How to Stop Obsessing About Food and Finally Be HAPPY Instead of SAD

Anna-Thea
5 min readMay 26, 2020

Do you find yourself obsessing about food? It’s a painful way to live. I’ve been there and it’s not fun. It’s a big issue for many but seems to be more common for women.

I suffered for many years obsessing about food. I thought I would never be free from it and I am! Still a shockingly large percentage of women suffer from eating disorders.

In this article I’ll share about your choice of being SAD or HAPPY. I’ll also offer you an easy experiment to try if you often obsess about food at social gatherings.

The “new normal” of social gatherings is still unknown. But let’s assume that social gatherings with food isn’t going to be a thing of the past!

With that said…

Learn to stop obsessing about food and feel the freedom of being a woman.

Women are sensual beings. Food is a sensual experience.

Do you have a love relationship with food?

To have a love relationship with food… ask yourself if you want to be
SAD or HAPPY.

They are acronyms for two different types of diets you can choose.

HAPPY stands for:

“Healthy Aware Person, Purifying Yourself.” I also like to say HAPPY stands for Healthy Aware Person Perceiving Yourself. When you can perceive yourself on a deeper level, feeling your feelings, you’ll stop obsessing about food.

Instead, you’ll feel your vitality, joy, and how amazing you are. You’ll become aware of the divine energy coursing through your body. This leads to general well-being or you being HAPPY.

SAD stands for:

Standard American Diet. If you want to be SAD, eat the Standard American Diet of packaged and processed foods. How often do you eat at a fast-food restaurant? Do you eat organic? How much sugar do you eat?

Sugar feeds the obsessive-compulsive cycle making it more difficult to stop obsessing about food. And overcoming emotional eating isn’t helped by poor diet choices and bad lifestyle habits. No wonder so many people suffer from chronic depression.

Our Standard Food Supply has Become Toxic

Our society is going through big transformation which includes a health crisis. We may live longer, however, we must ask ourselves if it is a life of quality.

Cancer, heart disease, diabetes, obesity, inflammation, and other degenerative diseases are on the rise. This rise of degenerative diseases during the twentieth century may be a lesson to indicate there is something out of balance in our modern lifestyle. No wonder we aren’t feeling pleasure… our bodies are inflamed!

And the chronic inflammation doesn’t help overcome food obsessions. It becomes a viscous cycle of feeding the dis-ease.

Gaining back your health and freeing yourself from obsessing about food is a complex problem in our society. We closely associate food with socializing and connecting with others.

If you want to be with others and they are not into healthy eating, it can be challenging. Drinking alcohol to toast the bride and groom at a wedding or eating sugary foods such as a cake for someone’s birthday celebration are “normal” ways we celebrate.

It’s a double-edged sword for those suffering from food obsessions. Staying connected to people you love and not being challenged by having to be around certain foods that trigger you.

I will always love a big decadent piece of carrot cake, but is it good for me? Can I love myself enough to enjoy a very small piece or a few bites as opposed to more than my body wants? And without falling back into the cycle of obsessing about food? Ask yourself the same question for those foods that trigger you.

If you have food issues, socializing becomes similar to a recovering alcoholic hanging out with his alcoholic friends in a bar. You need to have the willpower of God to expose yourself to such environments.

An Experiment to
Stop Obsessing About Food

Building new brain pathways by creating new experiences is helpful. If you find it hard not to obsess about food in social situations, make new brain pathways of connection with this experiment.

Next time you are planning to go to a social event where you know you’ll be triggered by the food, set an intention to shift your behavior. Before you arrive, set an intention for connection, as opposed to getting excited about all the delicious food that will be there.

Make it your priority to connect with people instead of obsessing about food.

Don’t position yourself near the food. Make eye contact with the people you talk with, listen attentively to them, ask questions, and open your heart to them. This can be quite fun.

Use your tendency to obsess in a positive direction; obsess about being connected and present with people. Be there for them energetically. Observe them as if though it is an assignment from your psychology class. If you begin to obsess about food, go back to your intention to connect with people and give them your undivided attention.

You’ll walk away from the event feeling more love, and you won’t wake up the next morning regretting having had too much food or alcohol. You’ll have widened a new pathway in your brain that is good for you.

Chronic or regular behavior patterns are literally pathways in our brain like big highways and byways. This experiments helps you to create new “highways” in your brain.

You may not be perfect in this new pathway; give yourself a break and be gentle on yourself if you can’t execute this concept perfectly. For sure, it will help, and it will open your heart…. to YOU.

Obsessing about food is a disease of numbing out. Learn to tune in and be present instead and your life will transform.

I’m Anna-Thea, an author and Divine Feminine Educator. If you are suffering from obsessing about food make sure you check out my book “Empower Yourself by Loving Your Body.” It will offer you many tools to overcome your struggles.

This article was originally published on my site at: https://annathea.org

If you’d like to see the original article please visit: https://annathea.org/obsessing-about-food

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Anna-Thea

Anna-Thea is an author and Divine Feminine Educator. She offers online education to awaken your divine feminine self.