Diet Culture Is Hijacking Your Focus

It’s not just the hunger, it’s the message that you deserve to be hungry

Virgie Tovar
Forge

--

Illustration: Jiro Bevis

MMia Feuer’s beautifully calloused hands unconsciously fluttered over her belly as she talked. A sculptor who has shown her work all over the world, she said she was dealing with a creative blockage.

At Babecamp, a weekend intensive I lead in San Francisco that helps women break up with dieting and diet culture, she told me that she could feel that she had it in her to create something truly remarkable, and she couldn’t figure out what, exactly, was stopping her.

But I had a hunch.

Have you ever noticed what happens when you’re hungry? Time seems to slow down. Routine tasks become impossibly difficult. You lose focus as this deeply human instinct eclipses your every thought. Sometimes you get irritable about small things, or unaccountably angry.

This altered state (sometimes known as “hanger”) makes sense when you consider the gut’s profound influence on the brain, and vice-versa. Evolution has wired us to seek food. When people experience hunger daily, according to the American Psychological Association, their mental energy is used to “focus on food, which can lead to neglect in other areas of life.”

When all you can think about…

--

--

Virgie Tovar
Forge
Writer for

Virgie Tovar is an author, activist and one of the nation’s leading experts and lecturers on weight-based discrimination and body image.