Emotional Eating

When Anxiety Doesn’t Look Like Anxiety: How High-Functioning Women Use Food to Cope — and What to Do Instead

How High-Functioning Women Use Food to Cope

 

You’re the capable one. The dependable one.
You keep it all together. Show up. Smile. Handle it.

From the outside, no one would guess you’re struggling.

 

But inside, it’s a different story.

Your mind never shuts off.
You’re always ten steps ahead, anticipating problems before they arise.
You’re exhausted, but wired. And sometimes, food is the only thing that helps you feel even a moment of peace.

 

This isn’t just emotional eating. This is anxiety-driven emotional eating.
And it’s especially common in women with high-functioning anxiety, the kind that looks like ambition on the outside, but feels like pressure and fear on the inside.

 

How Anxiety Turns Into Emotional Eating

 

The day goes like this:

You push through your morning, keep it together through a thousand tiny stressors, skip lunch because of meetings, and finally collapse on the couch with a brain that won’t turn off.

There’s no room to process. No space to feel.

So you eat.

Not because you’re hungry, but because it’s your one safe escape.

The food gives you something to do with all the feelings that never had a place to land.

 

If this is you, know this:

You’re not broken.
You’re not lazy.
And you’re definitely not lacking willpower.

You’re just stuck in a loop.

 

What You Can Try Instead: The Butterfly Hug

 

🦋 A Gentle Way to Calm Your Nervous System

 

One small practice you can try — especially in those anxious, “I need something” moments — is the Butterfly Hug.

It may look simple, but it’s a powerful somatic tool for helping your body regulate and self-soothe.

 

How to do it:

  1. Cross your arms over your chest so your hands rest on your upper arms or shoulders.
  2. Gently tap left–right–left–right in a slow rhythm.
  3. Close your eyes if that feels safe, and breathe.
  4. Stay with it until you feel even a slight softening or slowing down.

Even a 30-second pause like this can start to retrain your body to respond to discomfort with compassion, not coping.

 

But It’s Not Just About Tools…

 

Quick techniques help, but they’re not the whole solution.

If you find yourself returning to emotional eating again and again — especially during anxiety or burnout — it’s time to go deeper.

 

In my private coaching program, we work on:

  • Understanding the root causes of your emotional eating
  • Identifying the hidden stress patterns and perfectionist thinking behind the anxiety
  • Learning simple techniques to regulate your nervous system
  • Making food a source of nourishment, not a coping strategy

 

A Glimpse Into Your Future

 

Imagine this:

 

You still have a full life, but it no longer drains you.

You eat when you’re hungry, stop when you’ve had enough, and don’t obsess about what you just ate.

You no longer reach for food to handle your anxiety, because you have other, healthier ways to actually feel better.

You start to feel like you again: calm, clear, and at peace in your own skin.

 

You don’t have to keep fighting yourself.
And you definitely don’t have to do it alone.

 

Ready for a Different Way?

 

If this spoke to you, I’d love to help you find the version of yourself that’s been buried under all the stress and food noise.

Book a free discovery call here for 1-on-1 private coaching or check out the OUTGROWN Group Coaching program, where you’ll outgrow the version of you who needed food to cope.

Let’s explore how coaching can help you build that calmer, freer version of yourself, one gentle step at a time.

I look forward to speaking with you!

Rita

 

Rita

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