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Jul 13

What Is Intuitive Eating All About? The 10 Principles And More – Women’s Health

Whether you want to lose weight or eat better, there are a lot of diets out there vying for your attention. Keto? Whole30? Plant-based?

If all of the options have your head spinning (same), I've got just the thing for you. This diet actually isnt a ~diet~ at allbut it can still help you with your eating goals. Its called intuitive eating, and its a movement thats gaining major followers.

On a basic level, intuitive eating is all about getting in touch with body cues (like hunger and fullness) and learning to trust your body when it comes to food, explains nutritionist Keri Gans, RD. There are no restrictions or forbidden foods; just an effort for you to eat well, feel healthier, and enjoy food more.

For many people, the traditional diet approach leads to nothing more than years and years of weight loss and weight gain and a negative relationship with food and their body image, Gans says. Intuitive eating is here to put that crap to bed.

Clearly, there's something to it. Instagram is filled with comments from people who rave about how intuitive eating has helped them stop obsessing over their weight, quit binge-eating, and end feelings of guilt around food.

Of course, theres a little more to making this whole intuitive eating thing work. Heres what you need to know about the eating approachand how to make it work for you.

As the name suggests, intuitive eating is all about following your own innate intuition.

The biggest difference between intuitive eating and dietsor lifestyle changesis the focus on internal signals and cues rather than external rules, says nutritionist and certified intuitive eating counselor Alissa Rumsey, RD, owner of Alissa Rumsey Nutrition and Wellness. Intuitive eating uses feelings of hunger, fullness, satisfaction, and body knowledge to dictate eating choices in the moment. Traditional diets, meanwhile, use external factors like nutrient counts, calories, or food groups to plan food ahead of time without room for flexibility.

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While you can lose weight by following an intuitive eating approach, its not necessarily the goal. Instead, the goal with intuitive eating is to foster a healthier, happier approach to food.

Yes, it sounds suuuuper simplebut it definitely takes work to achieve. Were all born knowing how to listen to our bodys hunger and satiety signals but, as we go through life, our natural intuition is blunted on so many levels, says nutritionist Karen Ansel, RD. As children, adults are constantly feeding us snacks, whether were hungry or not; were told to finish our meals even though our bodies may be perfectly well-nourished; were rewarded with food for good behavior. At the same time, were told that hunger is an emergency, even though its a completely natural sensation, just like being tired.

Though intuitive eating offers the alluring promise of no food being off-limits, the process of reestablishing (and following) your natural cues is a tricky one.

Its long and time consuming, and sometimes you have to fail before you can succeed, Ansel says. The upside is that once you learn to eat intuitively, weight control often becomes infinitely easier, as your body naturally possesses all the tools to guide you. At this point, you can easily eat only when truly hungry and stop when satisfied. No stress.

The intuitive eating movement has been around in some form since the 1970s, but the term intuitive eating was coined in 1995 by nutritionists Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch, authors of Intuitive Eating: A Revolutionary Program That Works.

In their book, Tribole and Resch encourage people to reject diet culture, find satisfaction in eating, and listen to their body cues around food. They also ID three different eating personalities that help define the eating difficulties you might have:

The ultimate goal, according to Tribole and Resch, is to become an intuitive eater, someone who listens to their internal hunger cues. When theyre hungry, intuitive eaters pick something to eat without debating about it or feeling guilty.

So, how does one become an intuitive eater, exactly? To help you get there, Tribole and Resch came up with the 10 principles of intuitive eating, which all focus on creating a healthier relationship with food.

The principles of intuitive eating are guideposts that help you unlearn the dieting behaviors and diet mentality you've been taught and instead learn to tune back into your own body, Rumsey explains. While it's not always a linear experience, rejecting the diet mentality and learning to honor your bodys hunger cues are some of the foundational experiences."

Live by these principles, she says, and you'll not only find a happier relationship with food, but more positive self-care and coping behaviors, body respect, and more intuitive, joyful movement, too.

The 10 principles of intuitive eating, according to Tribole and Resch, are:

This means ditching diet books and avoiding articles that tell you how to lose weight quickly.

Learning to listen to your hunger cues is crucial, Tribole and Resch argue. Focusing on keeping your body nourished with the right foods can help prevent overeating.

This means giving yourself permission to eat what you want, when you want it.

Tribole and Resch urge people to remove good and bad thinking from eating. Have a bowl of ice cream? Don't feel guilty about it; its just food, and its part of your overall healthy diet.

Eating should be a pleasurable experience and, if you enjoy what youre eating, should help you feel satisfied and content. Identifying this satisfaction can help you learn when youve had enough of a food you enjoy.

Trust your body to lead you to the right foods and listen for the signals that youre not hungry anymore. Tribole and Resch also recommend pausing in the middle of eating to ask yourself how the food tastes, and how hungry you are at that moment.

Learn to recognize that food restriction can trigger loss of control and emotional eating. Learn to ID your emotions and find ways to deal with them that dont involve food.

Embrace your body, so you can feel better about who you are.

Be active for the sake of moving your body, instead of tracking how many calories you burn during exercise. Focusing on the energy you get from working out can help keep you motivated.

Make food choices that are good for your healthand taste greatwhile making you feel good. Know that you dont have to eat perfectly to be healthy. That one snack, meal, or day of less-healthy eating wont torpedo your goals.

If you want to rethink your relationship with food, Ansel recommends picking up the Intuitive Eating book to get the full view of what it's all about.

Its also a good idea to really immerse yourself in the concept. You have likely been absorbing years and years of diet culture messages, so surrounding yourself with alternative messaging will be helpful, says Rumsey, who recommends checking out different podcasts, books, and blogs created by registered dietitians and therapists certified in intuitive eating. These will help you weed through a lot of your long-held beliefs about food and your body to start developing a new relationship, she says.

Some of her recommendations:

Another question to consider: What do you really want to eat right now? Allow yourself to have whatever the answer is, Rumsey says. By allowing yourself to eat whatever you want, you stop the diet cycle in its tracks.

It can take time, but your mind and body will eventually learn that you have access to all foods and, with time, cravings and overeating should decrease. If youre unsatisfied, youll probably keep looking for that one thing that is going to make you feel satisfied and content, and youre more likely to overeat, Rumsey explains. When you eat what you really want, the feelings of satisfaction and pleasure you feel will help you be content.

You'll also want to start tuning in to your hunger signals, Rumsey says. Start noting when you tend to feel hungry during the dayand what you tend to do in those moments. Honoring your hungereating each time you are hungryis an important step in building back body trust, she explains.

If you're looking for extra support, a registered dietitian can help guide you through the first few months of intuitive eating. Each person is different and an intuitive eating registered dietitian can help you work through your unique challenges and questions, says Rumsey.

The bottom line: Intuitive eating is a great way to feel healthier in your body and create a happier, easier relationship with food. Experts say that it's never too late to work on intuitive eatingand that it really does work for most people.

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