Comfort Vs Emotional Eating

When eating doesn’t follow hunger…are you responding in the right way?


A short, clinically grounded training to help you distinguish between comfort eating and emotional eating, and respond with greater clarity and confidence in your client work.

If you work with food, you'll probably recognise clients who:

  • Eat outside of hunger
  • Describe food as 'comforting'
  • Struggle to change patterns despite insight

And in those moments, it’s not always clear what the best next step is because not all eating outside of hunger is the same.

And when we misread the behaviour, we often choose the wrong intervention.


What You’ll Learn

In this focused training, you’ll learn how to:

  • Clearly distinguish between comfort eating and emotional eating
  • Understand the function of eating behaviours in context
  • Avoid over-pathologising normal, adaptive patterns
  • Recognise when food is acting as a primary emotion regulation tool
  • Respond in ways that support change, without increasing shame

Why This Matters

One of the most common mistakes in practice is trying to remove a behaviour before understanding what it’s doing.

If a client is using food as a way of coping and we take that away too quickly we may be removing an important coping strategy, not just a 'bad habit'.

And that can leave both you and the client feeling stuck, frustrated, or ineffective.

This session will help you work more precisely, and with greater confidence, in those moments.


What You Get

  • 30-minute pre-recorded training
  • Clear, clinically grounded framework
  • Practical lens you can apply immediately in your sessions
  • Instant access after purchase
  • Watch in your own time
  • Keep and revisit as needed

This training is designed for:

  • Nutritionists, nutritional therapists and dietitians
  • Therapists and psychologists
  • Coaches and other professionals working with food and behaviour
Created by a Chartered Psychologist with a Master’s in Nutrition, specialising in the intersection of food, behaviour, and mental health.