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What Exactly Is Food Noise?

Constantly thinking about food? While it’s normal to think about food from time to time, constant thoughts that distract from other tasks can become a problem. It’s called ‘food noise’ – and it’s more common than you think.

food noise

What is food noise?

Food noise is the internal dialogue that a person has with oneself about food. The mind is meant to drift – and sometimes it can drift towards thoughts of food, like what to eat, when to eat, how much time till the next snack, etc. But when these thoughts are excessive, food noise can disrupt a person’s ability to live a happy, healthy life.

How does it develop?

Food noise can develop from a variety of social conditioning and cultural factors, hormonal cues, genetics, and psychological elements. Everyone develops a unique relationship with food, but there are some internal and external triggers that commonly lead to food noise.

Think about it – the body is supposed to react and give us reminders to eat. That’s a basic survival tactic. When you walk past a bakery and get a whiff of fresh-baked croissants or chocolate chip cookies, the scent alone may trigger the mind to think about food.

Hormones can also trigger food noise. If you skip your normal breakfast routine, there’s a good chance your stomach may grumble by mid-morning. This is an internal cue triggered by your appetite to get you consciously thinking about the next meal.

How does it impact behavior and mental health?

Consciously thinking about food is healthy, because it can help motivate us to fuel the body. But when food noise can’t be dismissed to focus on other things – like crossing the street safely or completing an important task – then it can have serious implications for a person’s behavioral and mental health.

In addition to creating dangerous distractions, food noise can lead to overeating and obesity. There may be a psychosomatic effect at work. Constantly thinking about food might actually trick the body into feeling hungry when it’s not, leading to overeating.

When you’re already hungry and can’t stop thinking about food, it’s tempting to go for a ‘quick fix’ like fast food or ultra-processed snacks. Why? Because these items are already prepared and ready to eat. Salty and sugary foods also tend to trigger reward pathways in the brain, leading to a cycle of craving more of these guilty pleasures.

In other words, food noise can lead to unhealthy eating habits that are hard to break.

What can you do to quiet food noise?

  1. Eat with intention. Plan meals, pay attention to portions, and eliminate mindless eating.
  2. Exercise regularly. In addition to burning calories, exercise helps regulate hormones, sleep and appetite.
  3. Improve your sleep routine. Everything is linked! Sleep and exercise play a role in establishing healthy eating patterns.
  4. Have healthier snacks nearby. Bananas, apples and heart-healthy trail mix are quick bites to curb hunger and avoid processed snacks.
  5. Reduce stress. Practice meditation or other relaxation techniques to avoid stress-snacking.
  6. Ask a doctor. Obesity is linked to sleep apnea, diabetes, and high blood pressure. If you need additional help quieting food noise to combat obesity, speak to a doctor about GLP-1s, therapy, nutrition and other strategies that might be right for your situation.

Food noise can feed into a habit of unhealthy eating. The best remedy is to break that pattern by adopting a new routine and sticking to it.

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Dr. Candice Seti

aka THE WEIGHT LOSS THERAPIST

California-licensed Clinical Psychologist, Certified Nutrition Coach, and Certified Personal Trainer

Dr. Candice Seti

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