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What Is Intuitive Eating?

The goal of Intuitive Eating is to normalize your relationship with food.

You will learn weight-neutral and non-diet strategies to recover your inner wisdom around nutrition and self-care.

Intuitive eating helps you learn to trust your body’s internal signals to make food choices that work for you, without self-judgment or the external signals of diet culture and food rules.

Weekly meetings Zoom Meeting Room

Wednesdays, October 9 through November 20

11:10 to 11:50 a.m.

Q&A to follow

Take the Intuitive Eating Scale

This validated scale will help you identify which factors may make intuitive eating challenging for you, and give you a good idea of how to move forward. When you complete the scale, you will receive an email with your results.

Ten Principles of Intuitive Eating

Principle #1: Reject the diet mentality

Throw out the diet books and magazine articles that offer you the false hope of losing weight quickly, easily and permanently. Get angry at diet culture that promotes weight loss and the lies that have led you to feel as if you were a failure every time a new diet stopped working and you gained back all of the weight you lost. If you allow even one small hope to linger that a new and better diet or food plan might be lurking around the corner, it will prevent you from being free to rediscover intuitive eating.

Principle #2: Honor your hunger

Keep your body biologically fed with adequate energy and carbohydrates. Otherwise you can trigger a primal drive to overeat. Once you reach the moment of excessive hunger, all intentions of moderate, conscious eating are fleeting and irrelevant. Learning to honor this first biological signal sets the stage for rebuilding trust in yourself and in food.

Principle #3: Make peace with food

Call a truce; stop the food fight! Give yourself unconditional permission to eat. If you tell yourself that you can’t or shouldn’t have a particular food, it can lead to intense feelings of deprivation that build into uncontrollable cravings and, often, bingeing. When you finally “give in” to your forbidden foods, eating will be experienced with such intensity it usually results in overeating and overwhelming guilt.

Principle #4: Challenge the food police

Scream a loud “no” to thoughts in your head that declare you’re “good” for eating minimal calories or “bad” because you ate a piece of chocolate cake. The food police monitor the unreasonable rules that diet culture has created. The police station is housed deep in your psyche, and its loudspeaker shouts negative barbs, hopeless phrase and guilt-provoking indictments. Chasing the food police away is a critical step in returning to Intuitive Eating. 

Principle #5: Discover the satisfaction factor

In our compulsion to comply with diet culture, we often overlook one of the most basic gifts of existence—the pleasure and satisfaction that can be found in the eating experience. When you eat what you really want, in an environment that is inviting, the pleasure you derive will be a powerful force in helping you feel satisfied and content. By providing this experience for yourself, you will find that it takes just the right amount of food for you to decide you’ve had “enough.”

Principle #6: Feel your fullness

In order to honor your fullness, you need to trust that you will give yourself the foods that you desire. Listen for the body signals that tell you that you are no longer hungry. Observe the signs that show that you’re comfortably full. Pause in the middle of eating and ask yourself how the food tastes, and what your current hunger level is. 

Principle #7: Cope with your emotions with kindness

Please recognize that food restriction, whether physical or mental, can trigger loss of control. This can feel like emotional eating. As an alternative, seek kind ways to comfort and distract yourself while working to meet and resolve your strong emotions. Anxiety, loneliness, boredom and anger are emotions we all experience throughout life. Each has its own trigger and each has its own appeasement. Food is never a real fix. It may comfort in the short term, distract from the pain or even numb you. But food won’t solve the problem. If anything, eating for an emotional hunger may only make you feel worse in the long run. You’ll ultimately have to deal with the source of the strong emotion.

Principle #8: Respect your body

Accept your genetic blueprint. Just as a person with a shoe size of eight would not expect to realistically squeeze into a size six, it is equally futile (and uncomfortable) to have a similar expectation about body size. But mostly, respect your body so you can feel better about who you are. It’s hard to reject the diet mentality if you are unrealistic and overly critical of your body size or shape. All bodies deserve dignity.

Principle #9: Movement - feel the difference

Forget militant exercise. Just get active and feel the difference. Shift your focus to how it feels to move your body, rather than the calorie-burning effect of exercise. If you focus on how you feel from working out, like energized, it can make the difference between rolling out of bed for a brisk morning walk or hitting the snooze alarm.

Principle #10: Honor your health - gentle nutrition

Make food choices that honor your health and taste buds while making you feel good. Remember that you don’t have to eat perfectly to be healthy. You will not suddenly get a nutrient deficiency or become unhealthy from one snack, one meal or one day of eating. It’s what you eat consistently over time that matters. Progress, not perfection, is what counts.