Healthy Living

Sunday, November 29, 2009

How to overcome emotional eating

My boyfriend recently said, "Well, what's wrong with emotional eating? If it works to calm the stress, then isn't it just basically a solution?" And it took me a moment to rustle up a reasonable response to that, because for a minute, he sounded so perfectly reasonable.

What is wrong with emotional eating? I like to eat! I like how food tastes! If food calms me down, well then, good for food, and good for me because I have discovered the way to keep myself from doing something like throwing my body off a bridge or taking an assault rifle on the express bus. It's not a self-destructive behavior like shopping yourself into debt or cutting or making prank phone calls until they shut off your line and arrest you, right?

Except, of course, when you emotionally eat yourself into a nutritional black hole--when you're eating nothing but candy and cheeseburgers and putting your face into a cake because you think if you try hard enough you could possibly learn to breathe frosting and a ham--how is that healthy? I don't care what the intuitive eating movement says: If you are under a big black cloud of sadness, which leads you to intuitively eat a box of Krispy Kremes for every meal from now until your next birthday, then your intuition could use an tune-up. Therefore, emotional eating, unless it involves sobbing while you bite into a crown of broccoli, is not healthy. That is my sorrowful conclusion.

More than 6 out of 10 women are disordered eaters. Are you at risk?

It is also the easiest and most unstoppable of my automatic behaviors. It doesn't even matter what the emotion is, frankly. I eat when I'm terribly sad, terribly stressed, terribly tired, terribly happy, wonderfully excited about the world and every little thing in it. My response is a fork, or my head in a pie if I am feeling especially in need of soothing, neutralizing, redirecting my energy in some way, sedating myself. I've realized that food, for me, is a distraction. I think about food, I work to procure food, I sit and concentrate on funneling food into my body and then I don't have to think about anything else or worry about anything at all. I've already got so much going on, here, with my face and the shoveling. It's like the hunter-gatherer survivalist laser-focus kicked into high gear. Eat or die! There's no room for anything else. (How to relieve stress without heading to the fridge.)

I want there to be room for more things. I want to not be vibrating from the sugar high, feeling sick from the grease, groaning because I have stuffed myself to my pain threshold. But I also want to figure out a way to deal with my emotions, to not be overwhelmed by the necessity of them, to not find it difficult to function and experience uncomfortableness or sorrow all at the same time. Is there a cure? The Internet says that there are lots of cures. The internet wants to reach out its cyberhands and fold me into its warm digital bosoms and whisper soothing 0101010s into my ear.

There are lots of reasonable, rational-sounding ways to overcome emotional eating (the Mayo Clinic's steps seem particularly reasonable, and I believe everything I read on WikiHow), but I want a magic cure with little to no effort. I want a poof and a bang. I want to be healed and whole immediately and forever right this second, please. I want The Sweet Ayurveda Treatment to Stop Emotional Eating. The Sweet Ayurveda Treatment to Stop Emotional Eating consists of the following:
  1. Lie on your back with arms straight out to the sides (like you are on a cross).
  2. Now close your eyes, gently raise your left arm and bring your left palm toward your face. Then gently kiss the center of your left palm and whisper "I Love You" to yourself.
  3. Now lower your left arm and bring your right arm up and kiss the center of your right palm, again whispering "I Love You" to yourself.
  4. Continue for about 5 minutes.
  5. To end, inhale deeply, hold your breath and visualize your body exactly as you want it to be, slim and trim, then get up with a smile feeling good about yourself.
No word on whether you need to drop to the ground and kiss yourself every time you visit a buffet.

I wanted to try it. I did. I even laid down with arm straight out, like I am on a cross. I stared up at the ceiling. I realized that if I actually lifted my hand up, pressed my lips against my palm and gently whispered "I Love You," I would never, ever be able to look at myself in the mirror, ever again. Even if it cured cancer, stuttering and foot-in-mouth disease, I would not be able to bring myself to do it. Because, just, no. No. I got up and made myself a sandwich. I'll try that Mayo Clinic thing tomorrow.

Related: Gain time and lose a pound or two with this easy week's worth of tasty, low-calorie meals.

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Comments 1-7 of 7
  • Phoenix's Avatar
    Posted by Phoenix Wed Dec 17, 2008 6:41pm PST

    Why did you not finish the treatment? Was it because you couldn't tell yourself you love yourself? I don't understand why you wouldn't be able to look in the mirror again? It sounded like you absolutely knew it would change something big in your life. Why did you choose not to take that step forward? What was at risk? I'm not being sarcastic or anything like that I swear I am truly and honestly curious. I also ask as a fellow emotional eater who struggles with finding the healthier path past this roadblock. The only way I have been able to rein in my eating is by negative therapy, by making myself SO unhappy every time I opened my mouth to eat something I shouldn't, I beat myself up about it mentally for hours. It works. I have to fix it so that eating DOESN'T make me feel any better, it will make me feel worse, so I can avoid it. I know I love myself, but I've never said it out loud. I am going to try that method tonight. I also think that this activity would be good for boosting self-esteem in anyone. Anyway, I'm really close to a normal BMI, just a little pudgy still. But I can't help but wonder if I could have possibly taken a better route.

    Peace.

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  • LuLuBee's Avatar
    Posted by LuLuBee Wed Dec 17, 2008 7:23pm PST

    Yea, I dont really understand why you couldn't finish the treatment. I would try it, sure I would feel a little silly, but I feel a little silly when my thighs wiggle and quite frankly I deal with that.

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  • Sparkie's Avatar
    Posted by Sparkie Thu Dec 18, 2008 3:18am PST

    while stress may trigger emotional eating there are other more effective & healthier ways to manage that awful stress...

    http://www.total-health-fitness.com/stress-management.html

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  • Jezabel's Avatar
    Posted by Jezabel Thu Dec 18, 2008 6:36am PST

    Beleive it or not one theory being tossed around psych research is whether or not a good pain of running shoes is more effective than pills or therapy to combat depressing, or extreme mood swings. The idea is endorphins will be released during a good workout and relieve stress. A legal high courtesy of mother nature if you will. So when you're down go to the gym or run, bike, walk outside for awhile. Even buying your own excersize bike is more cost effective than paying all those medical bills.

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  • Victoria's Avatar
    Posted by Victoria Mon Dec 22, 2008 8:02pm PST

    i don't know if its bad to eat when your emotional

    i hope not

    it shows on your body because you get fat

    Report Abuse
  • yvonne's Avatar
    Posted by yvonne Sat Sep 12, 2009 11:54pm PDT

    Maybe some help through coaching would help with stop the compulsive eating and binging.

    I have tried http://www.totellwellness.com,

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  • Andy's Avatar
    Posted by Andy Sun Oct 18, 2009 4:42pm PDT

    Interesting post I will have to try Sweet Ayurveda Treatment, I know if we know that we love ourself we vibrate at a higher energy and then maybe we would not require that extra plate of food, or that sugary dessert. I am a emotional eater but I found out that it was due to emotional triggers especially stress. I have been trying to retrain my mind and stop and ask myself why am I wanting to binge ? Am I really hungry. I also try to find other activities to do. This is not always easy but I have found some online help with http://www.totellwellness.com to help counsel me to stop emotional and binge eating. Sometime some extra help is what we need to find the right path.

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Comments 1-7 of 7

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