Switching to Mindful Eating
- Alina
- Nov 3, 2022
- 4 min read
Updated: Feb 17, 2023
Mindful eating involves paying closer attention to your food and how it makes you feel. In addition to helping you learn to distinguish between physical and emotional hunger, it may also help reduce disordered eating behaviors and support weight loss.

Mindful eating involves paying closer attention to your food and how it makes you feel. In addition to helping you learn to distinguish between physical and emotional hunger, it may also help reduce disordered eating behaviors and support weight loss.
Mindful eating relies on mindfulness, a form of meditation. Mindful eating is about developing awareness of your experiences, physical cues, and feelings about food.
Mindful eating is a technique that helps you better manage your eating habits. It has been shown to promote weight loss, reduce binge eating, and help you feel better.
This article explains mindful eating, how it works, and what you need to do to get started.
What is mindful eating?
Mindful eating is based on mindfulness, which is a Buddhist concept.
Mindfulness is a form of meditation that helps you recognize and cope with your emotions and physical sensations (1Trusted Source, 2Trusted Source).
It’s used to treat many conditions, including eating disorders, depression, anxiety, and various food-related behaviors (3Trusted Source, 4Trusted Source, 5Trusted Source, 6Trusted Source).
Mindful eating is about using mindfulness to reach a state of full attention to your experiences, cravings, and physical cues when eating (7Trusted Source).
Fundamentally, mindful eating involves:
eating slowly and without distraction
listening to physical hunger cues and eating only until you’re full
distinguishing between true hunger and non-hunger triggers for eating
engaging your senses by noticing colors, smells, sounds, textures, and flavors
learning to cope with guilt and anxiety about food
eating to maintain overall health and well-being
noticing the effects food has on your feelings and body
appreciating your food
These things allow you to replace automatic thoughts and reactions with more conscious, health-promoting responses (8Trusted Source).
Mindful eating helps you distinguish between emotional and physical hunger. It also increases your awareness of food-related triggers and gives you the freedom to choose your response to them.
Mindful eating and weight loss
It’s well known that most weight loss programs do not work in the long term.
In fact, some research suggests that people tend to regain about half of the lost weight after 2 years and 80% of the lost weight after 5 years (11Trusted Source).
BED, emotional eating, external eating, and eating in response to food cravings have been linked to weight gain and regain after successful weight loss (12Trusted Source, 13Trusted Source, 14Trusted Source).
Chronic exposure to stress may also play a large role in overeating and obesity (15Trusted Source, 16Trusted Source).
Most studies agree that mindful eating helps you lose weight by changing your eating behaviors and reducing stress (2Trusted Source).
Interestingly, one review of 10 studies found that mindful eating was as effective for weight loss as conventional diet programs (17Trusted Source).
Another study involving 34 females found that completing a 12-week training on mindful eating resulted in an average weight loss of 4 pounds (lb) or 1.9 kilograms (kg) and improved feelings of self-awareness, self-acceptance, and self-compassion (18Trusted Source).
By changing the way you think about food, the negative feelings that may be associated with eating are replaced with awareness, improved self-control, and positive emotions (2Trusted Source, 7Trusted Source).
When unwanted eating behaviors are addressed, your chances of long-term weight loss success are increased.
Why should you try mindful eating?
Today’s fast-paced society offers people an abundance of food choices.
On top of that, distractions have shifted attention away from the actual act of eating toward televisions, computers, and smartphones.
Eating has become a mindless act, often done quickly. This can be problematic since it takes time for your brain to register that you’re full.
If you eat too fast, the fullness signal may not arrive until you have already eaten too much. This is very common in binge eating disorder (BED).
By eating mindfully, you restore your attention and slow down, making eating an intentional act instead of an automatic one.
What’s more, by increasing your recognition of physical hunger and fullness cues, you can distinguish between emotional and true physical hunger (9Trusted Source).
You also increase your awareness of triggers that make you want to eat, even though you’re not necessarily hungry (10Trusted Source).
Knowing your triggers allows you to create a space between them and your response, giving you the time and freedom to choose how to react.
Mindful eating and binge eating
BED involves eating a large amount of food in a short time, mindlessly and without control (19Trusted Source).
It has been linked to weight gain, obesity, and disordered eating behaviors like purging or compulsive exercise (20Trusted Source, 21Trusted Source, 22Trusted Source).
Practicing mindfulness and mindful eating may drastically reduce the severity and frequency of BED episodes (23, 24Trusted Source).
In fact, one study found that mindfulness-based cognitive therapy improved eating behaviors and enhanced restraint over food intake when added to usual care in people with BED and bulimia nervosa (25Trusted Source).
Mindful eating and unhealthy eating behaviors
In addition to being an effective treatment for binge eating, mindful eating methods have also been shown to reduce (2Trusted Source, 26Trusted Source):
Emotional eating: This is the act of eating in response to certain emotions (27Trusted Source).
External eating: This occurs when you eat in response to environmental, food-related cues, such as the sight or smell of food (28Trusted Source).
Unhealthy eating behaviors like these are the most commonly reported behavioral problems in people with obesity.
Mindful eating teaches you the skills you need to manage these impulses. It puts you in charge of your responses instead of at the whim of your instinct.
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