Watch this week's lesson:
GLP-1 medications change a lot about how hunger feels. Many patients notice quieter appetite, reduced food noise, and smaller portions that come more naturally. But you may also notice that urges to eat still show up β even when you're not physically hungry.
This is completely normal, and it doesn't mean your medication isn't working.
Two types of hunger
Eating is driven by two different systems in the body:
Homeostatic hunger is physical β your body signaling a need for energy. It builds gradually, improves after eating, and is regulated by hormones like ghrelin and leptin. GLP-1 medications primarily work on this system, which is why physical hunger often feels quieter.
Hedonic hunger is driven by reward, emotion, stress, memory, and habit. It can feel sudden or cue-based, may be tied to a specific craving, and can persist even after you're full. GLP-1 medications may influence this system for some people β but they don't eliminate emotional cues or learned habits.
Understanding which type of hunger you're experiencing is the foundation of this lesson.
Before assuming it's emotional eating β check fueling first
Appetite suppression does not mean your body needs less energy. If you've been under-eating because hunger cues are quieter, you may experience symptoms like fatigue, irritability, low concentration, or strong urges to eat later in the day.
Before labeling an urge as emotional eating, ask yourself:
When did I last eat?
Have I been skipping meals because I wasn't hungry?
Did my last meal include protein, carbohydrates, and fat?
Has it been more than 3β4 hours since I ate?
Consistent fueling is always the first step.
Emotional eating is a coping tool β not a character flaw
Food is genuinely connected to comfort, celebration, connection, and culture. Using food for emotional reasons isn't a failure β it's human. The goal isn't to eliminate food from coping entirely. It's to expand your options so food becomes one tool among many, rather than the only tool available.
When an urge to eat appears and fueling isn't the issue, try pausing to identify what you actually need. Common needs that get expressed through eating include:
Comfort or stress relief
Rest or recovery
Stimulation or boredom relief
A break or transition between tasks
Connection with others
A cognitive reset
Building your coping toolbelt
Once you've identified the need, you can choose a tool that fits. Some examples by category:
Regulation: Deep breathing, a short walk, stretching
Comfort: Music, a shower, pet interaction, a warm blanket
Connection: Texting or calling someone, sitting near others
Rest/Recovery: A quiet break, an earlier bedtime, a short rest
Stimulation: Changing tasks, going outside, a creative activity
Cognitive Reset: Journaling, reframing thoughts, problem solving
Distraction/Transition: Changing rooms, drinking water, starting a small task
Food doesn't have to disappear from coping β but it works best when it's part of a broader toolkit, not the whole strategy.
What progress looks like
Progress with emotional eating is often subtle. It may look like pausing after eating instead of spiraling, having a smaller reaction to a trigger, recovering more quickly, or simply noticing a pattern without judgment. That growing awareness is real progress.
Confidence builds when you learn "I can respond differently" β not "I never struggle."
Your action steps this week
Using Worksheet 10, practice the following:
Pause once daily before eating and check in
Identify whether hunger is physical or emotional
Try one new coping tool from the list above
Notice emotional patterns without judgment
Set both a Weekly Goal (a skill to practice) and a Minimum Habit (a simpler version for hard days).
π Download Worksheet 10 to use the awareness tracking table and reflection prompts throughout the week.
