Health knowledge made personal
Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

marie dufour RD's Twitter Updates

DOMINO Powercat News: The end of summer... http://t.co/A7Pw2wb 267 days ago
http://t.co/uUckNoZ Domino is safe. 270 days ago
DOMINO Powercat News - Irene Post-Script: did we make the right decision? http://t.co/y0te5NF 272 days ago
http://t.co/vrxZ2Gp Domino is safe. 272 days ago
DOMINO Powercat News: The Day After Irene: Hudson & NYC; http://t.co/ZCm7wVJ 273 days ago
 

EMOTIONAL EATING

Posted Nov 04 2009 10:05pm

 By Marie Dufour, RD – It’s not just WHAT we eat, nor just HOW we eat, it’s also WHY we eat that matters. Compulsive overeaters, like alcoholics and gamblers, respond to psychological triggers that are often very complex, and more often than none, rooted in childhood experiences. Adult-life traumas and unresolved family conflicts can also cause the emotional eating response.

Whatever emotional trauma we have suffered and has not been psychologically resolved is a trigger for negative feelings. “Feeling bad” sends us reaching for feel-good stuff, in our case, food, and the results are evident on the scale, our hips, and eventually in our arteries.

What initially damaged our emotional heart, in the end will damage our physical heart if not addressed.

Therapy Today, the official journal of the British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy, agrees that “we need a better understanding of the issues underpinning compulsive eating so that psychological help can be successfully targeted.”

The brain is a complex chemical soup, and neurons can fire-up messages that will make us derail from our best planned behaviors. Discovering our overeating triggers, being able to make connections to the past, understanding our response, and adopting new behaviors are some of the keys to controlled eating.

In the case of emotional overeater, psychological counseling is one step in the way of healing old scars of the mind and getting a new body.

Source – British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy

Filed under: Lifestyle, diet, public health, childhood obesity, diet, emotional eating, healthy eating, healthy lifestyle, Marie Dufour RD, obesity, public health, weight control, weight loss, yo-yo dieting

 By Marie Dufour, RD – It’s not just WHAT we eat, nor just HOW we eat, it’s also WHY we eat that matters. Compulsive overeaters, like alcoholics and gamblers, respond to psychological triggers that are often very complex, and more often than none, rooted in childhood experiences. Adult-life traumas and unresolved family conflicts can also cause the emotional eating response.

Whatever emotional trauma we have suffered and has not been psychologically resolved is a trigger for negative feelings. “Feeling bad” sends us reaching for feel-good stuff, in our case, food, and the results are evident on the scale, our hips, and eventually in our arteries.

What initially damaged our emotional heart, in the end will damage our physical heart if not addressed.

Therapy Today, the official journal of the British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy, agrees that “we need a better understanding of the issues underpinning compulsive eating so that psychological help can be successfully targeted.”

The brain is a complex chemical soup, and neurons can fire-up messages that will make us derail from our best planned behaviors. Discovering our overeating triggers, being able to make connections to the past, understanding our response, and adopting new behaviors are some of the keys to controlled eating.

In the case of emotional overeater, psychological counseling is one step in the way of healing old scars of the mind and getting a new body.

Source – British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy

Post a comment
Write a comment:

Related Searches