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5 Ways to Overcome Food Cravings

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Hiya Gorgeous,

You know the triggers. The pint of ice cream calling you from the freezer. The chocolate chip cookies taunting you from the kitchen counter. The nachos gnawing away at your willpower during happy hour. But, is it the food that’s pestering you? Of course not—it’s cravings.

We all have them, but do we really understand why? And more importantly, do we know how to tame them? In the past, I’ve been so deeply under the spell of my cravings that I’ve sprayed Windex on my Ben & Jerry’s (after throwing it in the garbage, because it was the only way I’d stop myself from pulling the darn pint out of the trash so I could keep eating it!).

You probably already know that food cravings can have little to do with hunger, but you may not be aware of how they work. Cravings have both biological and psychological components. The most common foods we crave are sugar, carbohydrates, chocolate, salt and, for some, cheese. Let’s walk through the main causes of these cravings and a few helpful tips for overcoming them!

5 Causes of Food Cravings

Leptin Resistance

Leptin is a hormone your body produces in your fat tissue. It’s primary job is to stimulate your appetite and tell you when you’re full. This all works fine when your stomach and your brain are in the same reality. But, the problem starts when constant surges of leptin trick your brain into feeling hungry, even when you’re not.

What causes this? One culprit is having too much body fat—more fat means more leptin is produced. Another cause is eating a diet high in sugary foods and processed carbs. The sugar triggers your fat cells to release surges of leptin. Whatever the reason, constant surges of leptin can lead to leptin resistance, which creates a feedback loop and further dulls your ability to perceive your real appetite. Eating a healthy, balanced diet is the best way to keep a normal balance of leptin in your body and, therefore, reduce your chances of being swept away by cravings (study).

Low levels of serotonin

Serotonin is a “feel-good” neurotransmitter produced mainly in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. It’s directly tied to our mood, appetite and digestion. Eating carbs and sugar increases the release of serotonin (study), making us feel fabulous (temporarily). So, when our levels are low, our brains think, “Oh! That candy bar or bagel is going to fix this!”

A low serotonin level can be due to a variety of things, including poor gut health (90% of serotonin is made in the gut), alcohol consumption (study), depression, anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder. I don’t know about you, but I’m much more vulnerable to sugar and crappy carbohydrate cravings when I’m feeling down in the dumps.

Endorphins and Food Addiction

Eating sugary foods, and even salt (hello, chips!), increases the production of endorphins in your body (study). Endorphins are basically opiates that make us feel relaxed. So when we eat these foods and experience this feeling, we want more—similar to the way drug users get addicted to narcotics. In fact, a recent study shows that sugar can actually have a more intense feeling of reward than cocaine (study). It’s that powerful.

This is why the drug Naloxone (an opiate-blocker given to stop heroin and other narcotics from affecting the brain) also blocks the appeal and overeating tendencies for sugar, fat and chocolate (study). Another recent study looking at the addictive qualities of foods found that highly processed foods that are filled with fat and sugar can cause addictive eating because of their rapid rate of absorption (study). So the more you can avoid packaged and processed foods, the more control you’ll have over your food choices.

A wonky gut

As mentioned earlier, low serotonin levels are linked to cravings, and your gut is the epicenter of serotonin production. In order to maintain feel-good levels of serotonin, your gut needs to be in tip-top shape so it can absorb nutrients from your food and pump out serotonin through your gastrointestinal tract.

This process is greatly dependent on healthy levels and the proper balance of good bacteria. But when your diet isn’t very healthy, the bad bacteria can overpower the good guys, creating more food cravings! Cultivating a healthy balance of good bacteria by eating fermented foods, taking probiotics and embracing other gut-happy habits can create the intestinal peace necessary to calm your cravings.

Emotional Triggers

This is a biggie. Sadness, boredom, stress, poor self-esteem, negative body image (and the list goes on) can prompt you to cruise the pantry. Who doesn’t want a sleeve of Oreos when they look back on a painful breakup, losing a job or just having a bad day?

I refer to this as phantom hunger. But since food cravings are often fleeting and disappear within an hour, choosing to eat a healthier food or opting for a mood-boosting activity can satisfy you till the craving passes.

Now, let’s discuss some more strategies for how to stop food cravings…

 

5 Tips for Tackling Food Cravings

1. Stay hydrated.

Make sure you’re drinking about half your body weight (lbs) in ounces of water daily (if you’re 140 lbs, drink 70 oz of water a day). Thirst and dehydration make you feel hungry, and may kick up your food cravings. Drink water throughout the day to help you stay hydrated and control your hunger. Add a little lemon to your water or switch things up by making a cup of tea. Finish things up with some oil pulling.

2. Avoid sugary foods and processed carbs.

To prevent leptin surges and blood sugar crashes that pump up your appetite, avoid processed carbs and sweets as much as possible. Sometimes the healthy protein in a handful of almonds or sunflower seeds is enough to help steer you away from the sugary foods. And you can still enjoy tasty treats, just whip them up with lower sugar, higher fiber and higher protein ingredients, like dark chocolate, almond flour, cassava flour and bean flours. These ingredients won’t trigger cravings and feed an appetite that just won’t quit.

3. Exercise and stay rested.

Rather than relying on French fries and cookies to help you feel relaxed and happy, go for a brisk walk during the day and get into bed a little earlier in the evening. These habits produce endorphins just like the best tasting truffles on the planet. Plus, the exercise may boost your serotonin levels—something that should help you skip sugar and extra carbs more easily, too. And have you ever noticed that your food cravings seem to increase during PMS? As your hormone levels fluctuate, cravings can start to increase — so getting in a workout and some quality sleep are totally key during that time of the month too.

4. Make meditation and sunshine a priority.

Taking a few minutes every day to meditate and getting 10-15 minutes a day of sunshine or light therapy may boost serotonin levels so you’re not reaching for Snickerdoodles to turn your mood around. Want to give it a try? Grab my free Pep Talk meditation—you’ll love it! If I’m still looking for a little more relaxation, I’ll practice some EFT, get it all out in my journal, or I’ll watch something that makes me feel all happy inside.

5. Avoid trigger foods for 21 days.

Your taste buds have a fantastic memory! If you really want to break food cravings, one of the best ways is to avoid eating those foods for a set period of time. Find healthier options to grab when you’re craving candy, cheese or chips—stuff like low-glycemic smoothies and desserts, fresh berries, guacamole or hummus with veggies or rice crackers, raw cashews and nut “cheese”. You can also incorporate more fermented foods which are good for your gut, like homemade kefir and kombucha. Keep these healthy foods on hand, and try to think about it like you’re adding in, rather than taking out. And here’s the best news — your taste buds will actually change over time. Your body will start to crave the healthy, whole foods once you begin to make them your new habit. The junk just won’t taste the same!

Most importantly, you gotta go easy on yourself. Trust that your cravings will fade, ride the wave, and you will build new, healthier habits.

Does all this mean you should say buh-bye to birthday cake, French fries and bagels—no, sir! But if you feel like your food cravings are running your life, I hope understanding them and trying these tips will put you back in the driver’s seat again.

Your turn: What’s your go-to craving curber? Let me know in the comments below—it’s a space where we can all learn from each other and share our tricks. Oh! Here’s one more tip: brush your teeth, floss and gargle. Basically, close up shop. I don’t know about you but I’m less likely to scarf stuff down after I’ve taken care of some chomper hygiene.

Peace & progress,

Add a comment
  1. Food cravings are one of the biggest nightmares for dieters who are curious to lose a few pounds out of excessive stored fat. Even healthy eaters also get attracted to tasty sweets and flavor-rich snacks. These small mistakes can easily break your weight loss schedule, and you may lose your track to success.

  2. Mary Ann Dragoo says:

    Very helpful information. I have a rare form of cancer, Polycythemia Vera, diagnosed July, 2015. On chemo drug twice a day. Platelets too high, require removal of a pint of blood occasionally. I am delving into how mold foods affect my platelets. I recall hearing platelets are mold. Must determine if this is accurate information. If so, avoiding mold foods would seem imperative. Your thoughts would be welcomed.

  3. Max says:

    Hi, I had this problem for some time and all of this stopped because of a miracle tea

  4. Shiela Mae says:

    I’ve been doing this for a long time now and it really helped me a lot. If you love tea, you can try this one as well.
    It’s a West African Red Tea.

  5. Pessy says:

    Sounds good. Will try your 5 step to getting rid of cravings for junk. I’m on skinnier side too and would like to maintain it.

  6. Christina MCCAUSLAND says:

    I was dominated by a sweet craving that went on for weeks. I made the major decision to swap my habitual toast and dark delicious marmalade on my morning toast for Marmite which is full of B Vits. The taste of Marmite is very strong and it somehow dispensed with my sweet craving within a day !… I over enthused and smeared too much on my toast and developed heartburn… so it’s better to go easy. (i know that some people hate it) but Marmite is now part of my armour ! What do you think ?

  7. Lindiwe says:

    I’m jogging when I come back even after my work out I have strong craving. I need to stop that sweet I stop them long ago I’m eating more fruits and provita bread only

  8. AW says:

    Wow, reading this tonight, Sunday, and I am feeling awful, just like after most weekends. I’ve cut out alcohol, junk food and mostly all dairy. But because of socialising at weekends, and because basically all people around me (mostly my family) are junkaholics, it’s always somethings with cheese, or somethings with sugar that makes it down the hatch at weekends. I make things, brings snacks, try so hard, but it feels like I live in the kitchen at the weekend, if I am to follow my diet. Weeks are great! What does everyone else do? Sunday around 6, sitting here with a super bloated tum, and tomorrow morning’s run feels, shall I say, very very distant!

  9. Jane says:

    What works for just getting surgery foods off your mind. If all u want to think of is wanting those types of food?

  10. Robert Marr says:

    Cupcakes or donuts. Sweet and breadie
    Also I go for sweet drinks.

  11. Sue harriss says:

    Doing Avatar consciousness exercises, it’s the fastest way I’ve found to come to a higher state of consciousness. The Avatar work puts me directly in touch with the feelings I’m resisting that are creating the cravings. Also doing some yoga or other excersize helps

  12. David says:

    Thank you very much for this wonderful tips. This shows why you are so beautiful.

  13. Gayle Mulvey says:

    Kris,

    I thought to share this with you. Another explanation for sugar cravings… 🙂
    It is my experience that the craving for sugar is the experience of the physiological withdrawal of sugar from the body. If you have a piece of candy at 4:00 p.m. in the afternoon, you will experience a craving for candy the next day at approximately 4:00 p.m. when the sugar starts to leave the body. I learned this years ago when I stopped eating sugar.
    The first day after not eating sugar has the strongest craving sensation, the second day, a little less, the the third day a little less until the craving finally disappears around the second week. This experience has allowed me to have an objective approach to how sugar reacts in my body. The objective awareness of the physiological sensations allowed me to determine if I wanted to give in to the physiological withdrawal or just say to myself, “I know what is going on with my body and I do not have to give in to it.” This also applies to other types of sweeteners. Now, if I eat sweets, it has to be worth it. It has to be decadent with the finest of ingredients and something I cannot resist. I also noticed my taste buds have changed so that some sweets I enjoyed eating just do not taste as good as they used to because they do not have the quality of ingredients that make it worth eating. It is like refining your taste for fine wine. I have not owned a scale in 40 years and I am in complete control of what I eat and my weight. I do love Hagen Daz ice cream rocky road with dulce de leche and I could not resist a freshly made bread pudding, still warm from the bakery of one our local hotels. But again, it has to be “worth it”.

  14. Shasha says:

    Blood sugar going up/crashing down may make person want to eat more. When adrenals are burned out a person may need to eat more. Gluten is like Heroin and sugar like cocaine to the brain. Gluten stimulates opioid receptors which cause a craving. Organic brown rice used to get me over sugar issues, but now I can’t eat it due to a small amount of gluten in it which hurts my gut lining.

  15. Thank you Kris,
    I have applied the same principles with cigarette cravings, paying atention to myself.
    I decided to fully take care of my body, and i am having good results.
    Sometimes i feel i lack the necesarry confidence but i am working on it.
    I believe i would have more confidence if i would have more business conections.

    • jane says:

      I eat about 80-90% healthy but when it comes to cravings and eating sugar and carbs and bad on peanut butter I just can’t stop. When I start I just can”t stop until I am feel like crap. I am so desperate. Any help I would appreciate. Just want to cry writing this. Makes me not like myself. Help..

  16. Cat says:

    Cheese is my weakness. When I’m depressed, lonely, sad – it’s my go to, when I’m happy it’s my go too, when I’m not sleeping cause I’m hungry it’s my go to.

  17. andy johnson says:

    Hi Kris, these tips are very helpful to me because I am a food lover. I can’t control my junk food eating Crave. So I hope so these tips solve my this food crave.

  18. Danielle says:

    Dear Kris,

    About your wellness program, because I don’t use facebook, i” ll leave my comment here.

    I love your video’s and insightfull thoughts on health. There is this problem that limits me every time: eating disorder. I have had 24 years of therapy of all kinds and believe me some of this has only made me worse, not better. Also I have had a burn out about 7 years ago and I am still coping with exhaustion, low self esteem and I do not trust my body anymore on being capable to recover ever. This stresses me out and I feel like I am drowning in cortisol.
    So when you say that stress, fatigue and beliefs are your biggest enemy, this makes me want to cry because I do not know anymore how to overcome this crap!
    I will definatly try your program and hope you do not take those video’s down because they are the kind of pep talk I need when intrinsink motivation fails me again.
    I do hope you will tell me how to keep motivated (the blog about it was helpfull) and give me more tips because I need them honey!
    Thanks for what you are doing for others, I think it’s incredible! And sorry for the bad grammer, I am from Holland.
    Lots of love
    Danielle

  19. Jen says:

    Thank you bunches for this super helpful information and tips! When I feel like a craving is threatening to control my mood and focus, I lay down on the floor (if I’m able). I lay down with my legs up at a 90 degree angle, which also is something I do to help my lower back/back/neck tension. Laying down, closing my eyes, and listening to relaxing music or a nice meditation really helps to curb the craving and empower me to overcome it. 🙂

  20. jamie says:

    Love this article! Once I have overcame the food cravings, it’s a great feeling! I am 23 years old and I’ve been having so much trouble for the pass year with losing weight. I mediate, do yoga, see an acupuncturist, and go to the gym. I am constantly active. I also see a therapist as well since my dad passed away over 2 years ago as well as attended a grief group for a year. I drink around 90 oz of water a day and take multivitamins and probiotics as well. My diet for the most part, is very good! I eat mostly plant based items with some grains in the morning and at night. I have cut out a lot of processed sugar and switched to more organic food items. I have no idea what to do and I know I should not stress about it because stress does not help but it’s really bugging me. I just have no idea why I am 23 and cannot lose weight and I live a pretty healthy lifestyle. I’ll take any advice, thanks!

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