Food Psych #209: Giving Up the Weight-Loss Fantasy with Amee Severson
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Fellow anti-diet dietitian Amee Severson joins us to discuss why intuitive eating is NOT a weight-loss plan, her experiences as a fat dietitian, how she moved from the weight-management paradigm to Health At Every Size®, the social-justice side of HAES and intuitive eating, how social media can be helpful and harmful in recovering from diet culture, and so much more! Plus, Christy answers a listener question about what to do if your hunger cues are absent.
Amee Severson is a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist in Bellingham WA whose work focuses on body positivity, fat acceptance, and intuitive eating through a social-justice lens. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Food and Nutrition from Montana State University, is completing her Master's in Professional Practice in Dietetics from Iowa State University, is a dietitian registered in the State of Washington, and is currently working toward becoming a Certified Intuitive Eating Counselor and a Certified Body Trust Provider. Find her online at ProsperNutritionAndWellness.com.
We Discuss:
Growing up in a family where dieting was normalized
Why weighing children can be harmful
Amee’s experiences with dieting and disordered eating
What motivated her to start on the path of recovery and give up the fantasy of weight loss
How she was introduced to Health At Every Size® and intuitive eating
Why intuitive eating is NOT a weight-loss plan
Straddling the line between HAES® and diet culture, and moving past it versus staying there
The learning that can come from being called out
The difference between being called out and being oppressed
Her experiences as a fat dietetic technician and dietitian
Why she doesn’t like talking about nutrition
How health insurance can affect the type of care a person receives
Social media, and how it can be meaningful in recovery
The social justice side of HAES and intuitive eating
The importance of advocacy work in individual recovery
How Amee and Christy use social media as an advocacy tool
Social media as a source of representation
Why it’s not safe to follow HAES hashtags on social media
Why offering both HAES and weight management as a health professional is harmful
Body autonomy, and why we can’t fault people who choose to diet
Resources Mentioned
Some of the links below are affiliate links. Affiliates or not, we only recommend products and services that align with our values.
Submit your questions for a chance to have them answered on the podcast!
My online course, Intuitive Eating Fundamentals
Pre-order my forthcoming book, Anti-Diet: Reclaim Your Time, Money, Well-Being, and Happiness Through Intuitive Eating
Help spread the anti-diet message by subscribing to the podcast
Health At Every Size by Linda Bacon (CW: Linda Bacon no longer stands behind parts of this book and recommends that people read Body Respect instead)
Body Respect by Linda Bacon and Lucy Aphramor
Intuitive Eating by Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch
Be Nourished, co-founder Dana Sturtevant’s Food Psych episode, and co-founder Hilary Kinavey’s Food Psych episode
Poodle Science video
Alison Harmon’s work
Listener Question of the Week
How can someone eat intuitively when their hunger cues are absent? What are some subtle examples of lingering diet mentality? What are examples of signs of hunger outside of stomach sensations?
Resources Mentioned: