Weight & Eating Disorders
Eating disorders can generally be conditions characterized by unhealthy eating habits that may involve either too little or too much food intake, which is ultimately to the detriment of an individual’s physical & emotional well-being.
There are several different types of eating disorders. Some of the most common are:
Extreme food restriction, inappropriate eating habits or rituals, obsession with having a thin figure, and an irrational fear of weight gain, as well as a distorted body self-perception.
Bulimia
Binge eating followed by purging – typically by vomiting, taking a laxative/diuretic and/or excessive exercise – because of an extensive concern for body weight.
Binge eating
Repeatedly eating an objectively large amount of food in a short period of time, experiencing a lack of control while eating or feeling self-deprecating based on eating behaviour. People who suffer from binge eating do not purge after their binges.
Purging
Repeatedly purging to control weight that occurs in people with normal or near-normal weight. Absence of bingeing. People who suffer from purging disorder do not suffer from binge eating.
Compulsive overeating
Frequently unable to control their food consumption, during which they may feel frenzied or out of control and often eat past the point of being full. Also, a compulsive over-eater will spend excessive amounts of time and thought devoted to food, and secretly plan or fantasize about eating.
Symptoms & signs of weight and eating disorders
Undereating:
- Constant dieting or food restriction.
- Self-induced vomiting
- Use of laxatives
- Excessive and/or compulsive exercising
- Unhealthy fixation on other’s weight and physical appearance
- Constantly checking your own body for fat areas (measuring, pinching, examination in the mirror)
- Denying or ignoring your hunger
- Low self esteem
Physical symptoms:
- Weight loss (continual or sudden)
- Fainting and dizziness
- Absent menstrual periods in women
- Fatigue
- Feeling cold
Overeating:
- Eating to the point of physical discomfort
- Binge eating
- Eating in secret
- Eating even if you’re not hungry
- The need to eat more and more to feel satiated
- Feeling shame after indulging
- Preoccupation with food
- Low self esteem
Physical symptoms:
- Digestive problems
- Weight gain (continual or sudden)
- Headaches
- Chronic pain
- Fatigue
When is it time to get help?
Eating too much or too little can have serious consequences on your physical and mental health. Treatment should be sought as soon as possible to reduce the risks to your health. It’s common for weight management and eating disorder issues to be part of other mental health concerns.
Weight and eating disorders treatment methods
- Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is an evidence-based approach to treatment that focuses on how people’s thoughts, emotions, and beliefs influence their behaviour and how they perceive themselves.
- Behaviour Therapy tends to view human beings and behaviour with the assumption that humans are a product of their sociocultural conditioning and environment, looking at the current problems and the factors influencing them and emphasizes behaviour changes more than the underlying unconscious processes.
- Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy can allow clients to travel deeper into the unconscious or subconscious to look at and work with issues and ideas perhaps inaccessible otherwise. It’s like guided daydreaming: a form of relaxed concentration.
- Mindfulness Therapy is an approach to treatment that focuses on how people’s thoughts, emotions, and beliefs influence their behaviour and how they perceive themselves, others, and the world. The ability to be in the moment, to acknowledge and regulate your emotions helps you to break free from negative thought patterns.
What will I get out of treatment with Insight Psychological?
By undergoing counselling for weight management and eating disorders, it is possible to discover the root of an eating disorder and overcome it in order to reach a healthy weight. Many people cannot stop eating or maintain a healthy weight – and do not understand why. They wonder:
- Why do I overeat/refuse to eat?
- Why can’t I lose weight/put on weight?
- Why is it hard for me to stay on a diet?
- Why do I eat even when I am not hungry?
- Is it possible for me to pass these bad eating habits on to my children?
Treatment with and Insight therapist will help you answer those questions