Eating Disorders

20 Ways to Overcome Emotional Eating

20 Ways to Overcome Emotional Eating
By Women Story

Do you find the minute you’re at home alone you reach for the
chocolate bars or tub of ice-cream? When things get stressful at
work do you find yourself eating more take away and comfort
food? You could be an emotional eater which means that instead
of eating out of hunger; you eat in an attempt to soothe your
emotions. Interestingly these habits can become so unconscious
that you may not realize that you may be eating for emotional
reasons such as boredom, loneliness or anxiety.

In our society ‘having a pig out’s is often associated with
festivities, celebrations and fun. However, many studies suggest
that 75 per cent of overeating is due to emotional eating.

Here are 20 top ways to overcome emotional eating:

1. Well known Australian Medical Herbalist, Miriam Young says
that emotional eating is often fear-based and may be connected
with low self-esteem.

For example if you eat lots of sweet food you may be trying to
avoid your feelings and compensate for the fact that your life
is ‘sweet less’. Miriam says ask yourself, “What is it that you
are thinking before you open that packet of biscuits? What is
the emotion you are trying to avoid? What if you sat with the
feeling and allowed it to surface, and observed the
sensation/feeling without judgment.”

By accepting those feelings a shift usually occurs.

2. Young says eating junk foods or comfort foods deplete the
body of nutrients so that you end up craving more of those types
of foods but are still left feeling unsatisfied and
malnourished. Regularly detoxifying the body, eating from a wide
variety of organic whole foods and taking organic colloidal
mineral deficiencies and food cravings.

3. From a psychological perspective you can also observe your
behaviours and increase you awareness. Does you emotional eating
follow a pattern? Do you eat ‘junk on the run’ at lunch or do
you fast all day and feast at night?

4. Ask yourself: Am I stuffing my face in order to stuff the
feelings down as well? Look at what is stressing you out. Can
you resolve the issue right now? If not, then what can you do in
the mean- time to deal with those feelings? It’s time to
creatively brain storm.

5. When you let yourself feel the emotions rather than reach
for the comfort foods you are also delaying the immediate
gratification of food. This is like retraining the body and
mind. Get to know yourself by asking: What am I feeling right
now? Where do I feel that in my body? Can you draw a picture or
play a song to describe what it feels like inside?

6. Create a food journal (you can even use your creative
ability to decorate it) so that you can work out what times of
the day and in what situations you feel strong emotions or
comfort eat. Write with a pen to express from your heart or you
can type up a journal on the computer.

7. Assess whether you are you emotionally or physically hungry?
Ask yourself if you’re really hungry. Rate your hunger on a
scale of 1-10.

8. Oprah’s personal trainer Bob Greene says to help distinguish
emotional hunger from physical hunger, you can “delay your
eating past your normal meal times to experience the actual
sensation of physical hunger”. You may feel anxiety to start
with but say with it and over time it will pass. He suggests
consulting a health professional first if you have a condition
such as diabetes.

9. Once you have increased your awareness and assessed the
situation, you can work on some self-soothing tips. Before you
go to the fridge or a fast food joint, stop, breathe and listen.
Slow breathing can help you to tune into how you are feeling and
help to let go of tension.

10. Create a pleasure list of all the things you like to do or
have always wanted to do in order to build a connection with
you. Go out to see a musical show or play, treat yourself to a
massage, buy yourself a bunch of flowers, learn a new activity
like playing an instrument or horse riding.

11. You could call a friend. This may sound like a game show
crisis strategy, but to start with just calling someone you know
who is supportive can be helpful and may develop into a
reciprocal buddy system.

12. What things help you to relax and tune in to yourself? What
about an aromatherapy bath and some soft music? If this isn’t
your bag, then what about getting outdoors in nature?

13. What helps you to let go? Do you find that you’re always
trying to be the perfect family member, parent and employee?
However, dealing with emotions requires the opposite of trying
it requires an ability to let go and let the emotions wash over
you.

14. Start taking a stroll and build up to a longer walk.
Walking releases endorphins (your body’s natural happy drugs).
Once you’re out there walking, you may find that you feel
energized and less emotionally distressed and may even forget
about eating.

15. There are also some basic tips if you are starting to use
food as a crutch. Try not to eat in front of the TV to prevent
the “hand-mouth phenomena”.

16. Chew your food, eat slowly and mindfully, which allows the
stomach to register that it feels full. Bob Greene believes that
TV denies us the pleasure of the actual eating experience.

17. Similarly, don’t buy food in bulk, or have high fat, sugary
foods in the house all the time, because you’ll eat in bulk and
that may lead to weight gain and health problems over time. Make
sensible snack choices, such as popcorn instead of chips, yogurt
instead of ice-cream or herbal tea instead of a hot chocolate.

18. Give up the overeating dieting cycle and find a happy
medium. Don’t go to the extreme, which is often based on ‘all or
nothing’ thinking patterns.

If you just eat carrots for weeks you may eat more junk over
time and send yourself packing on a guilt trip. Find healthy and
realistic foods to eat and enjoy some foods that you find tasty
in small amounts.

19. After putting these strategies in place for few weeks
review your behaviours.

You’ll know when you haven’t really dealt with the issues
associated with emotional eating when you swap food for
something else like alcohol or gambling.

Counselling or other holistic therapies can assist when you
feel stuck in this addiction cycle.

20. You could also join a support group to make you more aware
of links between emotions and binge eating on the comfort foods.
You may be able to support others too once you’ve managed your
own eating and emotional behaviours.

It’s the simple things that matter

At the end of the day, breaking old patterns requires making a
commitment, turning into yourself and being consistent.

Think before you open the pantry, lolly jar or fridge.

Pre-plan nutritious and satisfying meals and you will be less
likely to spiral out of control when life throws a challenge
your way. Don’t beat yourself up if you fall back into old
habits, instead try and identify the patterns in your behaviour
that led you down the binge-eating path in the first place Don’t
be afraid to ask for help from those around you. As a wise
teacher once said, “A journey of 1000 miles begins with the
first step”

About the Author: If you would like more in depth ideas about
women lifestyle, please visit my website. (
http://www.nice-womenstyle.com/ ) Thank you.

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Anorexia: Who Are We To Blame?

Anorexia: Who Are We To Blame?
By Matthew Wagner

More and more anorexia sufferers are appearing each day. Should
we blame ourselves for creating a society in which anorexia
seems necessary for a young person? When a teen begins to suffer
from anorexia nervosa, it is never just a quick onset but rather
there are always conditions that lead the anorexia sufferer to
believe he/she can’t be good enough, which ultimately leads to
anorexia. These conditions come from every single aspect of the
sufferer’s life. 

The main cause cited for anorexia among teens is the media.
Many media images portray individuals as being extremely thin.
This image is very prevalent in the media, and may create the
delusion in young people that this is how they were meant to be.
Lots of people are naturally heavier during their younger years.
When an anorexia sufferer looks at his or herself in the mirror
and compares this image with the magazines and TV ads that they
are constantly bombarded with, it can seem like there is a huge
discrepancy. This makes it harder for anorexia sufferers to feel
good about their self-image. 

Although the perfect image created by society is not really
what a person should look like, this always needs to be made
clear to anorexia sufferers. Models in magazines are usually
modified by computer programs, and they (the models) don’t even
look like their pictures in the magazine. It is a very
unfortunate double-sided standard that society had drawn up
which is endangering the health of young people in the form of
eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia. 

Many anorexia sufferers can also be affected by their peers. At
a young age teens can be extremely cruel in their teasing. A few
insults expressed by another teenager could leave the other teen
completely crushed, particularly the anorexia sufferer, focusing
on the negative comment. It is unfortunate that teens can be
affected so much by the thoughts or comments of a peer, but it
is a fact. It is critical that everyone in the anorexia
sufferer’s life be supportive, not just family, but peers as
well. 

An anorexia sufferer needs to get help as quickly as possible.
This means that if someone suspects anorexia he or she should
immediately arrange an appointment with a mental health
professional. In particular the anorexia sufferer should attempt
to find a professional who deals with anorexia and in particular
uses Cognitive Behavioral therapy (CBT). CBT is thought to be
the most effective treatment for anorexia.

About the Author: Matthew Wagner has a degree in Psychology,
and has additionally studied Physics, Consciousness, and
Wellness. His passion involves researching and sharing useful
information with others via the internet to help them improve
the quality of their life. Most relevant here is Matthew’s
website (shown below) on anorexia nervosa which contains
important information that anyone suffering from Anorexia needs
to know. http://www.anorexiahelp.org

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Stress And Cravings: The Connection

Stress And Cravings: The Connection
By Angela Esguerra

It wasn't long ago that the cause of food cravings was believed
to be rooted in emotional problems and in the overweight
individual's practice of "looking for love in food". So-called
weight-loss gurus would write books and give lectures, telling
overweight people how they needed to look for love elsewhere in
life and stop believing that food could fill their emotional
void.

Today science knows better. What may be the biggest (and often
insurmountable) challenge to overweight people who want to lose
weight is the fierce craving of foods high in carbohydrates and
fats, and there is a reason those cravings can be impossible to
ignore. It is now understood that food cravings occur as the
result of the body's response to chronic stress, a response
which differs from the response to acute stress. Acute stress is
when there is an immediate perceived threat. Under acute stress
the body responds with a stress response, but after the
perceived threat has passed the body returns to normal. Chronic
stress, as the term implies, refers to living under stress over
a long period of time. Under chronic stress the body remains
under a stress response, and since it essentially senses the
need to be returned to a normal state it begins to crave foods
that will (at least temporarily) reduce/end the high-stress
response state. This is a process that is rooted in evolution.
Its also one to which anyone who has ever felt better after
eating a chocolate bar can attest.

Under chronic stress glucocorticoid levels remain elevated.
This leads to maintaining high levels of hormones
(corticotrophin releasing factor, which then regulates
adrenocorticotropin) which incite the stress response.
Essentially, the stress response keeps itself going. Since the
effects of this stress response are not positive effects nature
has built into the system a way to reduce/eliminate those
negative effects. From an evolutionary standpoint, animals and
people are designed to respond to stress by eating high-energy
foods in order to be ready for anything. From the standpoint of
even the most evolved and overworked mother of a few children,
not only has Nature built in the cravings that are difficult
enough to ignore, but maternal instinct, too, will drive the
mother to eat high-energy foods in order to keep going for her
family. Under long-term stress the adrenal gland can become
fatigued and “run out of juices”. Adrenal fatigue can be
misdiagnosed as “depression”. Symptoms include craving sugar.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, who
identified a biochemical feedback system in rates which could
explain the cause of food cravings in humans, suspect that the
signal to inhibit the stress system may come directly from the
fat deposits.

The Catch-22 of the obesity problem is that while chronic
stress, itself, results in negative effects on the health, the
very eating that reduces those effects also leads to health
problems. In addition to normal stress and extraordinary stress,
trying to lose weight can add yet more stress, but having that
weight, in itself, is also stressful.

In a world where so much emphasis is placed on educating people
about health eating (under the presumption that most people need
that education) understanding the very real challenge faced by
many people with a weight problem may be the education that is
most needed.

About the Author: Slimvia Health & Fitness Team
http://www.slimvia.com

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Emotional Eating 101 - What is Emotional Eating?

Emotional Eating 101 - What is Emotional Eating?
By Kate O'Neal

Frustrated with losing weight? Tired of the yo-yo dieting
weight-loss-weight-gain cycle?

If diets haven't worked for you, you may be struggling with
emotional eating. It's been estimated that over 75% of
overeating has emotional roots behind it.

So what is emotional overeating anyway?

Emotional overeaters eat to avoid or stuff down uncomfortable
feelings. They eat to cope with life. They eat for reasons other
than physical hunger and the nourishment of their body.

Emotional over eating comes in many forms. You could be eating
because you're:

- angry

- depressed

- scared

- anxious

- bored

- tired

- hurt

- lonely

- discouraged

Some people even eat to calm themselves down when they are
overly happy or excited.

Basically if you're eating in response to a difficult
situation, when you're not physically hungry, then you're
probably eating emotionally.

Emotional eaters may feel hunger come on very quickly and they
feel they need to eat NOW (whereas regular physical hunger comes
on slowly and usually isn't as demanding). They may go out of
their way to get food like driving to the grocery store late at
night or driving long distances just to get a specific food.

They usually choose sweet or salty comfort foods like
chocolate, cookies, cakes, chips, pizza, cheeseburgers or other
'bad' foods. They usually eat a lot of food very fast (this kind
of behavior is often called a binge).

They may feel frenzied or hurried, anxious to get it all down.
Alternatively, emotional overeaters may simply graze on food
constantly just to get through the day.

Emotional overeaters usually eat way past the normal feeling of
fullness. They usually feel emotions like guilt and regret after
eating and may hide their eating from others.

So what's the big deal? Doesn't everyone use food to cope
sometimes?

Yes. To some extent it's fairly normal to eat out of our
emotions occasionally. We all do it - even naturally thin eaters
have days when they just need a cheeseburger or piece of
chocolate for a pick-me-up.

Eating out of your emotions becomes a problem when it starts to
take over your life; when it starts to cause weight problems;
and when food becomes your 'drug of choice' to handle any kind
of difficult emotion.

It's then that this behavior becomes a habit - and losing
weight becomes virtually impossible. It also hurts us
emotionally and psychologically. We don't gain the confidence
that we can handle difficult situations since we're always
numbing ourselves with food instead of tackling the problem.

So what can you do?

The good news is that if you are an emotional eater, now you
know why diets haven't worked in the past. You haven't failed -
the diets were just addressing the wrong thing - the food.

The real issue is that you've developed the habit of using food
to handle difficult emotions. Once you address this, then you'll
quickly notice your food cravings diminishing and you'll start
to lose weight.

It may take some time and commitment to change - but the weight
loss results are well worth it - and much more permanent than
any diet.

About the Author: Kate O'Neill writes for
http://www.Stop-Emotional-Eating.net - a website offering tips,
resources and programs to help you stop emotional overeating and
lose weight for good. For programs that help you stop
emotionaleating visit
http://www.Stop-Emotional-Eating.net/Emotional-Eating-Help.html

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The Link Between Anorexia And Bulimia

The Link Between Anorexia And Bulimia
By Thomas Morva

Young women and men sometimes starve themselves. It doesn’t
matter how thin they may be— in their internal mirror, they are
fat. Or they may so afraid of gaining weight, yet so desperately
hungry, that they eat and eat until they feel so guilty that
they must vomit up all the food. These people suffer from eating
disorders. Eating disorders have nothing to do with the
digestive tract of the person. Rather, the illness resides in
the mind.

Anorexia and bulimia are the two most common eating disorders.
They tend to appear most commonly in women. In fact, 90 percent
of all cases are in women. Most eating disorders begin in the
teenage years: anorexia most often occurs around puberty, and
bulimia hits a bit later. People with anorexia nervosa and
bulimia nervosa share the same fear, guilt, and shame about food
and fat. Still, they are two separate disorders with different
symptoms. People with anorexia starve and exercise themselves
thin. People with bulimia eat unhealthy amounts of food and then
vomit or purge themselves. People with anorexia or bulimia tend
to start at normal weights, but then suffer from poor nutrition
as well as the mental and emotional effects of having an eating
disorder. Some people with eating disorders may have a
combination of anorexia and bulimia.

People with anorexia or bulimia, despite their different
behaviors toward food, share many of the same symptoms. Both are
undernourished, and, as a result, may have dry skin, brittle
hair and nails, be constipated, and may be sensitive to
temperature changes. Women may have irregular periods. People
with eating disorders may develop food rituals, like only eating
certain foods or at specific times, and they may eat in secret.
Even when thin, people with eating disorders think of themselves
as fat and are terrified of gaining weight.

Each eating disorder has its unique symptoms, however. People
with anorexia lose dramatic amounts of weight, eat little
amounts of food, and exercise excessively. People with bulimia,
however, have symptoms related to constant vomiting. Their
stomach acid eats away at their teeth enamel, burns their
esophagus, and can cause the salivary glands to swell. People
with bulimia may also have cuts or bruises on their fingers from
inducing vomiting.

Both anorexia and bulimia are completely treatable. People with
eating disorders need professional help from doctors and
psychiatrists. It may take years to learn to control an eating
disorder. Love and support from friends and family are also
needed for recovery from any eating disorder.

About the Author: Bulimia provides detailed information about
the causes, symptoms, and effects of bulimia; bulimia treatment
and recovery; the relationship between anorexia and bulimia; and
information about the “pro bulimia” viewpoint.  For more
information go to http://www.e-bulimia.com and/or visit our
affiliate site at http://www.original-content.net.

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