Learn How to Prevent Stress Eating
Are You Using Food to Cope With Stress?
Do you ever feel like the strongest food cravings hit when you’re at your weakest emotional point? If so, you’re one step further to understanding and uncovering the mood-food cycle.
When we feel negative emotions like stress, anger, fear, boredom, sadness, and loneliness, our body craves sugar and simple carbs that can offer temporary bursts of energy and mood-boosting hormones. Since certain foods are able to trigger our reward system in this way, it makes total sense that so many people get into the habit of using food as a tool for coping with stress and other emotional issues!
If you’re someone who turns to food as a means of providing feelings of comfort, security, or control, my Learn How to Prevent Stress Eating Email Series is the perfect resource for you. My hope is that this email series will help guide you toward a healthier relationship with food and better mealtime and snacking habits.
Meet Sue Williams, the Facilitator of Learn How to Prevent Stress Eating
As a graduate from one of the world’s largest nutrition schools, the Institute for Integrative Nutrition (IIN), I felt empowered to help people transform their lives. This lead me to become a Health Coach and an Author and has taken my passion and commitment to encourage healthy living to a whole new level. Sharing my passion with my family, friends, and loved ones through a combination of listening, learning, and suggesting small incremental changes, transformation to a healthy lifestyle for many became a reality. The process of transformation is not that hard, nor does it take a lot of will-power, but rather, it takes small incremental steps that can be easily integrated into your daily lifestyle, and these small steps over time, makes all the difference in the world.
Created by:
Sue Williams
Start Feeling Better About Your Eating Habits
Many emotions may trigger emotional eating, but there are steps you can take to gain back control and feel less powerless in the face of food. During my email series, we’ll be discussing some of these strategies, which include changing habits, creating new habits, and learning to interrupt your negative thought processes.
When you sign up for my email series, you’ll gain insight into human physiology, explore the way your emotions affect your behavior, and begin unpacking the true causes of your disordered eating habits.
Whether you’re trying to lose weight, looking to improve your diet, or you’re just curious about how stress might be affecting your dietary habits, this is a fantastic resource to opt-in to.
If you’re ready to put in some effort and make a real change in your life so that you can find food freedom, you don’t want to miss out on this!
I Can’t Wait to Share More With You!