Emotional Eating

An unexpected way to fix emotional and binge eating

 

I have bad news and good news. Which one do you want to read first? Let’s start with the bad news.

I’m truly sorry to report that one of the most effective cures for binge and emotional eating is learning to be kinder to yourself.

I know. Deeply unsatisfying.

It would be so much more satisfying to hear that there is this clean, elegant solution, a protocol, a rule that we could just follow perfectly and we’d never emotionally eat again and could finally graduate to being a Normal Person Around Food.

Or something we could buy or download that would permanently delete the part of our brain that reaches for food when life feels like too much.

But here we are, talking about self-compassion, which sounds suspiciously like something a therapist says when they’re out of better ideas. Or something written in cursive on a throw pillow.

Unfortunately (and fortunately), it’s true.

The bad news: how annoying. Haven’t we all already tried being nicer to ourselves and failed at that?

The good news: self-compassion actually makes it easier to change eating behaviours without perfect conditions, superhuman willpower, or a flawless mindset. It helps whether you’re tired, stressed, already overeaten, or convinced you “blew it” for the day.

But first, let’s talk about the real problem.

 

Why shame is such a sneaky saboteur

Shame is extremely good at pretending it’s helping.

It tells you that if you’re not hard on yourself, you’ll lose control, and you need the pressure.
It makes you believe that without guilt, you’d just binge constantly and never stop.

But shame is lying.

Research on shame (including Brené Brown’s work) shows that shame narrows thinking, drains emotional and cognitive capacity, and massively increases avoidance.

Which means: instead of creating the desired accountability, it creates shutdown. You can’t think clearly, and you rely on default mode, which is eating to cope with the negative feeling of guilt.

Also, when shame is present, eating behaviour stops being about food and starts being about who you are.
A binge isn’t just “something that happened”. It becomes proof that you’re broken, weak, undisciplined, or out of control.

Change always feels dangerous, but once your worth is on the line, it feels even more terrifying. So you avoid change and keep restricting and bingeing, because it feels safer than trying something new.

 

Shame and emotional eating are a match made in hell

Emotional eating already shows up when you’re overwhelmed, depleted, lonely, stressed, or emotionally flooded.

Add shame on top of that, and suddenly, food is a courtroom.

Every urge becomes evidence, every bite becomes a moral failure, every slip “confirms” what you secretly fear about yourself.

Shame collapses behaviour and identity into one thing.

“I ate because I was stressed” turns into “I ate because this is who I am (a binge eater, food addict, emotional eater).”

And if this is just who you are, why even try?

 

Being kinder to yourself interrupts the cycle

This is why self-compassion works in such an unsexy way.

It doesn’t magically stop urges or make emotions disappear. But it removes the extra layer of hostility that keeps the cycle alive.

When you practice self-compassion, your nervous system settles enough to think.
You regain access to curiosity, choice, and problem-solving.

Instead of flinching away from the behaviour because it hurts to look at, you can actually stay present long enough to understand it.

When shame softens, eating patterns become easier to work with because you’re no longer fighting yourself at the same time.

“Cool, but I’ve been trying to be nicer to myself for decades”

Fair.

“Be nicer to yourself” is terrible advice if it’s treated like a switch you should’ve flipped by now.

Self-compassion is a repetitive practice. It’s more like learning a language than having a breakthrough. You forget, you revert, and sometimes you default to your old dialect of self-criticism under stress.

That doesn’t mean it’s not working. That is the work.

 

Self-compassion does NOT mean letting yourself off the hook or lowering your standards

It means relating to mistakes, binges, urges, and inconsistency as information, not character flaws. It helps you look at things rationally, instead of emotionally.

That’s what keeps you in the conversation instead of emotionally storming out because the shame got too loud.

 

How to start fixing emotional and binge eating with self-compassion (without forcing positivity)

 

1. Treat self-compassion as a skill, not a personality trait

Don’t wait to feel compassionate to practice it. Practice it while feeling awkward, resistant, or unconvinced.

Fluency comes later.

 

2. Change the question

When eating feels out of control, experiment with replacing
“What is wrong with me?”
with
“What do I need right now?” or
“What would make this moment easier?”

Even if part of you still thinks something is wrong with you, that small interruption shifts your brain from default mode (eating) to thinking.

 

3. Start with neutral, not positive

Going from “I’m disgusting and hopeless” to “I love myself” usually backfires.

Try neutral instead:
“I ate past fullness.”
“I was overwhelmed.”
“I used food to cope.”

Just facts.

Neutral language lowers defensiveness and keeps shame from hijacking the moment.

 

4. Expect it to feel wrong

If self-criticism has been your safety system, kindness will feel unsafe.

Your brain will insist you need the harshness to stay in control.

But discomfort only means you’re doing something unfamiliar.

If being hard on yourself actually worked, you wouldn’t still be stuck here.

 

5. Let feelings exist without building a case against yourself

You’re allowed to feel disappointed or upset after eating in a way you didn’t intend.

The problem isn’t the feeling. It’s the story you attach to it.

“I feel bad about this” is complete.
“I feel bad about this, therefore I’m bad, and this will never change” is shame talking.

You don’t have to believe anything new for this to work.
Just notice when a feeling turns into an identity verdict and interrupt it.

Over time, that interruption loosens shame’s grip. And with less shame, change starts feeling possible.

That’s how you fix emotional and binge eating with self-compassion.

 

I’m Rita, a scientist (PhD in Chemistry), ex-binge eater, turned Health Coach and Life Coach specialising in emotional and binge eating, and weight loss without dieting. I use nutrition, psychology and brain science in my work.

I work with driven, smart women who are tired of fighting themselves around food.

I don’t believe in fixing people because you’re not broken. I believe in helping you outgrow the version of you that learned to cope this way.

This work is compassionate, deep, and real. And it works because it goes where other approaches don’t.

Free resources

OUTGROWN Workbook

OUTGROWN Group Coaching experience 

Private Coaching Program

Self-Paced Courses

 

Rita

Recent Posts

Dieting Diana and Balanced Bianca – from food obsession to food freedom

This blog post introduces the two extremes of my clients' journey from food obsession to…

2 years ago

Surprising Connections Between Suppressed Feelings, Stress, Health and Emotional Eating

In this blog post, we're delving into the profound connections between suppressed feelings, stress, health,…

3 years ago

Breaking free from the fear of failure to overcome emotional eating

How the fear of failure may manifest itself in your life Most of my clients…

3 years ago

From Stress to Success: How to Manage Emotional Eating for High-Achievers

  Many high-achieving, successful people often face the challenge of overeating and emotional eating, even…

3 years ago

Taking a deep breath can make you more anxious and stressed

  Taking a deep breath to calm down may not work for you and it…

3 years ago

How to apply Coue’s method for weight management and lose the struggle

In this post, I show you how I use Coue's method for weight management and…

3 years ago