Binge Eating Disorder - Signs and Treatment

The binge eating disorder occurs as people intake unhealthy quantities of food regularly which uncontrollably and can lead to obesity. The desire to alleviate negative feelings, anxiety, stress , and depression may cause binge eating. However, the relief that food brings does not last long and after bingeing episodes people may experience frustration, remorse and anxiety. These post-binge sensations can lead the patient to swing to the other drastic end and to a restrictive diet. This binge feeding cycle followed by intense diet is a type of "yo-yo diet" that can become a permanent and destructive process.

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Signs of Binge Eating Disorder

Binge people, normally isolated. You might do it while everyone is asleep, alone or in the car. If someone you care about continues to eat regularly, but gets heavier, they may have binge eating disorder — especially if they already have symptoms of depression and anxiety. The habit of "concealing evidence" is another symptom of binge eating disorder. Exceptions include discovering wrappers under the pillow, hiding empty containers in the wardrobe or the absence of significant quantities of food.

Binge Diet and Repeat

Most people say their diet began with their eating disorder. A diet is a limitation on food of any form. The more limitations people have, the more likely the binge they become. The more they drink, the more they add weight. This reduces the pressure, repeated the process.

Binge food can have a whole-body calming effect that feels incredibly gratifying. We see binge eating by people who had abuse history and PTSD as a coping mechanism. Emotional discomfort goes down for a moment as the soothing influence falls in. Most people who believe binge are out of balance and complain that they haven't really tasted or liked the meal. Nearly every person with binge eating disorders states that after binges they feel tired, sad and ashamed. They binge again, repeating another loop, to stop those feelings.

The Best way to treat binge eating disorders is by therapy

For food and their bodies, we help our patients establish nurturing boundaries. For eg, it is all right if you want a cake every day for the rest of your life if you encourage yourself to have it. Patients who find eating 'bad' say that they don't want to eat things such as cookies. Then one night, your partner takes home a slice of cake, eats a lot, feels guilty and struggles with remorse and guilt. We need to avoid relying on weight and diet as the problem with the binge eating disorder and concentrate on the fact that we are healthy at any level – physically and psychologically. Therapy will get us in.

Start to Recover Today

At the Matthew Tweedie hypnosis it is possible to combine regular cognitive behavioral treatment with an eating disorder specialist and sessions with a dietitian with the treatment of binge eating disorder. We know how bingeing works in their lives as we treat our patients with food disorders. We help to establish the illusion that all foods match, but naturally accessible – not constrained.