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Many people believe restrictive eating is easy to recognize. They picture dramatic weight loss, visible food refusal, or a body that clearly signals medical danger. In reality, restrictive eating often develops quietly and exists on a wide spectrum that includes subtle undereating, ARFID, atypical anorexia, and chronic long-term restriction.

In this solo episode, Dr. Marianne Miller explores the restrictive eating spectrum and explains why restriction does not always look the way people expect. Restrictive eating can appear in socially normalized patterns like skipping meals, chronic undereating, rigid food rules, sensory-based food avoidance, or medicalized dieting. Many people living with restriction never receive proper screening or support because their bodies or eating patterns do not match stereotypes about eating disorders.

This episode also explores how neurodivergence, sensory sensitivities, trauma, and interoceptive differences can shape restrictive eating patterns, particularly in people with ARFID (Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder). Even when body image concerns are not present, the body can still experience significant restriction that affects mood, digestion, metabolism, and cognitive functioning.

Dr. Marianne also examines so-called "atypical anorexia" and restrictive eating in higher-weight bodies, highlighting how weight stigma and anti-fat bias in healthcare can delay diagnosis and treatment. Many individuals experience serious medical complications from restriction while being told they are healthy or encouraged to continue dieting.

The episode also addresses chronic restrictive eating, which can persist for years or decades and reshape hunger cues, nervous system regulation, and energy levels. Dr. Marianne explains how long-term restriction affects the body and why recovery requires more than simply “trying harder” to eat.

Finally, this conversation explores what meaningful recovery looks like across the restrictive eating spectrum. Healing requires adequate nourishment, autonomy, compassionate support, and liberation from shame-based food culture. Recovery is not about perfection or rigid rules. It is about helping the body move toward safety, nourishment, and greater freedom over time.

If you have ever wondered whether restrictive eating always fits inside a single diagnosis, or if your own relationship with food feels difficult to explain, this episode offers a broader and more compassionate framework for understanding what restriction can look like and how recovery can begin.


Related Episodes

Anorexia in Higher-Weight Bodies: Rethinking “Atypical Anorexia” & the Restrictive Eating Spectrum With Dr. Jennifer Gaudiani, MD @gaudianiclinic on Apple and Spotify.

Anorexia & Night Eating Syndrome: Why Restriction Fuels Night Eating & What Helps on Apple and Spotify.

The Quiet Places Where Anorexia Meets Identity & Expression on Apple and Spotify.


Topics Discussed in This Episode

Restrictive eating spectrum and why restriction is often invisible
Subtle undereating and socially normalized food restriction
ARFID and sensory-based restrictive eating patterns
Being neurodivergent, experiencing interoception, and having eating issues.
Atypical anorexia and restrictive eating in higher-weight bodies
Weight stigma and diagnostic gaps in eating disorder care
Chronic restrictive eating and long-term nervous system changes
What real eating disorder recovery requires across the restrictive eating spectrum


Resources Mentioned

Dr. Marianne Miller’s ARFID and Selective Eating Course teaches neurodivergent-affirming and sensory-attuned approaches to expanding nourishment safely and compassionately. The course provides structured guidance for individuals navigating ARFID, restrictive eating patterns, and complex relationships with food.

You can learn more about the course and other recovery resources at drmariannemiller.com.


Listen and Support the Podcast

If this episode resonated with you, consider following the podcast, leaving a review, or sharing the episode with someone who may benefit from hearing it. These small actions help more people find compassionate, evidence-informed conversations about eating disorder recovery.