
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Kait breaks down one of the most confusing and uncomfortable parts of eating disorder recovery: relearning hunger, honoring hunger, and learning how to tolerate fullness without panic.nShe explains why restrictive eating disorders often disrupt natural hunger cues and how that can make recovery feel incredibly counterintuitive. When physical hunger cues disappear, mental hunger often takes over, showing up as constant thoughts about food, meals, snacks, and what to eat next. Kait emphasizes that mental hunger is real hunger and deserves to be honored.
The episode also explores why mechanical eating can be an important recovery tool, how fullness can feel intense and triggering early on, and why that discomfort does not mean you are doing recovery wrong. Kait shares her own lived experience of losing hunger cues, rebuilding trust with her body, and learning that slip-ups are not the same thing as relapse. Overall, this episode is a reminder that recovery is not all or nothing, healing takes time, and your body is not broken, it is trying to heal.
Episode takeaways:
Losing hunger cues is a common symptom of restrictive eating disorders and does not mean your body is broken
Mental hunger is real hunger and should be honored just like physical hunger
Thinking about food all the time is often a sign of deprivation, not obsession or lack of control
Mechanical eating can help restore consistency and rebuild trust with your body when hunger cues are unreliable
Fullness can feel physically and emotionally overwhelming early in recovery, especially after long periods of restriction
Feeling full does not mean you ate too much, gained weight, or did something wrong
Recovery requires learning how to sit with discomfort without compensating or trying to “fix” it with eating disorder behaviors
Slip-ups are not relapse. They are part of the learning process and an opportunity to adjust and move forward
There is no universal timeline for when hunger cues return or when eating feels natural again
You are still sick enough and worthy of recovery, whether your hunger cues are gone, inconsistent, or still present
Connect with Kait
📸 @bitebybiterecovery
🔗 bitebybiterecovery.org
📞 Interested in 1:1 recovery coaching? Book your FREE discovery call
🍒 Kait’s Recovery Resources
Affiliate Links
COMFRT
FIND THE GOOD
By Kaitlyn Moresi5
88 ratings
In this episode, Kait breaks down one of the most confusing and uncomfortable parts of eating disorder recovery: relearning hunger, honoring hunger, and learning how to tolerate fullness without panic.nShe explains why restrictive eating disorders often disrupt natural hunger cues and how that can make recovery feel incredibly counterintuitive. When physical hunger cues disappear, mental hunger often takes over, showing up as constant thoughts about food, meals, snacks, and what to eat next. Kait emphasizes that mental hunger is real hunger and deserves to be honored.
The episode also explores why mechanical eating can be an important recovery tool, how fullness can feel intense and triggering early on, and why that discomfort does not mean you are doing recovery wrong. Kait shares her own lived experience of losing hunger cues, rebuilding trust with her body, and learning that slip-ups are not the same thing as relapse. Overall, this episode is a reminder that recovery is not all or nothing, healing takes time, and your body is not broken, it is trying to heal.
Episode takeaways:
Losing hunger cues is a common symptom of restrictive eating disorders and does not mean your body is broken
Mental hunger is real hunger and should be honored just like physical hunger
Thinking about food all the time is often a sign of deprivation, not obsession or lack of control
Mechanical eating can help restore consistency and rebuild trust with your body when hunger cues are unreliable
Fullness can feel physically and emotionally overwhelming early in recovery, especially after long periods of restriction
Feeling full does not mean you ate too much, gained weight, or did something wrong
Recovery requires learning how to sit with discomfort without compensating or trying to “fix” it with eating disorder behaviors
Slip-ups are not relapse. They are part of the learning process and an opportunity to adjust and move forward
There is no universal timeline for when hunger cues return or when eating feels natural again
You are still sick enough and worthy of recovery, whether your hunger cues are gone, inconsistent, or still present
Connect with Kait
📸 @bitebybiterecovery
🔗 bitebybiterecovery.org
📞 Interested in 1:1 recovery coaching? Book your FREE discovery call
🍒 Kait’s Recovery Resources
Affiliate Links
COMFRT
FIND THE GOOD

166 Listeners

228 Listeners

49 Listeners

109 Listeners

7 Listeners

49 Listeners

67 Listeners

20,222 Listeners

156 Listeners

33 Listeners

21 Listeners

20 Listeners

9 Listeners

20 Listeners