A Nutritional Therapist and specialist in helping people overcome emotional eating, overeating and binge eating.
After years of working with women with hormone imbalances, I noticed how many women I worked with were experiencing stress around their diet and exercise, emotional eating, irregular appetite, cravings, overeaing and binge eating.
The disordered eating habits often started due to dieting and constant pursuit of weight loss. The rules, restrictions and food mindset was getting in the way of them making long lasting healthy changes, not to mention the impact of this stress, physical symptoms of restriction and rebound weight gain.
So I decided to take the leap and train as a Emotional Eating and Binge Eating Specialist!
I am now running my signature 16 week programme BECOMING Weightless, helping women heal their relationship with food, so they can live healthy fulfilling lives!
If you'd like to know more - hit the button below!
“Does this mean I have an eating disorder?”
Was a question I was asked by a client recently. So I thought I would write a post to help clear up any confusion you might have on the differences between having a disordered relationship with food/disordered eating habits and having a diagnosable eating disorder!
First things first, let’s break down what we’re talking about:
Definition: A range of irregular eating behaviours. Includes things like chronic dieting, skipping meals, following extreme fad diets, emotional eating, overeating, binge eating, and food rules.
Impact: These behaviours can negatively affect your physical and mental health, therefore impacting your everyday life, but they are typically less severe and less consistent than those in eating disorders.
Duration: May be short-term or situational and doesn’t usually require clinical intervention, though support is beneficial (such as coaching with a qualified Nutritional Therapist or Dietician to heal your relationship with food)
Definition: Diagnosable mental health conditions characterized by severe disturbances in eating behavior and related thoughts and emotions.
Types: Includes anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, and others as classified in the DSM-5.
Behaviour: More severe and consistent patterns such as extreme restriction of food, binge eating, purging, and obsessive concerns about weight and body shape.
Impact: Significantly affects physical health, emotional well-being, and daily functioning. Often requires professional treatment involving a multidisciplinary approach (e.g., therapy, nutritional counseling, medical monitoring).
Duration: Typically long-term and can be chronic without appropriate treatment.
Some disordered eating habits can often seem perfectly normal and healthy, for example – opting to eat wholegrain rice instead of white rice. But if they are leading to physical and mental health side effects – it might be time to look at your relationship with food!
As I write this, I think it is important to say that as a Nutritional Therapist, I value health and I LOVE nutrition science, I think taking a preventative approach to our health is so important.
BUT – Health isn’t just what we eat and how much we exercise, and sometimes under the cloud of a disordered relationship with food and exercise, we can put all of our energy and attention on these two things, forgetting that our health is so much more.
Not to mention, it is difficult, or near impossible to implement healthy habits with a disordered relationship with food.
Disordered eating habits can create a cycle of being ‘all or nothing’.
Disordered eating habits can lead to an Eating Disorder.
Diagnosable eating disorders are serious mental health conditions that need professional intervention.
Major Types:
Key Characteristics:
So why should we care about the difference between disordered eating and eating disorders?
If you think you might be dealing with disordered eating or an eating disorder, here’s what you can do:
Thank you for reading. I hope this helped with any confusion you might have had. Leave a comment below if you had any insights or have any questions.
Chat soon,
Leanne
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Leanne@leannemoran.com
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