Your relationship with food, your body, or eating may feel complicated, exhausting, or hard to explain to others. On the outside, it might not always look like something is wrong—but internally, it can take up a lot of space.
You might notice:
- Constant thoughts about food, weight, or your body
- Feeling out of control around food—or trying hard to stay in control
- Cycles of restricting, overeating, or binge eating
- Guilt or shame after eating
- Avoiding certain foods, meals, or eating in front of others
- Comparing your body to others or feeling uncomfortable in your own skin
- Using food or control around food to cope with stress, emotions, or feeling overwhelmed
These challenges around food and body image can start to affect your mood, relationships, energy, and overall sense of well-being.
You don’t have to meet a specific diagnosis to struggle. If your relationship with food or your body feels distressing, that matters.
Eating Disorder Therapy That Supports Lasting Change
Eating disorder therapy isn’t just about food.
It’s about understanding what food, eating, and body image have come to represent in your life—and finding new ways to cope, relate, and feel more at ease.
In eating disorder therapy, we gently work to:
- Reduce the intensity of food-related thoughts and behaviors
- Build a more stable, consistent relationship with eating
- Understand emotional triggers connected to eating patterns
- Decrease shame, self-criticism, and body-related distress
- Strengthen your ability to cope with difficult feelings in other ways
- Reconnect with your body in a more supportive, respectful way
Healing doesn’t mean giving up control. It means not feeling controlled by food or your body dissatisfaction anymore.
What the Process Looks Like
Starting eating disorder therapy can bring up mixed feelings. Part of you may want things to change, while another part feels unsure or even afraid to let go of familiar patterns. We approach this with care and without judgment.
Early sessions often focus on:
- Understanding your relationship with food, body image, and control
- Exploring patterns that feel stuck or overwhelming
- Building trust and creating a sense of safety in the work
From there, therapy may include:
- Developing more consistent and supportive eating patterns
- Learning tools to navigate urges, emotions, and triggers
- Exploring underlying experiences that may be connected to your relationship with food and your body
We move at a pace that feels manageable, with an emphasis on collaboration rather than pressure.
You’re Not Alone And Support Is Available
Many people struggle quietly with food and body image. With the right support, it’s possible to feel more steady, more flexible, and more at peace in your relationship with food and your body.
If you’re ready for things to feel different, we’re here to help.
You can schedule a consultation to learn more about eating disorder therapy and see if working together feels like the right fit
