Explainer | What is intuitive eating? TikTok trend’s health benefits, including better digestion, more positive body image, and increased satiety with less food
- Intuitive eating helps a person break away from reactive or emotional eating patterns, relying on internal cues of hunger and fullness to guide eating habits
- A teacher explains how her quality of life and body image improved when she ate intuitively, while nutrition experts highlight the link to Ayurveda
![Intuitive eating is a big TikTok and Instagram trend now and is related to a number of physical and mental health benefits. It involves listening to internal hunger cues - and doesn’t mean you have to feel guilty about eating things like pizza. Photo: Shutterstock](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/12/22/fdd194fa-e7b9-4b31-99ff-509931b4472d_d7db3945.jpg?itok=_icGIv5K&v=1703217832)
Inspired by the Kardashian sisters’ well publicised fit physiques, Swathi Nair, a teacher based in Munnar, in India’s southwest state of Kerala, began to follow a restricted calorie diet to achieve a svelte figure herself.
Over three years, the diet helped the 32-year-old mother of two whittle down her weight by 7kg (15lb) – but it came at a price.
Nair became irritable, her blood pressure plummeted – and she felt guilty every time she ate a slice of pizza, her favourite food.
“My professional and personal relationships suffered because of my altered food habits. I stopped going out with my friends or socialising for fear of eating too much. My husband was miffed that I never wanted to eat out. Physically, I felt undernourished,” she says.
![Inspired by people like Kim Kardashian (pictured), Swathi Nair followed a restricted calorie diet – but despite losing weight, she found she became irritable and her blood pressure plummeted. Photo: Getty Images Inspired by people like Kim Kardashian (pictured), Swathi Nair followed a restricted calorie diet – but despite losing weight, she found she became irritable and her blood pressure plummeted. Photo: Getty Images](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/12/22/f3f32455-71af-4004-af1c-5ec024ccae9d_2352b542.jpg)
A nutritionist recommended that Nair adopt intuitive eating (IE): allowing her own internal cues of hunger and fullness to guide her to healthy food habits rather than obsessing over eating less.
“After a month of following the new routine, I saw a dramatic improvement in my body image and quality of life. I took control of what and when I ate,” Nair says.
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