You’ve just savored a slice of a decadent, creamy chocolate cake. The taste was amazing, but somehow you don’t feel satisfied. Instead, as if on cue, the guilt starts setting in. You berate yourself for indulging in a desert and regret not showing more restraint. You promise yourself you’ll “do better tomorrow,” and then question, “Why do I feel guilty after eating?”.
Eating is one of life’s simplest pleasures, but it comes with complicated emotions and food guilt for many people.
As a Licensed Psychologist who often works with teens & adults who struggle with feeling guilty after eating, I know how stressful these negative emotions can be. In this article, I will help you understand food guilt better and share practical strategies to improve your eating habits.
Food guilt is an emotional response to eating characterized by regret, shame, or anxiety after eating certain foods or breaking food rules. Feeling guilty after eating is highly distressing and can make you feel like there’s something wrong with you.
You may feel guilty after eating certain “bad foods” (labels we often find associated with sweets or desserts) or, in some cases, after eating any food in general.
Food guilt can sound like an internal dialogue in your head:
Feeling guilty after eating can be exhausting. It can also create a relentless cycle of restriction and binge eating that takes a toll on your physical and mental well-being.
The constant self-criticism and negative emotions associated with indulging in certain foods can lead to an obsessive preoccupation with food choices and your body image.
This often results in restrictive eating patterns when you stop eating “forbidden foods” to avoid food guilt. However, food restrictions only intensify cravings, sometimes leading to binge eating, and often reinforcing a self-critical voice that makes you feel sad, depressed, or overwhelmed. This cycle of restriction and binge eating triggers even more guilt and negative self-talk.
Feeling guilty after eating is becoming more and more common in modern society, but it doesn’t mean that it’s normal. It stems from so many places, including the way your family labeled foods “good” or “bad”, our society’s intense focus on diet culture and relentless drive for thinness, and a multi-billion dollar wellness industry thriving off the mindset that if we can just “hack” our eating, exercise, or sleep, we’ll finally be happy. Focusing on living a healthy lifestyle overall is important, and should include allowing yourself to experience the joy of eating a variety of foods free from feelings of guilt or shame.
If you often feel guilty after eating, it’s a sign of an unhealthy relationship with food and, could potentially lead to disordered eating.
Society often promotes narrow beauty standards and equates thinness with health and morality. Social media, advertising, and social influencers perpetuate unrealistic beauty standards and position thinness as a sign of health, success, and desirability. Many people internalize these messages and start to feel guilty when they eat foods that may contribute to weight gain. Societal pressure can make it really hard to enjoy food without feelings of shame and remorse.
Diet culture promotes restrictive eating. It teaches you to categorize foods as “good” and “bad” and feel guilty eating “bad” foods, especially when focused on losing weight. Diet culture is not only limited to adults. A recent study in Kentucky has shown that around 50% of children 10 to 12 years old report being on a weight-loss diet, which puts them at a high risk of both developing an eating disorder and becoming obese.
Diet culture manifests in various forms, including obsessively counting calories or cutting out certain food groups, such as dairy or gluten. While different research exists on how certain food groups can impact your health, feeling ashamed or guilty after eating a “bad” food group is not a healthy way to reach your health goals.
Your perception of your body can influence your relationship with food and eating.
Research shows that at age thirteen, 53% of American girls are “unhappy with their bodies.” This grows to 78% by the time girls reach seventeen. Many people feel self-conscious about their bodies from the time they’re teenagers and resort to dieting and restrictive eating to lose weight in an ill-advised attempt to improve their body image. You may be feeling food guilt because you feel stuck and don’t like your appearance.
Restricting certain foods to follow a meticulous diet plan can intensify your cravings and lead to a disordered eating cycle.
You may restrict certain foods for a few days, weeks, or months and then eventually succumb to your cravings and end up binge eating, which often triggers feelings of guilt and shame. Rigid food rules create an environment where even minor deviations trigger intense self-judgment.
Food guilt in itself is not classified as an eating disorder, but it can be a symptom of various eating disorders, such as binge eating disorder, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or orthorexia. While occasional feelings of guilt after eating are common, persistent and intense food guilt, coupled with disordered eating behaviors, can be a sign of an underlying eating disorder.
If guilt, shame, or anxiety surrounding food and eating impact your physical and emotional well-being, consider getting professional support from a therapist to cultivate body acceptance and create a healthier relationship with food.
It’s possible to stop feeling guilty after eating and create healthier ways of thinking about food. While it may feel like full recovery is not possible for you, there are ways to overcome food guilt and start enjoying eating food again.
Understanding what triggers your food guilt is essential for addressing and overcoming it. Several factors may contribute to why you feel guilty after eating, including unrealistic societal expectations, diet culture, and poor body image.
If you struggle with a pattern like emotional eating, it’s important to identify what triggers this behavior.
Are you struggling with poor body image or lower self-esteem? Do you label certain foods as “good” or “bad,” leading to feelings of guilt when indulging in the latter? Honest self-reflection can help identify and challenge these negative patterns so you can start making peace with your eating habits.
I often tell my clients that emotions act like waves. They come in all shapes and sizes, and you can’t control them, no matter how hard you try. What you can do is make peace with your emotions and learn how to roll with them.
Instead of immediately trying to suppress your food guilt or change how you feel, it’s important to sit with your emotions and hold space for them.
It can often feel uncomfortable, but it’s going to help you learn how to differentiate emotions from thoughts, and how to let feelings pass through you without getting stuck in them.
Food guilt often stems from labeling certain foods as “good” or “bad.” For example, you may think of a salad as “good” and of cheese pizza as “bad.” These kinds of black-and-white thoughts create a rigid system of thinking where one indulgence or deviation from your diet plan immediately means failure.
Adopting a more flexible and balanced approach can help you embrace moderation and enjoy a diverse range of foods without guilt.
All foods have a place at the table, so to speak, and cultivating a more neutral mindset helps to shift your relationship with food. For example, instead of labeling some foods as “bad,” instead describe their flavor or texture (e.g., savory, sweet, creamy, etc.). Food neutrality allows us to take out the moral implications assigned to food when we call it “good” or “bad.” That way, we can acknowledge that both spinach and cookies offer different benefits.
It’s important to nourish your body and honor your hunger. When you let yourself become excessively hungry, you’re more likely to make impulsive food choices or overeat, which can lead to guilt and shame afterward.
When you address your physical hunger on time and prioritize regular meals and snacks throughout the day, mindful eating becomes easier.
As you work to let go of food guilt, you’ll learn how to eat more intuitively to respond to your body’s cues. It’ll become easier to eat when you’re hungry and stop when you’re full instead of alternating between restriction and binge eating. Embarking on an intuitive eating journey can be incredibly helpful in letting go of guilt eating.
If you have tried letting go of food guilt on your own but still keep wondering, “Why do I feel guilty eating after eating,” you can benefit from working with a therapist who specializes in eating and eating disorders.
When you see a therapist, you have a safe and nonjudgmental space to process your emotions and cultivate self-compassion.
Your therapist can help you unpack the underlying causes of your food guilt and develop healthier coping strategies. I use evidence-based psychology to help teens and adults overcome food guilt and eating disorders.
Feeling guilty after eating is commonly referred to as “food guilt.” It’s an emotional response to eating certain foods (or, in some cases, eating in general) that triggers negative feelings such as regret and shame. Several things can trigger food guilt, including diet culture, societal pressure, and a poor body image. Food guilt can also be a sign of an eating disorder such as anorexia, bulimia, or binge eating.
Feeling guilty after indulging in a sugary treat is a common experience for many people in today’s world, but if you always experience intense feelings of shame and regret after eating sugar, you may be struggling with food guilt or an eating disorder. You may feel guilty about eating sugar because diet culture often demonizes sugar as “bad” or “unhealthy.” Working with a therapist who specializes in eating disorders can help you uncover why you feel so guilty after eating sugar.
If you feel guilty after eating, you may be struggling with an eating disorder like anorexia or a binge eating disorder. You may believe that you need to restrict what you’re eating and how much to stay healthy, lose weight, or fit a certain standard you created for yourself. If you struggle with feeling guilty after eating anything, get in touch with a therapist who specializes in eating disorders to uncover the root causes of your feelings and learn how to respond to them in a healthy way.
Feeling guilty after eating is a common experience for many people, but it doesn’t mean that it’s normal. You deserve to be able to eat foods you like without feeling guilty, ashamed, or remorseful. Nourishing your body is important, and you should have the freedom to eat foods you want to eat without feeling bad about it. Working with a therapist can help you develop a more balanced approach to food if you feel guilty after eating.
Everyone deserves to enjoy food without guilt or shame. It’s a source of pleasure, nourishment, and cultural connection. If you restrict what you eat and struggle with food guilt, consider working with a therapist who specializes in eating disorders.
Learn more about how evidence-based psychotherapy can help you cultivate self-acceptance and achieve a new level of personal growth.
Private therapeutic practice specializing in the treatment of mood, anxiety, and eating disorders in teens and adults. Available online & in Boca Raton, FL.
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