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Emotional Eating: Tips for taking control



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Lap Band patients are often surprised to find old habits with food creeping back into their lives over time. Here's the hard truth: habits related to food, especially the habits of using food to care for emotional needs, are hard to break, but overcoming these habits and acquiring new tools for coping is an essential part of weight loss surgery success.

Here are important steps to follow if emotional eating (eating when stressed, bored, lonely, anxious, overwhelmed, etc.) is an issue for you:

1. Identify it

Name it for what it is. If you are eating because you are tired, angry, bored, sad, anxious or excited the first important step is to notice that this is what is happening. Try to get into the habit of assessing how physically hungry you are before you eat. Learning to pay attention to hunger cues is an important skill even if weight loss surgery has altered them and you are required to eat when you do not feel physically hungry.

2. Be a detective

Sometimes this is most easily done by working backwards. If you have a day of eating that feels out of control, take some deep breaths afterward and do some detective work. Hold your judgment at bay and cultivate your curiosity. What was different about this day then the one before it? What led you to eat more? How were you feeling? When did you start thinking about food?

3. Learn your triggers

As you practice the first two steps, you will begin to identify some "triggers." These are feelings or situations or circumstances that tend to lead you down the path of eating when you aren't physically in need of food.

4. Pay attention to your "basic needs"

We all have basic needs for sleep, physical activity, stress release and relaxation, time alone and time with others. Take the time to know your needs in these areas and make sure that you are fulfilling them. As a weight loss surgery patient, you also need to pay extra attention to nutritional needs. Letting things like supplements, Protein and Water slide will affect your energy level and can drastically affect your eating (not to mention your health).

5. Start to develop a plan of attack

As you learn to identify your emotional hunger and you start to develop an awareness of what triggers your emotional eating, you can start to develop alternate coping strategies. "What can I do instead of overeating?" and "What else can I start to do when I am feeling (fill in the blank with your trigger)?" are some of the most powerful questions you can start to ask. Don't feel defeated if you don't know the answers to some of these questions. Make a note of them. These are the areas where you will really want to start collecting more tools, strategies, and support to help you.

6. Be patient

You didn't become an emotional over-eater overnight and you aren't going to overcome it in one fell swoop. Be gentle with yourself and keep working these steps. They will make a difference.

Melissa McCreery, Ph.D. is a Psychologist and the founder of Enduring Change Coaching. She helps her clients create and live their very best lives and specializes in helping bariatric surgery patients maximize their success after surgery. Melissa is the creator of the Emotional Eating Toolbox , a 28-Day Self-Guided Program for Taking Control of Emotional Eating and Moving Beyond Dieting. Learn more about the programs she offers and claim a free five session audio e-course, at her website: www.enduringchangeafterwls.com.

Edited by MelissaMcCreery

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