Reject the Diet Mentality and Respect Your Body
Honor Your Hunger and Feel Your Fullness
Make Peace with Food and Honor Your Health with Gentle Nutrition
Challenge the Food Police + Movement- Feel the Difference
Discover the Satisfaction Factor + Cope with your Emotions with Kindness
100

What does HAES stand for? Which organization created the HAES principles?

Health at Every Size, Association for Size Diversity and Health (ASDAH)

100

Name three factors that can disrupt hunger cues. 

Stress, trauma history, anxiety, dieting or disordered eating patterns, poor sleep. 

100

Name one way you have honored your health with gentle nutrition over the past few weeks. 

No wrong answer!

100

Name one form of joyful movement you are looking to explore. 

(no wrong answer!)

100

List three positive coping skills you can use to help cope with your emotions with kindness. 

  • Get some rest.

  • Take a relaxing walk.

  • Listen to music you love or that soothes you.

  • Meditate or breathe deeply.

  • Play with a pet.

  • Ask a loved one for a hug.

  • Spend time outdoors in nature.

  • Writing your feelings in a journal.

  • Call a friend or other trusted loved one.

  • Let yourself cry.

  • Reach out to your therapist.

200

What is weight stigma? Name three places where it shows up in society.

Weight stigma refers to the discriminatory acts and ideologies targeted towards individuals because of their weight and size.

-Doctor's office and healthcare 

-Airplanes

-Social media 

-Television and movies 

200

How can a history of dieting lead to eating past comfortable fullness? 

  • Many diets have allowable or “legal” foods (with adjacent disallowable or “illegal” foods). 

  • Binges may occur on “legal” versions of foods while dieting.


    • Ex/ bingeing on low-carb while following a keto diet

  • When your body has access to food, it will choose to eat past fullness if it has been previously deprived.

    • Our bodies don’t know the difference between famine and dieting.

200

Name three factors that influence health besides nutrition and movement. 

-Stress

-Access to healthcare

-Our environment 

-Social connection 

200

What is the "Nutrition Informant" voice? 

  • Voices nutrition “evidence” to stay in check with diets and diet culture

  • Façade of health, really another voice of food rules

200

This is known as the "hub" of Intuitive Eating

The Satisfaction Factor 
300

What is pseudo-dieting? 

  • Limiting consumption of certain foods or food groups 

  • Counting points, macros, calories , etc. 

  • Rules for food timing 

  • Eating only “healthy” foods 

  • Trying a juice cleanse 

  • Joining a weight loss challenge at work 

  • Second guessing your hunger cues 

300

What is interoceptive awareness?

Interoceptive awareness: the perception of physical sensations that arise within your body.

300

What are some questions you can ask before and after eating when considering incorporating principles of gentle nutrition? 

  • Questions to ask before eating:

    • How has this food or meal made me feel in the past?

    • How did I feel after eating this food or meal?

    • How did this food or meal impact my fullness and satiety cues?

 

  • Questions to ask after eating:  

    • How does my body feel after eating this food or meal?

    • How is my energy after eating this?

    • Did I have any negative side effects from eating this (GI distress, fatigue, headaches)?

    • How long did this meal fill me up for and keep me satisfied? 

300

__ __ __, also known as CBT, is one way to challenge food police thoughts. 

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy 

300

List three questions you could ask yourself before eating that are aligned with the Intuitive Eating voice.

-What tastes good to me right now?


-What am I in the mood for?


-What will make me feel connected to my body right now? 

400

Where does diet culture show up in your life? How did you navigate it this week? 

No wrong answer!
400

Name two types of hunger 

  • Practical hunger

    • Eating now to plan ahead for the day so that hunger doesn’t become too extreme later 

  • Taste hunger

    • Eating because it tastes good!

    • Part of satisfaction

  • Emotional hunger

    • Eating to meet emotional needs- sadness, tiredness, etc. 

    • Can be one tool in your toolbox, this is not always a “bad” thing!

  • Physical Hunger

    • Physical sensations of hunger

    • To help meet your energy needs/too little nutrition 

400

What is rebound eating? Name at least one type. 

Rebound eating happens when someone has a "primal" drive to eat and and has intense cravings around food that occur from restricting food intake. 

Types of rebound eating: 

-Last Supper Eating 

-Food Competition

-The empty cupboard

-Returning home 

-Anticipation of food restriction

400

What is the "Nutrition Ally" voice?

Allows you to speak out against dieting and diet culture 

Helps protect your boundaries in a more adaptive way

Ex: Asking your family member to not comment on your food choices.

Ex: Unfollowing accounts that promote diet culture.


400

Name on example of how you made a meal or snack more satisfying over the past few weeks. 

No wrong answer! 
500

What did you learn in the Poodle Science video?

About Health at Every Size- all bodies are unique. There is more to someone's health than their weight and nutrition status. 

500
Name a situation in which you may need to eat past comfortable fullness. 

-When on an eating disorder recovery meal plan 

-Convenience (road trip, before work or class) 

-Food tastes really good!

500

What does it mean to have unconditional permission to eat?

  • Foods have no moral value

    • You are not a “good” or “bad” person based on how or what you eat 

  • Eating foods you crave and are in the mood for

    • Not just foods you think you “should” have 

  • No one food has the power to body change shape or size 

500

What is the "Food Anthropologist" voice? 

-Makes observations in a neutral, non-judgmental way

-Helps collect facts about food and the experience of eating

-Keeps you in touch with your biological and psychological cues – helps rebuild body trust

-Ex: I skipped breakfast and I’m feeling ravenous at 11:00am.


500

What is sensory-specific satiety or flavor fatigue?

  • Sensory-specific satiety or ”flavor fatigue”: as you’re eating a particular food, there is a decrease in desire for that particular food over time.