Intuitive eating: Reclaiming your body’s original language

By Anusha Wijeyakumar, Wellness Consultant, Hoag’s Women’s Health Institute
We have been conditioned to follow external "rules"—counting macros, timing windows, and eliminating entire food groups until we can no longer hear the quiet, steady voice of our own biology. Intuitive eating is the process of unhooking from those external rules and returning to your body’s original language.
The three pillars of intuitive eating:
1. Dethrone the "food police"
We have been socialized to categorize food as "good" or "bad," "clean" or "dirty." This moral labeling of nutrition creates a constant state of low-level anxiety in the nervous system. When we eat a "bad" food, we feel like "bad" people.
The Shift: Recognize that all food is energy. When we remove the moral weight, the forbidden fruit loses its power to trigger a binge-and-shame cycle.
2. Honor your biological hunger
Chronic dieting keeps the body in a state of "survival mode." When you ignore hunger cues, your body triggers a primal famine response, slowing your metabolism and increasing cortisol.
The Shift: Keeping your body biologically fed with adequate energy and carbohydrates is a prerequisite for a regulated nervous system. You cannot be mindful if your brain is screaming for glucose.
3. The satisfaction factor
In our rush to be healthy, we often forget to be satisfied. We eat the dry salad because it’s "good," but our spirit remains hungry.
The Shift: Ancestral traditions, like those found in Ayurveda, emphasize the importance of the experience of eating—the colors, the spices, and the joy of the meal. When you eat what you actually want to eat in an environment that is inviting, the pleasure you feel helps your body switch from "fight-or-flight" to "rest-and-digest."
Learn more about the Hoag for Her Center for Wellness Program.


