Top 10 Reasons Why Women Can Eat Too Much

Having once eaten my way up to 240 pounds and a size 22, I ate for many reasons that had nothing to do with body hunger.

Overeating is becoming even more common in an age of food abundance, advertising, and addictive man-altered foods.

Although both sexes can struggle with eating too much, I'm gearing this article toward women simply because I've heard our stories most often through emails, plus that was my experience!

Here are the top 10 reasons women can eat too much, gleaned from my experience and emails over the nearly 20 years that takebackyourtemple.com has been online.

See if you can relate! These reasons are in no particular order:

1. Permissible Self Care

You may feel guilty or that it is selfish to take time for yourself and have become so busy taking care of everyone that you put yourself on the shelf.

So food becomes a way to "rest" and make yourself feel special without feeling guilty - at least temporarily.

2. Emotional Novocaine

Food becomes a way to numb yourself to uncomfortable feelings, such as anger, anxiety, stress, boredom, depression or frustration.

3. The Food is There

Leftovers are calling you from the kitchen or you are over-enthusiastic in "tasting" the food you are preparing.

Before you know it, you've grabbed a little bit of this and that until you have consumed the equivalent calories in a meal.

4. Last Supper Eating

If you are a diet veteran, then you are probably very familiar with "Last Supper" eating (also known as "Get while the getting is good").

You are so accustomed to going on diets that you tell yourself that you better eat up your favorite "goodie" because you won’t be allowed to have it ever again.

5. Relationship Building

Food becomes a way you show love to others. After I got married, I found myself gaining weight. I discovered a simple reason for it.

I had started fixing my portion sizes larger subconsciously.

I was cooking for my husband and preparing his plate as well, matching my portion sizes to his!

He is a big guy and I’m a petite woman, so no wonder I was getting bigger eating as much as he was.

To deal with the issue, I asked him to prepare his own plate or when I prepared his plate, I was careful to fix the portion size appropriate for my size.

6. Something to Do

Eating becomes a habit that you do when you are bored or you use it as a form of procrastination.

You use it as a delaying tactic to avoid an activity that you view as painful, either consciously or unconsciously.

7. Food Insecurity

You may have experienced hunger as a child if your parent had difficulty putting food on the table.

The official name for this one is "food insecurity."

Deep down, you are afraid of experiencing insecurity from lack of food again, so you overeat as an insurance policy.

8. It's New and Improved

Food becomes a form of excitement. I experienced this one on vacation once.

When you travel, do you anticipate eating food you’ve never eaten before (new food) or eating familiar food, but prepared a new way (improved food)?

This can also happen when you attend a new restaurant or want to try a new food item advertised on television.

The fear of scarcity is behind this one: "If I don’t eat it now, I may never get the opportunity to eat it again."

9. It's Free

You can be vulnerable to eating too much at church dinners, banquets, family holiday dinners, or eating out on an employer expense account.

Since you are not paying for it, you want to eat as much as you can to take full advantage of the freebie.

10. Bottomless Food Pits

Have you ever had the experience of sitting down to watch T.V. with a bag of buttered popcorn or potato chips in hand, and then found yourself reaching into an empty bag a short while later? If so, then you fell into a bottomless food pit.

It's keeping a large serving in front of you, eating mindlessly until it is gone.

I wrote this article to make you aware of the many environmental cues that can tempt you to eat when you aren't hungry. In that way, you can seek God's wisdom as to effective ways to handle them. He promises:

If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him (James 1:5)."

Which of the top 10 reasons do you struggle with most often? Take a moment to write them all of them down.

Then submit these areas to the Lord in prayer, asking Him to renew your mind. Humble yourself and set your mind on obedience to the Lord so that food will regain its proper place in your life.

Your change may not happen overnight, but keep meditating on God's word and keep practicing whatever the Lord teaches you to turn that situation around.

It may not be easy. After all, they don't call it a "Faith of fight" for nothing.

But if you hang in there and refuse to give up, you are destined to win!

About the author 

Kimberly Taylor

Kimberly Taylor is an author and Christian life coach with a heart to help others struggling with emotional eating and weight loss. Once 240 pounds and a size 22, she can testify of God’s goodness and healing power to overcome. She lost 85 pounds as a result of implementing techniques to overcome emotional eating and binge eating disorder.

Kim is the author of "The Take Back Your Temple Program," which teaches Christians how to take control of their weight God's way and the books "The Weight Loss Scriptures" and "The Weight Loss Prayers."

Kim has been featured in Prevention Magazine, Charisma Magazine and on CBN’s 'The 700 Club' television program.