A Must Read: Do you SPEAK or EAT Your Mind?

Emotional and angry eaters put on more weight, keep it on longer and are more at risk for morbid obesity, heart disease and other weight gain related illnesses
This is an exceptionally insightful article from EmpowHER that we wanted to share with our Diet Network readers:
One of the biggest triggers for emotional eating is anger. Eating when we’re angry, frustrated, irritated, feeling like we’ve been treated unfairly—we may call it different names, but these words usually boil down to feeling angry.
Anger, and the conflict that often accompanies it, makes many people—especially women—uncomfortable. Many of us go to great lengths to avoid expressing our anger directly. Even when we’ve learned to face the conflicts and the sticky situations head-on in professional settings, we may still shy away from addressing our anger in our personal lives.
Want to know what many of us do with anger? We swallow it. Literally.
Many women who feel strong and competent in other areas of their lives, feel so uncomfortable with anger and frustration that they turn to food to avoid it, change it, bury it, or sometimes even turn the anger on themselves.
One of my clients said it beautifully. She told me, “I don’t like anger and it makes me uncomfortable. When I get angry with someone I eat at them.” Then she laughed. “Fat lot of good it does me.” Exactly.
Taking control of emotional eating isn’t just about food. In fact, sometimes it’s hardly about food.
It’s about taking on challenging issues and learning to cope with them differently and directly. That’s one of the reasons that taking charge of emotional eating is so empowering. Taking charge of emotional eating transforms you.
I talk quite a bit about how struggles with food and weight hold many successful women back. This is another important example. If we aren’t comfortable standing tall and facing conflict head on and if we don’t have the tools to deal with anger in an effective manner that reflects our best selves, we’re not fully in the game. It’s not about choosing different foods to eat, it’s about learning the tools and strategies that help you move beyond emotional eating and dieting by approaching the rest of your life more effectively.
What do you think? Is anger an emotional eating trigger for you? Do you speak your mind or eat at people?
##
Melissa McCreery, PhD, ACC, is a Psychologist, ICF Certified Life Coach,and emotional eating coach who specializes in providing smart resources to busy women struggling with food, weight and overwhelm.














Hi there. I’m hopping in to thank you for reprinting my article. Emotional eating is a topic that I am passionate about because it short-circuits so many well-intentioned weight loss plans. It’s one of the major causes of overeating and it’s something that so many overeaters feel powerless about. I blog about these issues regularly at my own blog and would love to hear your thoughts and comments.
Melissa,
Thanks for stopping by! We would be happy to share any of your current and future articles with readers and members of the Diet Network. Feel free to send them to us at info@dietnetwork.org and we will make sure it gets posted for everyone to read and learn from.
Thanks again,
Content Team
Diet Network
http://www.dietnetwork.org
“The Free Information and Interactive Place to Learn About and Discuss Diet, Weight Loss, Fitness and Healthy Living”