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This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at U Mass Amherst chapter.

Trigger warning for anyone who has suffered from disordered eating.

Intuitive eating sounds so simple. When you’re hungry, you honor your hunger by eating what your body is asking for at that moment. Something I heard in the magnificent podcast How To Love Your Body (which I highly recommend if you are starting your IE journey) was-when we’re cold, we don’t tell ourselves not to put on a sweater. So why do we tell ourselves not to eat when we’re hungry? It’s the same thing. Your body gives you signals that it needs something, and therefore you honor it. However, when you live in a world where you are constantly bombarded with messages contaminated with diet culture, starting intuitive eating takes a lot of unlearning and patience as you connect back with your body’s natural signals. But it is so worth it. Here are some of the ways intuitive eating has given me my life back where it was once stolen by diet culture.

couple eating breakfast shot from above
Iamngakan eka via pexels

First-I don’t constantly think about food anymore. I used to plan out what I should eat now if I’m going to eat this thing later. Now, I have the freedom to listen to my hunger, see what my body wants to eat at that very moment, eat it, and carry on. Regardless of what I might be eating later. It has taken time, and I’m definitely still working on it, but it was like: “wow, I can really eat a bagel right now? Even if I ate an hour ago?” yes! You can! And then you can move on with your day without it lingering in the back of your mind. When you restrict, you end up feeling even more hungry and obsessed with food, leading to guilt and shame when you do eat. This ultimately causes more pain than the temporary discomfort of eating what you want in the moment, which can feel really hard when you are first starting. Because then you can move on, feeling full and satisfied.

Daria
Intuitive eating has taught me a lot about myself, and improved my relationship with me. The inner critic in my head that used to bash me for eating has now been replaced with more of a best friend type of inner voice. I check in with me, ask what I’m feeling hungry for, and…you guessed it, I eat it! Intuitive eating has really held a mirror up to my unchecked and hardwired internal dialogue about food. I have learned to understand the difference between what I want to eat as opposed to what I think I “should” eat. Thus, allowing me to eat what I’m really craving in the moment free of guilt, instead of forcing a salad and then just binging later.

Love yourself written on wall
Photo by Nicole De Khors from Burst/Shopify

With eating not consuming my thoughts, and an improved relationship with myself, I can now experience life with freedom. I think about the lost moments that my disordered brain and diet culture took from me. The late summer night ice cream trips with best friends where I didn’t get anything because I “didn’t want ice cream.” Or the brunches where I got the eggs because it was the lowest calorie item on the menu when I was really eyeing the french toast (also eggs literally make me nauseous, so wtf). Intuitive eating has given me these moments back.

StockSnap via pixabay
I don’t want to miss out on any more delicious and memorable moments with my friends and family, and I don’t want you to either. Life is too short. Don’t get the eggs when you want french toast.

Meghan Buschini

U Mass Amherst '22

Meghan is a Senior at UMass Amherst majoring in Communications with a minor in Sociology. She is a spin instructor and is passionate about mindfulness, meditation, body acceptance and self love. She shares these passions both through her articles and her instagram account @mindfulmeg_
Contributors from the University of Massachusetts Amherst