Emotional eating is something that 38% of adults have reported engaging in under times of stress and anxiety, according to the American Psychological Association. Additionally, half of those adults report engaging in these behaviors on a weekly basis or more.
However, continual emotional eating can be extremely harmful to your health down the road as you can develop obesity, which can lead to other health issues such as high blood pressure and diabetes. Let’s break it down a bit more and analyze what other health problems can come up as a result of long-term emotional eating.
It’s no secret that binge-eating and emotional eating can cause rapid weight gain as the most common factor. Additionally, if you’re emotionally eating because of stress, that stress on top of your excessive eating can mess with your metabolism, making it harder to lose weight (and easier to gain it.)
Insulin sensitivity and diabetes are two things that can occur long-term when emotionally eating. Insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome are both directly linked to overeating and emotional-eating. Because insulin helps control the amount of sugar in the blood, it causes a build-up of glucose, which can then lead to type 2 diabetes. A healthier diet and weight loss and exercise can help reverse insulin resistance.
Hypertension is also known as high blood pressure, which can often be reversed with a decent diet and exercise. In more moderate to severe cases, medication may need to be involved. Cardiovascular disease is a class of diseases directly related to the heart that can cause heart failure or a heart attack. These two things are both directly correlated in that they both affect the heart.
Stress can activate the hormone cortisol, causing it to rise during times of high tension. Increased levels of the hormone can cause higher insulin levels and your blood sugar to drop, meaning you’re more likely to crave something unhealthy and emotionally eat trigger foods. Extra abdominal fat long-term is unhealthy for anyone with any body type, so it’s recommended to treat your stress in healthy ways such as meditation instead of using emotional eating to cope with the stresses of life.
Now that you know all the ways emotional eating can be harmful to you down the road, you can take action right now to stop emotional eating and choose much healthier, balanced options. The best ways to offset things such as hypertension, diabetes, etc. are to identify your trigger feelings and trigger foods, make the effort to resist the urge, and surround yourself with healthier foods and develop those healthier habits! This is why I became a coach because of where I was as an emotional eater. {You can read my story here}. I can help you break free from sugar and emotional/stress eating so you can be calm, confident and at peace.
To grab my free gift to you ~ “The Ultimate Guide to Feel Good Without Food,” go here. I also offer free personalized food struggle assessment calls that you can schedule by clicking here.
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Melissa found her way out of using food as a crutch and turned her life’s lessons into a mission to help others. Her journey began in childhood, using food to cope with the uncontrollable chaos around her. This pattern stretched into her adult life, where diet after diet failed, until she dug deep into the real reasons behind her relationship with food. Today, Melissa uses insights from behavioral psychology, neuroscience, and healthy lifestyle design to guide teen girls and women toward freeing themselves from food struggles. Check out her free resources for a joyful, guilt-free relationship with food, and start your journey to freedom.