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Is eating the kindest way to cope with emotions?

This is the seventh post in a 10-part series looking at the principles of Intuitive Eating. Last week’s post was on Principle 6: Feel Your Fullness [1].


Do you struggle with emotional eating — occasionally, sometimes or what feels like ALL the time? Have you beaten yourself up over it, or tried hard to squash your tendency to use food to soothe? You may be interested in this little tidbit: before the current edition of “Intuitive Eating [2],” Principle 7 was called “Cope With Your Emotions Without Using Food.” Today, it’s known as “Cope With Your Emotions With Kindness.”

Why this shift? Because the reality is that sometimes, using food to soothe your stress or uncomfortable emotions is the kindest choice — and sometimes it’s not. That makes trying stamp out emotional eating altogether very diet-culturey. Ironic, given that dieting itself can trigger emotions, which ultimately leads to using food as your primary coping mechanism for dealing with those feelings.

I’ve had clients who went through therapy for emotional eating and were assured the entire time that once they “cured” their emotional eating, they would suddenly lose weight. Well, that didn’t happen, and while exploring how we use food emotionally is valuable, that value lies not in weight loss, but in learning more effective ways to find calm or comfort when we need it.

A brief client example

Mary had very strong emotional eating tendencies stemming from childhood, when food was her only source of comfort in a household with an emotionally distant father and a mentally ill mother. We’d been working together for a while when she told me she’d had a very difficult week. She wanted to eat for comfort on a surface level, because that had been her go-to for decades, but to her surprise, she discovered that deep down, she really didn’t want to.

It occurred to her that when she was dieting, which she had done her entire adult life, she was never fully, properly nourished with enough food to feel comfortably full. This was partly because she was unable to honor her hunger [3] and had a million food rules thanks to the food police [4]. So by being constantly underfed she was extremely vulnerable to stress, and would not just eat, but overeat, to comfort herself.

Once she started consistently nourishing herself with both food and joyful activities, she became more resilient to stress — plus, she identified other ways to comfort herself when things get tough.

The emotional eating continuum

Emotional eating isn’t the same for everyone, and it takes different forms.

Emotional eating triggers

Emotional eating triggers are plentiful, but here are some of the most common ones:

Questions to ask yourself

No matter where you fall on the continuum, no matter what your personal emotional eating triggers, coping with emotional eating starts with asking yourself these questions:

Meeting your needs without food

When you are stressed, upset, lonely or dealing with other uncomfortable emotions, your need to feel “less bad” is a genuine and legitimate need. If your feelings are unbearable, and food is the only tool you have to help you cope, then thank goodness if you have food. But sometimes, the kinder choice is to find alternative means of coping. For example:

The bottom line is that emotional eating both helps and hurts. [5] Here’s a simple, yet insight-provoking exercise you can do. Take a piece of paper, and:

The (maybe) surprising benefits of emotional eating

While there are real benefits to finding non-food ways to cope with stress, boredom and emotions, it’s also important to consider What happens when food is no longer important for comfort and soothing?

Aside from the fact that for some people, some of the time, food is the only tool available to make unbearable feelings feel not SO unbearable, emotional eating can have another surprising benefit—it can serve as a red flag that something is going on.

It can be a clue that your life is unbalanced with too many responsibilities, too little relaxation, or that something is just not quite right for another reason. It may seem strange, but in this way, the urge to eat emotionally can be a gift, if you notice the urge, then ask yourself the am I hungry, what am I feeling, what do I need questions.

As I mentioned when I talked about the emotional eating continuum, emotional eating isn’t a problem when you use food to nurture yourself in a constructive, healthy way. This includes choosing foods that truly satisfy you, as well as things like chicken soup when you’re sick or hot cocoa when the weather outside is dreary. It’s when you move down the continuum that it’s important to probe deeper about what’s going on, bringing in the trifecta of compassionate self-awareness, curiosity and non-judgment.

Next post: Principle 8: Respect Your Body. [6]

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Disclaimer: All information provided here is of a general nature and is furnished only for educational purposes. This information is not to be taken as medical or other health advice pertaining to an individual’s specific health or medical condition. You agree that the use of this information is at your own risk.

Hi, I’m Carrie Dennett [7], MPH, RDN, a weight-inclusive registered dietitian, nutrition therapist and body image counselor. I offer compassionate, individualized care for adults of all ages, shapes, sizes and genders who want to break free from eating disorders, disordered eating or chronic dieting [8]. If you need to learn how to manage IBS symptoms [9] with food, or improve your nutrition and lifestyle habits [10] to help manage a current health concern or simply support your overall health and well-being, I help people with that, too.

Need 1-on-1 help for your nutrition, eating, or body image concerns? Schedule a free 20-minute Discovery Call [11] to talk about how I can help you and explore if we’re a good fit! I’m in-network with Regence BCBS, FirstChoice Health and Providence Health Plan, and can bill Blue Cross and/or Blue Shield insurances in many states. If I don’t take your insurance, I can help you seek reimbursement on your own. To learn more, explore my insurance and services areas page [12].