The world’s largest free audio library for everyday wellbeing
Real people. Real life. Real time.
Discover transformative Retreats led by Insight Timer's best teachers.Reconnect, recharge, and return renewed.
The world’s largest free audio library for everyday wellbeing
Meditation is something everyone can do. Practicing can help improve your health and wellbeing.
Explore MeditationFree meditation timer with customizable intervals, bells, and ambient sounds.
Meditation Timer OnlineMindful eating is more than just eating slowly. It isn’t necessarily about weight loss either. Through mindful eating we nourish a new relationship to food and our bodies. One that encourages awareness, compassion, and acceptance.
When we eat mindfully, we use all our senses, including our intuition, to choose healthy, nutritious food. We strengthen awareness of hunger cues to eat portions that satisfy without overindulging. We accept and acknowledge our relationship to food without judgment or self-criticism. We find freedom from our cravings or attempts at food restriction. We observe the interconnectedness of all things and cease harming ourselves or others via our food choices.
Anyone can benefit from mindful eating, but those with a troubled relationship to food, or a past history of restriction or overeating may find it especially freeing.
Benefits of Mindful Eating
The benefits of mindfulness begin with non-judgmental awareness. Mindfulness encourages acceptance of present moment sensations, thoughts and emotions. We learn to be less reactive, and to view our discomfort with greater compassion. Those who practice mindfulness typically find the benefits extend to their relationship with food. Likewise, a focus on mindful eating often brings an expanded sense of peace to the rest of our lives.
Mindfulness of the body helps us better connect to feelings of desire and aversion, hunger and fullness. We become a witness to our own craving and notice it may or may not be related to food. Increased body awareness teaches us to trust our intuition when it comes to our food choices, sensations of hunger or satiety, and when it’s mindfully appropriate to refrain or indulge.
Mindfulness of our emotions helps us become less reactive. We’re better able to be present with discomfort. Mindful eating teaches that while food might offer comfort in the moment, this relief is impermanent at best. With mindfulness as support for a stable mind, we learn it’s safe to experience a full range of emotions. Our increased capacity for acceptance frees us from the habit of binging or restricting in response to stress.
Mindfulness of our thoughts helps us let go of the ‘good’ and ‘bad’ labels we apply to food or our eating habits. We realize we are not our thoughts, nor are we defined by what we choose to eat or not. No longer controlled by food, we let go of using food as punishment or reward. Practicing mindful eating reminds us true nourishment is derived not from what we consume, but from within.
Mindfulness of the breath helps us recognize when we’re anxious about food, rushing through a meal, or eating distractedly. Connecting to breath awareness teaches us the benefits of slowing down.
By intentionally involving all our senses in the shopping, preparation, cooking, and eating process, we awaken to feelings of gratitude, abundance, and satisfaction.
Non-judgmental awareness reduces our feelings of self-criticism and despair. We become naturally inclined to practice greater self-compassion. As our hearts open, the tendency to make food choices which reduce harm to ourselves, and to others arises.
Radical acceptance allows us to experience joy and nourishment regardless of our bodyweight, or what we ate today. Mindful eating is not about weight loss or future goals, but about connecting to what’s truly the most nourishing for us in the present moment.
Mindful eating is not a diet or a habit we pick up and let go of. It’s a lifelong journey into awareness of the body and mind. Mindful eating takes place before, during, and after each encounter we have with food. To begin a simple mindful eating practice, consider the following:
Learn to recognize different types of hunger. When hunger arises, is it physical or emotional? What are you really hungry for? It may or may not be food.
Respond to your hunger with mindful awareness. Choosing not to eat is not the goal, rather, learn to listen to your body’s cues and intuition.
Stock your kitchen with healthy, wholesome, nourishing foods. If you live with others who love their sweets, set boundaries if you need to.
In restaurants and social settings ask, what’s the best option available to me? It’s perfectly okay if prioritizing your health means declining invitations, choosing where to eat, or setting firm boundaries with family and friends.
As you decide what to eat for each snack or meal, slow down and notice sensation in your body, breath and mind. Let wisdom, not reactivity, be your guide.
Drop diets and rules around food restriction. Mindfully hone your intuition instead. With each small choice, ask does this bring me closer to or further from health? Listen for the answer in body, breath and mind.
Eat without distraction and involve each of your senses. Note how your food looks and smells, feel the texture in your mouth, and observe the changing taste. Visualize what occurs after you swallow. Note how this changes food’s power.
Eating slowly allows you to be mindful of sensations of hunger and fullness. Between each bite ask should this be my last one? Note what satiation feels like, versus what you might expect.
Practice making meal time sacred. Say a form of grace or a gratitude prayer before each meal. Reflect upon all the hands or lives that contribute to your nourishment.
Volunteer to help feed those who are hungry. Notice where nourishment and a sense of fullness truly comes from. You may find it has little to do with food.
Mindful eating can be helpful for the treatment of eating disorders. In particular mindfulness offers a solution that addresses the anxiety and stress that can prevent positive, healthy changes in eating behavior.
Mindfulness helps let go of the need for control and can lead us to greater freedom. The compassion we learn through mindfulness supports us through the recovery process.
If you suspect you or someone you love has an eating disorder, it’s possible they may need more help than mindfulness alone. A qualified therapist who specializes in eating disorders can help you incorporate mindfulness alongside other appropriate interventions.

8 min
4.7
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating - Listen To Your Body
Stel Coombe-Heath

22 min
4.4
• GUIDED
•
Emotional Eating
House of Wellbeing

11 min
4.7
• GUIDED
Emotional Eating- Self-Discovering The Root Cause
Nathan O'Neill

9 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Eating Mindfully
Abby Turner

31 min
4.8
• GUIDED
Healing Emotional Eating
Lai Tattis

16 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Stop Emotional Eating
Kerie Logan

3 min
4
• GUIDED
Mindful Attention Practice: Awareness Of Eating
Falisha Oser

9 min
4.3
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Sara Rabinovitch, Ph.D

10 min
4.4
• TALKS
Mindful Eating
Fernando Albert

5 min
4.8
• GUIDED
A Mindful Bite
Priya Patel

15 min
4.5
• TALKS
Mindful Eating For Healthy Body And Mind
Mary Yousif

14 min
4.9
• GUIDED
Mindful Meal
Jennifer Innes

4 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating - Savour Every Mouthful
Rachel Atkins

8 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Jacqueline Choi

10 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Eating Mindfully
Alison Hutchens

11 min
4.9
• TALKS
Intuitive Eating Part 2
Sara Nielsen

3 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Self-Compassion For Emotional Eating
Sarah Stites

4 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Leah Livernois

9 min
4.8
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Douglas Robson

7 min
GUIDED
•
Mindful Eating
Light Energy Meditation

6 min
GUIDED
7-Min Mindful Eating Practice
Joe Hunt

19 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Gregg McBride

12 min
4.7
• GUIDED
A Short Simple Guide To Eating Mindfully
Stephanie Nash

10 min
4.7
• GUIDED
Savor Every Bite: BASICS Of Mindful Eating
Lynn Rossy

5 min
4.3
• GUIDED
5 Minute Meditation For Emotional Eating
Anna Spivak

5 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Eat Your Meal Mindfully
Juni Bucher

11 min
GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Aaron Hendon

11 min
4.5
• TALKS
Mindful Eating Practice
Kathryn Remati

7 min
4.3
• GUIDED
Real Time Mindful Eating Meditation
Sara Nielsen

8 min
4.8
• GUIDED
Moving Beyond Emotional Eating
Sarah Stites

6 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Mindfulness Eating Exercise
Marissa Krimsky

11 min
4.3
• GUIDED
Simple Meditation For Mindful Eating
Meditation Assembly

7 min
4.6
• GUIDED
The Art Of Mindful Eating
Christina M. Martin

7 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Robin Boudette

5 min
5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Meditation
Molly Hentz

11 min
4.7
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating & Body Awareness
Mark Joseph

6 min
4.3
• GUIDED
Eating Meditation
Abby Turner

8 min
4.7
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating
Marie Castello

66 min
TALKS
•
Mindfulness And Food Talk
Susmitha Veganosaurus

2 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Meditation
Dr Nurys Jones MD

45 min
4.8
• GUIDED
•
End Emotional Eating While You Sleep
Lai Tattis

7 min
4
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Practice For Beginners
Raising Wellness

10 min
4.5
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Meditation
Sara Nielsen

8 min
4.6
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Meditation
Jane Gabites

4 min
4.8
• GUIDED
Mindful Eating Guided Meditation
Natasha Ganes

6 min
4.7
• GUIDED
•
Mindful Eating
Catherine Justice