Emotional Eating After Surgery

Emotional Eating Emotional eating can occur during times of intensified stress or transition. Eating to distract yourself or to avoid your emotional distress is an all too common practice. Studies show that 75% of overeating is caused by emotions. You may turn to your favorite foods to soothe your anxieties, or to cope with stress. Ignoring your body’s natural satiety cues is problematic to your post-surgery wellness. Binge eating, constant snacking, and relying on “comfort foods” to alleviate stress are dangerous habits—especially after bariatric surgery. Adjusting to your post-surgery lifestyle is a large transition both mentally and physically. Your dramatic physical transformation along with your dietary limitations can seem overwhelming. Although your body may seem more adjusted after your weight loss surgery, your mental state may need time to catch up. You may face relationship changes, anxiety over your new diet, and emerging insecurities. Coping with these issues in a healthy manner is imperative in order to fully benefit from any weight loss surgery.

How to Identify if You Are Emotionally Eating

It may seem like an easy problem to identify, but emotional eating can be a conscious or subconscious choice. Some tell-tale signs may include:

  • Eating when you’re not hungry. In the months after surgery, you may have returned to a more regular diet. However, after surgery you may find that your hunger cues have changed—you may not feel hungry at all. Employing a stricter schedule or routine for eating to maintain adequate nutrient levels may be necessary.  Eating outside of this schedule could lead to dangerous food practices. Remember that your body is different now. Think about the last time you ate and determine whether you truly need to eat again.
  • Changing your eating habits based on your level of stress. You may be experiencing a higher level of stress or anxiety due to your recent weight loss surgery. To cope with arising issues, you may find yourself snacking more throughout the average day. It may not seem like much extra, but snacking can lead to binging on foods that are higher in fat and calories. This can negatively affect your postoperative weight loss goals.
  • Using food as an incentive or a positive reward. A bowl of ice cream or your favorite candy bar may seem nice after a particularly rough day at work. However, rewarding yourself with extra and unnecessary food is just another excuse to overeat.
  • Identify your triggers. Do you turn to food when you are bored, anxious, or overwhelmed?
  • Keep a food journal. If you record what you are eating, it is easy to track and maintain your postoperative diet. Write down what you were feeling when you ate. If you begin to notice that you are eating for reasons other than hunger, you can take the proper steps to change those habits.
  • Find emotional support groups. It’s all right to feel anxious or overwhelmed following bariatric surgery. Just remember, you’re not alone. Finding a support group will provide you with an outlet to express and cope with your current concerns before you turn to your favorite “comfort foods.”

How to Avoid Emotional Eating After Weight Loss Surgery

Emotional eating is an easy solution to a temporary problem. Finding healthy ways to cope with the everyday burdens of your postoperative lifestyle is imperative. The results of your weight loss surgery may be dramatic; however, permanent lifestyle changes are necessary to maintain your new body. Don’t feel discouraged, and remember that there are many comforts and consolations to enhance your new lifestyle that don’t include food.

Comments

2 Responses to “Emotional Eating After Surgery”
  • logesh says:

    True! Emotional eating is really a temporary problem and can be easily solved with yoga and other emotional therapies. Because lot of emotional therapies available now to cure emotional eating and negative emotions.

  • mowlyn says:

    I am looking for ways to keep busy instead of eating. I enjoy doing crafts and reading,so I plan on using both of these instead of eating,as both keep your hands busy and are hard to do when eating.

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