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Writer's pictureKaren Lacerte

Mental Health Can Be Endangered by Food Fixations

When we talk about the overall health of our psyche, food is not the first thing that comes up in conversation. Pop culture and social media frame things like childhood trauma, toxic relationships, and problematic personalities as the face of mental illness. More common reasons like consistently poor diet and lifestyle choices often go unnoticed.


Food, hunger, and diet play a much larger role when it comes to our mental health than we might think. Here are two research-backed examples of how our food habits impact mental health.


1. Food choices can lead to social isolation


There are as many types of diets and food restrictions in the world today as there are types of food. There are veganism, vegetarianism, pescetarianism, dairy-free, and gluten-free diets, just to name a few.


Whether this abundance of options is good or bad for our mental health is difficult to say. There is research, however, to show that diets with very specific food restrictions can have the unintended consequence of increasing feelings of loneliness and social isolation.


“Food consumption is an inherently social activity — as people often acquire, prepare, and eat food in social contexts,” state researchers Kaitlin Woolley, Ayelet Fishbach, and Rongham Michelle Wang. “We found that food restrictions predict loneliness. People who are unable to eat what others eat, to some extent, are less able to bond with others over the meal.”


The researchers report that the relationship between food restriction and loneliness is equivalent in magnitude to the association between being unmarried and loneliness, which they also measured in the study.


“Both food restrictions and loneliness are societal problems on the rise; this research found that they may be related epidemics,” they suggest.


If you think that your food restrictions are getting in the way of your social life and making you lonelier, it may be time to have a conversation with your loved ones to ask them to make space for it in their lives. This could mean asking them to stock up on things they can eat or planning social gatherings at eateries that have multiple diet options on the menu.


Alternatively, there may be areas where you could make food compromises that make it easier to coordinate a shared meal that is enjoyed by all. Surely, many parents reading this will have experience in this regard, perhaps in the form of mac-and-cheese and juice box dinner night or some other dubiously healthy but child-approved food combination.



2. Extreme healthy eating can be unhealthy


Weight loss and a thin body are both considered to be features of a healthy person in our society. This is a fairly reductive way to view overall health and wellness. Moreover, the pursuit of a slim body can lead to several mental health conditions, including eating disorders.


Orthorexia is a condition associated with significant dietary restrictions including the omission of entire food groups. Orthorectics tend not to consume food that has been processed with pesticides, herbicides, or artificial substances, which seems reasonable. But they are highly worried about the techniques and materials involved in food preparation. Sound familiar?


Simply put, orthorexia is such an extreme form of healthy eating, it’s unhealthy.


“Orthorexia nervosa is a type of eating disorder that can easily hide behind the premise of clean eating or healthy eating,” explains Dr. Wendy Oliver-Pyatt, chief medical officer of Within Health.


According to Oliver-Pyatt, the pursuit of health for orthorexics turns into somewhat of a mechanical experience.


“The social aspect of eating and enjoyment of eating is considered irrelevant to the sufferer, who will forgo social interactions and potentially meaningful and important aspects of life to pursue healthy eating,” she says. “The hyper-focus on the ingredients in foods devoids the person from the very real human, lived, and joyful experience of eating.”


For people at risk of developing this condition, Oliver-Pyatt suggests focusing on fixing one’s relationship with food by practicing what she calls internal regulation.


“When our eating becomes internally regulated, which we call mindful eating, our eating patterns shift in such a way that we are neither over- nor under-eating,” she says. “The orchestra of neurotransmitters and hormones that connect the brain and gut, and body, can all interact and guide us toward eating according to our biological and even, yes, our psychological needs.”


Conclusion: While it may sound trite, you are indeed what you eat, even when it comes to your mental health. Research on diet and its effects on our mind point to a reality that often goes ignored: mental health is not just about addressing your emotions in therapy it is also about maintaining a healthy lifestyle.


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