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This Might Be Why You Can’t Stop Binge Eating at Night

Is there something more frustrating than when we feel like we’re doing all the right things, but it’s still not working? For many women, this especially applies to food. We have a plan to follow, but why can’t we just stick to it?

One day you’re doing great—eating clean and following all the “right” steps. You meal prep, skip dessert, and fill your plate with greens. The next day, out of nowhere, you find yourself at the bottom of a bag of chips or polishing off a whole sleeve of cookies.

This cycle gets confusing, and we start to think it’s our genes, our laziness, or we invent a million other ways to blame ourselves. But maybe the better question is this: what if your binge eating isn’t happening in spite of your healthy eating efforts … what if it’s happening because of them?

Let’s look at why this happens—especially for health-conscious women—and what you can do instead to create a sustainable way of eating.

The All-or-Nothing Trap

When most women decide to “eat healthier,” it usually isn’t just for the sake of health. It’s often because we want to lose weight or feel better in our bodies.

These goals aren’t bad in themselves, but they often give us a very narrow focus: the scale. And while it’s fine to want to lose weight at times, when that becomes the only measure of success, it becomes a problem.

The scale starts to run our lives. Every day you step on it, it decides what kind of day you’re going to have. If you lose weight, it’s a great day and you feel in control. If the number doesn’t change—or worse, it goes up—your mood is ruined. You start to doubt every decision you made the past week. Did I eat too much at dinner? Was my workout not hard enough? Was it that piece of chocolate I had?

As a coach, I see this all the time. Women get so hung up on a single number instead of using it as just one of many indicators of progress.

When success means the scale has to go down continuously, healthy eating quickly morphs into “do whatever it takes to make the number drop” eating. That often leads to extreme measures that are the complete opposite of real health. And extremes are never sustainable. Sooner or later, you’ll “fall off the wagon.”

How to shift: Make sure you have more than one way to measure whether your strategy is working. Ask yourself: Am I sleeping better? Is my mood more stable? Is my cycle less painful? Do I have more energy throughout the day? Being healthy means supporting your whole body, not just chasing one number.

The Perfection Mindset

That weight focus often feeds into another trap: the all-or-nothing mindset.

We tell ourselves:

  • “If this is going to work, I need to do it perfectly.”

  • “If I eat anything off-plan, I’ve ruined everything.”

  • “The stricter I am, the faster I’ll see results.”

At first, this can feel good. There’s a sense of control and even pride in following a plan to the letter—especially for high-achieving and driven women.

But what do we know about perfection? It doesn’t exist.

Life happens. Kids get sick. Work deadlines pile up. And that rigid plan that once felt empowering quickly becomes overwhelming. When the inevitable slip happens, you see it as failure. And failure often leads to, “Well, I already blew it, so I might as well eat what I’ve been craving all along before I start over.”

That’s not a lack of willpower. That’s the natural outcome of a perfection-driven mindset.

How to shift: Allow yourself to aim for “good enough.” Consistency beats perfection. Strict rules may give faster results at first, but if you can’t stick with them for long, they’re not truly working.

The Language of Deprivation

Here’s another big one: the words we use around food.

Most of us start our “healthy eating” by focusing on what we can’t have:

  • “I can’t eat sugar.”

  • “I can’t have bread.”

  • “I’m not allowed dessert.”

It seems natural to keep track of the “do nots.” But language matters more than we think.

Every “can’t” signals to your brain that something is being taken away. It creates a scarcity mindset. Instead of feeling empowered, you feel deprived. And what happens when someone tells you that you can’t have something?

The inner rebel kicks in.

That little voice inside says, “No one can tell me what to do!” You might resist for a while, but eventually, rebellion wins. And the very foods you were trying to avoid suddenly become irresistible.

This is why so many women find themselves obsessing about chocolate the minute they decide to “give up sugar.” Chocolate didn’t suddenly get more delicious—it’s just that now, it’s all you can think about.

How to shift: Change the focus to what you can have. Instead of saying “I can’t,” ask yourself: Does this food support my goals right now? Why am I craving it? Am I just tired? Could I choose something that satisfies me and still helps me feel good? Being healthy doesn’t mean you can never have something again. It means becoming more intentional and in control of your choices.

When “Healthy” Becomes Harmful

There’s also the practical side: how we define “healthy eating.”

For many women, “healthy” becomes synonymous with:

  • Eating very low calories

  • Following a rigid set of food rules

  • Obsessively counting calories or macros

  • Cutting out entire food groups like carbs or fats

And while some structure can be helpful, going to extremes can backfire.

I remember taking a holistic health course years ago. I was so excited to make all the changes. I stopped eating certain foods, filtered my water, bought everything organic, tried to eat at the “perfect” time of day … it was a lot to think about. And slowly, it became stressful. Every time I failed to meet that impossible standard, I felt guilty. Does that sound very healthy?

Instead of food being fuel, it became a source of stress. Instead of giving me energy, it drained me mentally. I lived in constant calculation mode: “Do I have enough calories left for this? Is this clean enough? What will I eat at my friend’s party?”

That kind of stress is not healthy. And when stress builds high enough, your brain looks for an outlet. Cue emotional stress eating.

Ironically, the binge is often not about food itself. It’s about escaping the pressure of living a “perfectly healthy” life. After weeks of white-knuckling, your brain craves freedom. The binge feels like a release—like exhaling after holding your breath too long.

But then comes the guilt. And guilt sends you back to restriction … which fuels another binge. That’s the restrict–binge cycle so many women get stuck in.

Stepping Off the Hamster Wheel

At this point, the pattern is clear:

  • Focusing only on the scale pushes us into extremes

  • Chasing perfection sets us up for burnout

  • Using restrictive language makes us rebel

  • Defining “healthy” as rigid rules creates more stress than support

The way out isn’t another stricter plan. It’s shifting your approach:

  • Focus on adding nourishment instead of cutting everything out

  • Redefine healthy as support, not punishment

  • Use food language that feels flexible, not moral (“good” or “bad”)

  • Build compassion into your choices so you can be consistent, not perfect

When you approach food this way, healthy eating stops being an on-or-off cycle and starts becoming a lifestyle that feels supportive and sustainable.

Final Thoughts

Eating healthy shouldn’t feel like a full-time job or a constant tug-of-war with yourself. And it definitely shouldn’t drive you into a binge.

You deserve a relationship with food that feels supportive, flexible, and aligned with your life—not one that leaves you stressed and disconnected.

Food is meant to fuel you, not control you. The shift happens when you stop asking, “How can I eat really healthy?” and start asking, “How can I eat in a way that supports me in living a healthy, enjoyable life?”

That answer changes everything.

Here’s to building a way of eating that truly supports you. –Marlene

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