Mental Health Condition
Disordered Eating.
Disordered eating affects more than just how we eat—it shapes how we feel, cope, and relate to our bodies. In this article, we explore the emotional roots of disordered eating and how therapy can help restore a balanced, compassionate relationship with food and self.

Understanding Disordered Eating: Beyond the Myths
Disordered eating is often misunderstood or minimized—but for many, it’s a significant struggle that quietly affects both mental and physical well-being. It doesn’t always fit the criteria for a clinical eating disorder like anorexia or bulimia, but that doesn’t make the distress any less real. Disordered eating includes a wide spectrum of behaviors—rigid food rules, chronic dieting, guilt after eating, obsessive thoughts about weight, or even cycles of bingeing and restriction—that can deeply impact a person’s relationship with food and body image.
Common Signs and Patterns
Disordered eating can take many forms. Some people skip meals regularly and suppress hunger cues, while others overeat in response to emotional triggers. You might find yourself constantly checking food labels, avoiding entire food groups, or feeling intense anxiety around meals or social gatherings. Often, these behaviors are driven by a desire for control, self-punishment, or the pursuit of an idealized body image promoted by diet culture.
Signs to look out for include:
- Obsessive thoughts about food, calories, or exercise
- Emotional eating or binge episodes followed by guilt
- Rigid eating routines or food avoidance without medical necessity
- Drastic weight changes, fatigue, or digestive issues
- Isolation from social events involving food
Emotional Roots of Disordered Eating
At its core, disordered eating is rarely about food alone. It can be a coping mechanism for deeper emotional pain—anxiety, trauma, shame, or a history of body shaming. For some, controlling food intake offers a sense of stability when life feels overwhelming. For others, eating provides emotional comfort during times of distress.
Many people who experience disordered eating have also struggled with perfectionism, low self-worth, or childhood experiences that shaped how they see their bodies and worth.
Healing the Relationship with Food and Body
Therapy offers a space to unlearn harmful patterns and build a more peaceful relationship with food and self-image. At Tête Therapy, we take an inclusive and compassionate approach—working with clients across all body types, gender identities, and cultural backgrounds. Our goal isn’t weight loss—it’s healing.
Our therapists draw from evidence-based practices like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), and somatic approaches to help clients:
- Identify emotional triggers behind disordered eating
- Challenge harmful thought patterns and food-related guilt
- Reconnect with natural hunger and fullness cues
- Build self-compassion and body neutrality
We may also integrate Art Therapy, Mindfulness, or Attachment-Based Therapy depending on what best suits your needs.
You Deserve Support
Whether your struggles feel “mild” or overwhelming, you deserve support and healing. You don’t need a diagnosis to reach out. If food feels like it’s controlling your life—or if your self-worth feels tied to your body—therapy can help you reconnect with yourself in a more compassionate and sustainable way.
Let’s move toward nourishment, not punishment. Toward peace, not perfection.
In-Person Offices
Our locations
Tête Dumbo
Tête Miami
Tête Manhattan
Common Questions
We Have Answers
To begin your journey, send us a message with your contact information and a brief description of what you’re looking for. Our Client Care Coordinator will respond within the next business day to answer any questions and guide you through the following steps.
