If you've tried a million wellbeing plans, but just can't stop emotional eating, it's not surprising.
And not your fault, either.
The most common outcome of controlling your diet and your weight is:
swinging between feeling “good” and out-of-control
swearing you'll be better next time, but something happens, and you can't stop yourself
feeling bad about yourself physically, mentally and emotionally.
Another food or exercise plan won't solve any of that. Weight loss drugs will only help while you're taking them and come with side effects like muscle loss.
Shifting the way you think and feel will end the struggle without side effects and last a lifetime.
And that starts with assessing where you're currently at.
It's a structured self-assessment tool.
You'll complete three short assessments and receive a score in each area:
Your Thinking Patterns
How your current thinking impacts you and how much room you have to improve
Your Eating Patterns
Understand where your relationship with food sits on the intuitive eating scale so you can pinpoint where to put your attention
Your Body Image
Identify how cultural messaging is affecting how you think about your body, so you can disengage from it and choose more empowering thoughts
All of which means you get a really clear picture of where you are starting from.
From there, you can create a unique plan to stop struggling with emotional eating in a way that actually works for you.
Most approaches tell you to change your behaviour first.
What to avoid. What to eat. How to hide the peas behind the ice-cream (which leads to wanting the ice-cream more, not less)
Feminist health coaching starts with understanding how you think and how you handle your feelings.
Because when your thinking and feelings change, behaviour follows.
No discipline required.
+ audio guide
Enter your email to get your self-assessment scores and see how you can end your struggle with emotional eating, for once and for all
Emma Wright is a certified Health and Body Image Coach with training in Trauma-Informed Cognitive Behavioural Coaching and Intuitive Eating.
She holds a Master’s degree and wrote her feminist thesis on how appearance pressure affects female athlete performance.
She’s the author of Body Confidence (HarperCollins), and has been featured on RNZ, The NZ Herald, Viva Magazine, The Breeze, and The Project.
Emma is known for her effective and compassionate coaching style where she empowers women to take care of themselves and get their energy back.
© 2025 Emma Wright Coaching
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The content and coaching services provided by Emma Wright Coaching are for educational and informational purposes only. They are not a substitute for medical or mental health care. Always consult a qualified health professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or your overall healthcare plan.