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  1. Sep 28, 2024 · How can we actually eat intuitively? How do our hunger hormones change as we age? How can we reduce unhealthy food cravings? Neuroscientist and addiction psychiatrist Jud Brewer, M.D., Ph.D., answers all that and more in this episode of the mindbodygreen podcast.

  2. Oct 12, 2023 · You can break the habit by setting a budget and stocking up on easy-to-make meals. Find yourself turning to food delivery apps too often? Here are some easy steps you can take to break the costly ...

  3. Oct 27, 2020 · Does diet affect anxiety? If so, what should I eat, and which foods should I try to avoid? People who suffer with anxiety should remember a few simple rules: Low blood sugar, poor hydration, use of alcohol, caffeine, and smoking can also precipitate or mimic symptoms of anxiety.

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  4. Jul 17, 2017 · This one-day diet plan from Vincent M. Pedre, M.D. may help limit your anxiety by removing foods that can trigger feelings of stress. A more holistic, natural regimen to alleviate depression or anxiety

    • Overview
    • Cooking isn’t as easy as it sounds when you’re depressed
    • How we value food matters
    • Finding a new relationship with food

    Fourteen nights of Thai food to go isn’t that bad.

    We don’t talk about this enough: Meals are a lot of work.

    Cooking dinner is often the most intensive labor to do for the day. I think everyone, from people with depression asking for quick recipes to moms who swear by the Instant Pot, can agree. This is especially true after a day where nothing has gone well; eating can become exhausting.

    Before my boyfriend and I allowed ourselves out of bed today, I had to outline exactly where, and what, I would eat for breakfast. If we didn’t, I would’ve just skipped meals until dinner.

    After all, we almost did that the day before: a bagel each at 11 a.m. and a shared patatas bravas tapas before our 7:15 p.m. dinner because our stomachs were starting to hurt.

    The fact we were able to register hunger pains was a sign of our body-brain improvement.

    A lot of millennials get vilified for ordering to go instead of cooking or meal prepping at home.

    Taylor Lorenz, tech reporter at The Atlantic, was nationally mocked for purchasing $22 avocado toast. Shame around takeout has reached all new heights, to a point where $5 coffee is vilified by money coaches.

    But the thing is, I tried to cook for myself when I was depressed. I tried really hard. All it did was trigger suicidal ideation.

    Once it was after I touched cold rice to my lips. It wasn’t just the fact that it was cold. In that moment, the frigid rice became a cumulation of failure. Failure at steaming food, not completing work tasks, going without food since 9:30 a.m.

    I couldn’t even do something as simple as eating! I ended up sobbing into my dinner with Netflix on, going to bed hoping tomorrow wouldn’t come.

    Another time was while I was boiling dumplings. What could go wrong?

    Fortunately, I’m able to separate food from the mainstream definition of “healthy.” I don’t worry about whether or not the type of food is “doing my hormones a service” or “putting my cells at risk.” I can intuitively eat in moderation.

    What I’m working on is how to appreciate my appetite and understand that craving a certain type of meal isn’t bad.

    Diet culture has us so caught up in only valuing hunger, your body’s physical need for fuel, as a restriction tool that we tend to demonize our natural appetite, or cravings for a type of food that brings joy. This culture teaches us that we should control our appetite or alter it so it only overlaps with hunger.

    But I can’t feel hunger. I don’t know how else to understand food. Food, to me, only matters in context: a shot of energy, aesthetic pleasure, a new beautiful memory… When I have to see it only as a tool for survival, when I’m at peak depression, food and survival have no meaning to me.

    In fact, I stop looking for context in food. It becomes a fish out of water, flapping desperately because it can’t do what it does best to live: swim. It’s dying of boredom. That’s what my brain was saying to me: Food without context is without meaning, and it’s so boring. And yeah, I’ll die without it, but god, life is so boring.

    I used to think not eating was natural because I wasn’t hungry. My body wasn’t sending me any warning signs, so?

    Now that the worst of my depression is tapering away, food has regained its original context: to feel productive. It may be sad, but the truth is, I’m not sure when I’ll ever be able to give food meaning on its own.

    But for now, I can get better at distinguishing between hunger and appetite — the same way I can tell the difference between sex and love, to separate the need for fuel and emotions. Just the way sex is, and isn’t, about love. Food is, and isn’t, about hunger. It is, and isn’t, about appetite.

    It’s about listening to hunger when it calls and leaning on appetite when hunger isn’t calling. Sometimes it’s also discovering that leaning on appetite, the way I did with takeout, is a luxury too.

    Food isn’t a relationship that comes intuitively for everyone. Sometimes you just know at first sight how you feel; other times you have to grow and restart the relationship over and over until you’ve learned from your mistakes. Eventually there’ll be a relationship you can truly trust and react within, using your gut.

    And while I didn’t end up eating what I told my boyfriend I was going to this morning, I did have a Ghirardelli mini brownie before we went out the door. My dog tried to go into a cafe, so I ended up ordering a fatty pork belly banh mi and ate the whole thing. I finished my first meal at 2 p.m. and managed to eat a small bowl of pasta. I then finished the rest of the mini brownies and did my laundry.

    I kind of look forward to tomorrow.

  5. Jan 11, 2021 · Start by noticing your cravings and desire to use food or to binge eat as a way to cope. Without judgment, accept the urge as beyond your control. Be willing to experience it, to surf the urge as...

  6. The Eat Right Now program helps you retrain your brain so you’re easily able to identify stress and emotional eating patterns, reduce food cravings, and build sustainable eating habits that feel natural.

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