|
Week 4
Emotional Eating:
Feeding Your Feelings
Eating to feed a feeling, and not a growling
stomach, is emotional eating.
By
Heather
Hatfield
WebMD
Feature
Reviewed by
Charlotte
Grayson Mathis, MD
When you're
happy, your food of choice could be steak or
pizza, when you're sad it could be ice cream or
cookies, and when you're bored it could be
potato chips. Food does more than fill our
stomachs -- it also satisfies feelings, and when
you quench those feelings with comfort food when
your stomach isn't growling, that's emotional
eating.
"Emotional
eating is eating for reasons other than hunger,"
says Jane Jakubczak, a registered dietitian at
the University of Maryland. "Instead of the
physical symptom of hunger initiating the
eating, an emotion triggers the eating."
What are the
telltale signs of emotional eating, what foods
are the most likely culprits when it comes to
emotional eating, and how it can be overcome?
Experts help WebMD find the answers.
How to
Tell the Difference
There are
several differences between emotional hunger and
physical hunger, according to the University of
Texas Counseling and Mental Health Center web
site:
-
Emotional
hunger comes on suddenly; physical hunger occurs
gradually.
-
When you
are eating to fill a void that isn't related to
an empty stomach, you crave a specific food,
such as pizza or ice cream, and only that food
will meet your need. When you eat because you
are actually hungry, you're open to options.
-
Emotional
hunger feels like it needs to be satisfied
instantly with the food you crave; physical
hunger can wait.
-
Even when
you are full, if you're eating to satisfy an
emotional need, you're more likely to keep
eating. When you're eating because you're
hungry, you're more likely to stop when you're
full.
-
Emotional
eating can leave behind feelings of guilt;
eating when you are physically hungry does not.
Comfort
Foods
When
emotional hunger rumbles, one of its
distinguishing characteristics is that you're
focused on a particular food, which is likely a
comfort food.
"Comfort
foods are foods a person eats to obtain or
maintain a feeling," says Brian Wansink, PhD,
director of the Food and Brand Lab at the
University of Illinois. "Comfort foods are often
wrongly associated with negative moods, and
indeed, people often consume them when they're
down or depressed, but interestingly enough,
comfort foods are also consumed to maintain good
moods."
Ice cream is
first on the comfort food list. After ice cream,
comfort foods break down by sex: For women it's
chocolate and cookies; for men it's pizza,
steak, and casserole, explains Wansink.
And what you
reach for when eating to satisfy an emotion
depends on the emotion. According to an article
by Wansink, published in the July 2000
American Demographics, "The types of comfort
foods a person is drawn toward varies depending
on their mood. People in happy moods tended to
prefer ... foods such as pizza or steak (32%).
Sad people reached for ice cream and cookies 39%
of the time, and 36% of bored people opened up a
bag of potato chips."
Lose and
Win is sponsored by Healthy Hancock, a
coalition of organizations working together
to improve the health of residents in
Hancock County. |
|
|

Dr. David Prescott, director of
psychology services at Acadia Hospital will
be the speaker for week # 4 in Ellsworth.
Haydee Foreman, The Style Coach will
speak at the Deer Isle meeting.
Deer Isle meetings are held every Wednesday,
Ellsworth holds their meetings on Thursdays.
Meetings begin at 6 pm at both locations.
For more information about Lose and Win is
available by calling Health-Link at
667-2474. |
|