Eating is a part of life. Your body gets its nutrients from food. Sometimes we can go overboard with our eating habits and it can result in gaining weight. One issue with food is emotional eating.
The problem of emotional eating may end with the scale but it begins in the mind. Stress takes its toll on your life. When your defenses are compromised your health takes a hit and so do your emotions.
Everyone has good days and bad days. How we deal with the bad ones brings emotional eating into play. You look for comfort for your hurts. People who turn to food for comfort find a coping mechanism that won’t judge them, hurt them or tell them ‘no.’ To complicate the issue, eating pleasurable foods can stimulate the release of endorphins just like exercise. So, after you eat, you feel better.
Emotional eaters use food to relieve stress. They hide behind the food instead of seeking solutions to the problems. This is not uncommon when the stressor is something horrible such as physical abuse or a death.
But, how do you know you are using food in this way? The first sign is obvious. You will gain weight if you eat too much. In light of the weight gain, examine other areas of your life:
* Have you been under stress lately at work or at home?
* Has anything traumatic happened in the last year?
* Are you dealing with a problem but haven’t found a solution?
Answering ‘yes’ to any of these questions could mean that you are an emotional eater. You eat but you are not necessarily hungry at the time. The foods that you choose are what we term ‘comfort foods’:
* High fat foods like French fries, fried foods
* High carb foods like macaroni and cheese, mashed potatoes
* Sugary foods like ice cream, donuts, cookies, cake
There is help for emotional eaters. The first step is recognizing that you have a problem. Youíll experience feelings of helplessness and guilt. The guilt is over potentially ruining your health and the helplessness lies in the fact that you donít see a way out.
Secondly, seek counseling. There are many types of counselors out there that can meet your need. Emotional eating has nothing to do with dieting or changing your eating habits but gaining control over your emotions.
A counselor might suggest things like visualization, practicing problem solving skills, relaxation techniques and family support. Visualization helps you to see your problems in a realistic way and not blown out of proportion. You will also learn to see food as nutrition for the body and not an emotional crutch.
Thirdly, your family can learn your triggers for stress and be on the lookout for changes in your eating habits. They can help you be aware of the foods you are eating, assist you in making healthy food choices and exercise along with you. Proper diet and exercise increases immunity, blood flow and positive thinking. Yoga enhances the mind/body connection so you don’t eat when you aren’t hungry.
Finding new ways to solve your problems and deal with stress will push food out of the equation. You’ll feel good about finding solutions which will replace the dependence on food.
Kristy Lee Wilson



June 4, 2009 at 3:22 pm |
Hi Kristy,
I found your information to be highly informative and I am sure that others will agree. Knowledge regarding fitness I think is so essential, it helps us to realize that exercising can be fun without potentially hurting ourselves. Knowing your bodies limits and that like most things in life everything done in moderation and eventually the results will show. Creating a fitness schedule that you are able to follow, after time you can slowly progress to pushing yourself a little further step by step. Also with the exercise introducing a well balanced and healthy diet is definatly an added positive, still being able to enjoy your occasional treats but being more informed as to what we are putting into our bodies, I think is so important. The recipes that you posted look delicious and I will definatly have to try them. Everything in life is a balance so why not make fitness and nutrition one of your scales in life.
Thanks Again
June 4, 2009 at 3:59 pm |
Ann, you are so right! It is all about balance and not deprivation. Exercising can be a lot of fun if people educate themselves on the right way to go about it. Unfortunately there is a lot of misinformation out there and people become very confused on what is fact and what is fiction. I am glad you enjoy the articles I post, and definitely try the recipes … they are good