Are you emotionally eating too? Yeah, I get it. I'm eating All The Skittles right now. So what is emotional eating? Why do we do it? What does our emotional eating point us toward? How do we stop?
In this episode, the Grace In Real Life podcast welcomes integrative wellness speaker, author, and educator Rebekah Fedrowitz, MDN, BCHN. Rebekah helps women identify, combat, and recover from adrenal overload, the stress-driven health syndrome that can lead to digestive, hormonal, and mental health challenges. Her desire is to see women living in the abundant life and purpose God created for them.
"All eating is emotional. All eating should be emotional." - Rebekah Fedrowitz
However, we don't want to be driven by emotions but want to be able to see our emotional connection to food.
Emotional eating is when there is something emotional going on in our environment driving us to eat in unhealthy ways, not just unhealthy foods, but eating in an unbalanced way for your body or when there is something about food driving us to want more of it to soothe us when we feel overwhelmed.
Stress isn't the same for everyone, but all stress produces a biochemical response by causing changes in blood-sugar regulation. Your body knows to crave food to help you regulate your blood sugar.
"Maybe the chocolate isn't what you need, but making yourself feel bad about it won't make you crave it less." - Rebekah Fedrowitz
There's a fine line between being hyper-controlled and hosting a free-for-all. We go through seasons to figure out life. New seasons bring out new habits, not all of which are good.
"This is not about willpower." - Rebekah Fedrowitz
When you go to extremes, you're relying on willpower and not getting at the root of what's going on.
"If we're going to extreme solutions, we're going to find extreme swings." - Rebekah Fedrowitz
"We are creative powerful women. God has given us really great brains." - Rebekah Fedrowitz
"Challenge the status quo. Wherever you are is not where you are stuck. Give yourself grace in this moment." - Rebekah Fedrowitz