Soon after, I started binge eating. While I was willing to calorie-control (AKA starve) my way to weigh less, my body had an inbuilt protective mechanism to keep me from self-sacrificing. Like people panic buying during Covid, my body feared there was a famine. So when I finally got access to food, I felt compelled to uncontrollably eat as much as I could. A frenzy of trying to fill that hole, that gap, that needed to be fed.
I gained weight quickly. I felt like such a disappointment, ashamed of my lack of control around food. By now my relationship with food was on rocky ground. Unhealthy and disordered. My ballooning weight was seen to be the real problem. And heartbreakingly, the harder I tried to lose weight, the more I ended up secretly bingeing on bowls of cereal, loaves of bread or peanut butter by the spoonful (which was always followed by crushing guilt and girl-scout promises to do better tomorrow).
When it came to binge eating, my body didn’t discriminate. I’d devour ‘forbidden’ foods like cookies-and-cream ice cream straight from the tub just as readily as I’d gorge on healthy foods like cucumbers, berries or yoghurt. My body craved the things I was depriving it of. Calories. Food. Energy! The more I emotionally ate, the harder I dieted to regain control. But that just trapped me in an unbreakable cycle of yo-yo dieting, being good all week, then binging on weekends, only to start a new diet each Monday.
The more weight I gained, the more my dieting was encouraged, which only put my weight goals further out of reach. I knew what I ‘should’ be eating, but why couldn’t I stick to it? It turns out there wasn’t anything wrong with my self-control. And there’s nothing wrong with yours either.