to get to the root cause of your overeating and emotional attachment to food. If you do so with the intention of making peace with food, you will find your own way of renewing a relationship with eating where it’s about nourishment and even enjoyment.

mindful eating

Facing the underlying issues is crucial to a full recovery and to managing the symptoms associated with any kind of disordered eating.

Most people, especially those who have a history of “on and off again dieting”, fight their bodies instead of tuning into its natural guidance. Struggling with food IS a struggle against the body.

This leads to depriving the body of what it needs for nourishment, fighting against ALL cravings, including important ones that are meant to direct you to eat when needed. In the end, the battle with appetite is usually lost, and that’s why you might find you go from wanting something sweet to top off dinner (a craving you might fight) to devouring a whole box of chocolates without sensing the taste of any of them.

This then fuels that painful drive to control and consequently punish yourself for being ‘bad.’ (Which is a false and harmful belief)

When you learn to be conscious of your thoughts and habits, you are drawn toward nourishment from your food. You discover freedom and a greater sense of control.

The solution to mindful eating for binge eaters getting there lies in Mindful Eating, taking a deep breath, and reconnecting with your body’s natural guidance mechanism.

Being mindful involves focusing your utmost attention on the present moment so as to disconnect from negative habits and behaviors.

Mindfulness nurtures the practice of consciousness in the present moment, relevant thoughts, and feelings. It helps you to understand what emotions you’re experiencing and how best to handle them.

Now let’s consider the meaning of Mindless Eating. What does it look or feel like? It entails an absolute lack of awareness of the food you are eating and your reason for eating, as well as the lack of control over your rate of consumption.

Mindful eating is not about diet or giving up anything at all. It is about experiencing food and the pleasure from it more consciously. In a nutshell, Mindless Eating is the opposite of Mindful Eating.

To eat mindfully, you have to trust your body and learn to listen attentively to what it tells you. You are fully conscious of your senses and the factors that influence your appetite.

Do you eat for satisfaction or to ease stress? Is your hunger physical or emotional? 

mindless eating

Asking questions, acknowledging the sensations and psychological responses that come up as you eat in peace, and discerning differences will influence your judgment about food. It will also influence how food affects your physical state—your moods, energy levels, and productivity for the rest of the day.

Mindfulness applies to more than just the act of eating. It incorporates various guidelines and techniques into your daily practices like meditation, engaging all your senses, and self-assessment.

These guidelines and techniques will result in greater awareness of the positive and nurturing opportunities involved in food preparation and consumption.

The essence of these techniques is to help individuals reconnect with themselves. Something that is typically lost in the vicious cycles that come with self-sabotaging habits and behaviors and a negative relationship with food.

If you or your loved ones are interested in learning more about mindful eating for binge eaters, mindfulness, and how mindful eating can help you to enjoy a satisfying, healthy, and pleasurable relationship with food, please reach out. We are here to help

During this time, remember to be extra kind and compassionate with yourselves.

Wishing everyone good health and keep safe