Among the former, avoiding calorically dense foods contributes to a ​suppressed weight and maintenance of the disorder. Among the latter, binges often result from the pressure created by setting rigid rules against certain foods, which then become irresistible to the person who violates the rule and binges. Overcoming food avoidance is, therefore, an important therapeutic task for most patients. This avoidance behavior usually emanates from internalized dietary rules about which foods one is “permitted” to consume and a long list of “forbidden foods.” Recovery from both restrictive as well as binge/purge eating disorders typically includes the reintroduction of these fear foods. In fact, research indicates that reincorporating these foods is an important element of treatment.

Tackling the Fear Foods

Developing a list of feared situations in order of fear level is called an exposure “hierarchy” and provides a roadmap for practicing exposure in a way that moves you forward gradually without being too overwhelming. Taking incremental steps makes this process easier.

Step 1: Make a List

Begin by making a list of all of your feared foods and dividing it into three sections: Super Scary Foods, Medium Scary Foods, and Slightly Scary Foods. You might look at the sample list below for inspiration. Include foods you’d rather not eat and foods you make excuses not to eat. Even if you think there might be another reasonable non-eating disorder explanation for avoiding these foods (you think you don’t like them) you are encouraged to add them to the list. Eating disorders can be tricky illnesses. Quite often patients with eating disorders insist they don’t like certain foods, but further on in recovery, they are able to see that it was fear rather than dislike that kept them from those foods. You may also include those foods on which you binge. Now you have your hierarchy and you can determine how slow or fast you go up the ladder. Some people like to go faster and some people like to go slower.

Step 2: Plan and Carry out Your Exposures

Here’s the thing: exposure is supposed to raise your anxiety. It must do so in order to work. Over repeated exposures, the brain is retrained that the scary situation is not truly dangerous. Only with exposure does the brain truly habituate and learn the situation is not dangerous. By contrast, avoiding feared things only perpetuates the fear of them. Thus, we usually advise starting with something from the Slightly Scary list. You don’t need to overwhelm yourself; it should feel “slightly scary” but manageable. Plan to incorporate a single serving of one or two foods from this list per week. Plan to eat this fear food in place of or part of a normal meal or snack. However, plan carefully and be thoughtful. You may want to introduce the food on a day you feel more confident or will have company. If you have had a history of bingeing on pizza, it is inadvisable to order in an entire pizza when you are home alone and expect it to go well. Instead, plan how you can eat a normal portion of it and be successful. Instead, you might go to a pizza restaurant with a friend and order one or two slices along with a salad and eat it there. Each food on your list will likely need to be consumed several times (over a period of time) until the thought of eating it no longer causes extreme anxiety. It may also help to break things down into smaller steps. For example, when working on pasta, you can start with a small side of pasta, over time, eat pasta as a main dish with a marinara sauce, and then eventually have a main course of pasta with a richer sauce. If you are fearful of eating cake, you could start with a bite and over repeated exposures (over a period of weeks or months) work your way up to a full slice. (Don’t worry; you don’t need to eat cake every day!).

Step 3: Keep Records

Many people find it helpful to keep a chart of their exposures. On this record you can record the date, the food eaten, and your anxiety rating (on a scale from 0 to 10). It can be reassuring to see the anxiety ratings for certain foods coming down and it can feel good to have evidence for your bravery in facing forbidden foods.

Step 4: Behavioral Experiments

You may also want to make a note of what your fear is of eating that certain food and run an experiment to see if it comes true. For example, “If I eat a piece of cake I will gain five pounds.” Or “If I eat a piece of pizza I will not be able to stop eating pizza and will continue eating pizza all night.” Make sure to record whether or not your prediction comes true. You will find that it usually does not. After you have conquered all of the foods in the Slightly Scary list, then work on the foods in the Medium Scary list, and finally the Super Scary list in the same way.

How to Adapt This to FBT

If you are a parent helping your child to recover, you can make a list of all the foods they used to eat about two to three years before they showed any signs of an eating disorder. It is often the case that in retrospect, there were subtle signs of restriction long before the eating disorder was diagnosed. This is why it is suggested you go back even further: this will give you a more accurate picture of the broader range of foods to which you will want to expose your child. Don’t worry about ranking them and if your child is in early recovery, please don’t expect them to willingly participate in this exercise or even to admit that they are afraid of certain foods. It is common for adolescents and young adults in recovery to vehemently assert that they truly do not like these foods. Despite this, keep them on your private list. One of your goals is to help your child to be able to eat all of the foods on this list. In summary, many people find this a scary part of treatment, but it is often the most rewarding. Food expresses culture and offers the opportunity for connection to others. Once you have worked through your fear foods, the whole world of food is open to you.

A Word From Verywell

Facing your fear foods will likely be distressing, especially in the beginning. By nature, exposure is designed to be! However, with practice, it will become easier. Acknowledge and give yourself credit for taking this brave step towards recovery. There was an error. Please try again.