Tag: healing

  • Hunger by Roxane Gay: Summary, Key Ideas & Review

    The book in one sentence: A fearless, fragmentary memoir about the relationship between sexual trauma and a very large body, written by one of America’s sharpest essayists without a recovery arc, a transformation narrative, or a tidy resolution.

    Content note: This book describes sexual violence, including gang rape. Gay writes about it directly and without euphemism. If you are reading during a vulnerable time, please take that into account.



    What Is Hunger About?

    Roxane Gay opens her memoir by telling you what it is not. It is not a weight loss story. There will be no before-and-after picture, no triumphant arc, no insight into how she overcame an unruly body and unruly appetites. “Mine is not a success story,” she writes. “Mine is, simply, a true story.”

    That insistence on truth over narrative tidiness is what makes Hunger worth sitting with. Gay is the author of Bad Feminist and one of the most widely-read cultural critics writing today. She knows how stories are supposed to go. She refuses the available shapes anyway.

    The book traces a life split in two. Before age 12, Gay was a happy child, sheltered and bookish, growing up in a Haitian-American family with parents who loved her. At 12, she was gang-raped by a boy she trusted and his friends, in an abandoned hunting cabin in the woods. She kept that secret for over twenty years. What followed was a body built not from appetite but from a child’s survival logic: eat, grow large, become undesirable, become safe.

    That is the book. Not a self-help manual. Not a policy argument about fatphobia, though there is clear-eyed analysis of both. A memoir of a specific body, in a specific life, making its way through a world that was not built for it.


    How Does Trauma Shape a Body?

    Gay understood something at age 12 that took her years to articulate: fat bodies are treated as undesirable, and undesirable bodies are less likely to be targeted. She had watched how the world treated large people. She knew the hostility, the contempt, the looking-away. She wanted that invisibility. She chose it.

    “I ate and ate and ate in the hopes that if I made myself big, my body would be safe,” she writes. “I buried the girl I had been because she ran into all kinds of trouble. I tried to erase every memory of her, but she is still there, somewhere. She is still small and scared and ashamed, and perhaps I am writing my way back to her, trying to tell her everything she needs to hear.”

    This is what she calls the body fortress: the body she made deliberately, the weight that served as armor. It was not irrational. It made sense. The fortress kept some things out. It also locked things in.

    The complication Gay returns to throughout the memoir is what happens years later, when the body has done its job but the threat is gone. The part of her that built the fortress still reads smallness as danger. When she starts losing weight, a specific terror overtakes her: “I get terrified. I start to worry about my body becoming more vulnerable as it grows smaller.” The armor doesn’t know the war is over.

    This is the mechanism that most narratives about weight never address. Not lack of willpower. Not a disorder to be treated away. A survival system doing exactly what it was built to do, long past the moment it was needed.


    What Does It Actually Cost to Live in a Larger Body?

    Hunger is precise about what it takes, day by day, to inhabit a body the world was not designed to hold. Gay is not complaining. She is testifying.

    She catalogs the daily calculation: whether the chair will hold, whether the blood pressure cuff will fit, whether the doctor will diagnose “morbid obesity” as the primary condition regardless of why she came in. She describes arriving at a Cleveland Clinic at her heaviest (577 pounds, a number she can barely write) for a bariatric surgery orientation, where a psychiatrist explained how to warn “normal people” in her life not to sabotage her weight loss. The examining doctor looked her up and down, glanced at her chart, said she was “a perfect candidate,” and left. “I was not unique. I was not special. I was a body, one requiring repair.”

    The medical section alone is worth reading for anyone who works with people in larger bodies. Gay had a chronic stomach condition for over ten years that went undiagnosed because getting treatment meant submitting to environments that regarded her body as the primary problem, regardless of why she came in. She avoids the doctor not from negligence. From self-protection.

    Beyond medicine, she writes about what she calls the stares at the gym, the whispered comments at restaurants, the children’s guileless cruelty and the parents’ mortified pauses. She writes about timing her gym visits to avoid peak hours, about friends who suggest they go hiking as if her body and their bodies work the same way, about family members who respond to her presence by organizing around the project of her weight loss, treating it as the only important fact about her.

    “I hate going to the doctor because they seem wholly unwilling to follow the Hippocratic oath when it comes to treating obese patients. The words ‘first do no harm’ do not apply to unruly bodies.”

    None of this is incidental. Fatphobia is a system, not a series of individual rudeness. Gay makes this structural argument clearly: the stigma isn’t just interpersonal. It’s built into the equipment, the office design, the medical classification system, and the cultural certainty that very large bodies are moral failures waiting for correction.


    Does Roxane Gay Believe in Body Acceptance?

    She does. She also is not there yet, and she will not pretend otherwise.

    This is one of the book’s most valuable moves. Gay admires the fat acceptance movement. She understands that her body has a logic and a history and that the culture’s hostility toward it is unjust. She also knows she is not happy at her size, that daily life is painful in concrete physical ways, and that she wants to be smaller. She holds all of this without resolving it into either self-loathing or performed contentment.

    She has tried everything. Weight Watchers, Lean Cuisines, low-carb, high-protein, SlimFast, intermittent fasting, five small meals a day, water by the gallon. Planet Fitness memberships she never uses. Personal trainers she fantasizes about murdering. None of it is mockery. It is the exhausted accounting of someone who has been trying, genuinely, for decades, while fighting against a protection system her own body built.

    She writes about cooking as the unexpected place where some healing happened. Ina Garten’s television show, watched alone in a small Midwestern apartment, taught her something she had not yet learned: that she was allowed to feed herself well. “Cooking reminds me that I am capable of taking care of myself and worthy of taking care of and nourishing myself.” That sentence, which sits quietly in the middle of the book, carries more weight than most of the more declarative passages. Food is not only the problem in Hunger. It is also, slowly, carefully, where she begins to practice the idea that she deserves something good.

    On the question of survivor identity, Gay is equally precise. She prefers “victim” to “survivor.”

    “I prefer ‘victim’ to ‘survivor’ now. I don’t want to diminish the gravity of what happened. I don’t want to pretend I’m on some triumphant, uplifting journey. I don’t want to pretend that everything is okay. I’m living with what happened, moving forward without forgetting, moving forward without pretending I am unscarred.”

    Call it resignation if you want. Gay would call it precision. “Survivor” carries a cultural expectation of arc, of transcendence, of having moved through and past. Gay hasn’t done that, not fully. She is living with what happened, and the distinction matters.

    The book’s final pages describe movement without transformation: fewer nightmares, less flinching when touched, the beginning of believing she is allowed to want something. She calls it “undestroying” herself. “I no longer need the body fortress I built. I need to tear down some of the walls, and I need to tear down those walls for me and me alone.”

    Not triumph. Not recovery. The slow, incomplete work of undoing what was done.


    Is Hunger Worth Reading?

    Read this if you want to understand, from the inside, how trauma and body size connect. Or if you have a complicated relationship with your body that diet culture frameworks, body positivity frameworks, and standard self-help have not been able to hold. Or if you are a practitioner working with people whose eating carries any history of violation, shame, or fear. Gay shows the mechanism in a way no clinical text does.

    Skip it if you are looking for a roadmap. Hunger is not structured to give you steps or strategies. It is structured to bear witness. The fragmented form (88 very short chapters, some barely a page) mirrors the fragmented self, which is artistically right and can be hard to read in long sittings.

    One honest note: Gay’s account is specific to being very large (she distinguishes herself clearly from “Lane Bryant fat”) and inseparable from her identity as a Black woman navigating predominantly white spaces, from boarding school to Ivy League to rural academia. The book does not try to speak universally, and it is better for that. But readers whose experience differs may find some sections don’t map directly to their own.

    What stays is this: Gay refuses both false resolutions available to people with difficult relationships with their bodies. She won’t perform self-loathing and she won’t perform acceptance she hasn’t reached. The third option she offers is harder and, for many readers, far more useful. Unflinching honesty about where you actually are, without collapsing it into shame or bravado. For anyone who has spent years feeling the story the culture tells about their body doesn’t match what they know from the inside, this book sees you.


    Books Like Hunger

    BookAuthorBest For
    The Body Is Not an ApologySonya Renee TaylorReaders ready to move from Gay’s unflinching self-honesty toward a framework for radical self-love
    Anti-DietChristy HarrisonThe cultural and scientific context for what Gay experiences personally: why the diet industry fails and what the restriction cycle looks like from the outside
    Rising StrongBrené BrownOverlaps on shame and vulnerability, but considerably more hopeful and prescriptive; useful paired with Gay as a corrective to Brown’s sometimes-sanitized narrative
    What Happened to You?Oprah Winfrey & Bruce PerryA more accessible, conversational entry point into how trauma shapes behavior, good for readers who found Gay’s rawness difficult
    In the Realm of Hungry GhostsGabor MatéThe neurobiological complement to Gay’s memoir. Where Gay shows the inside of compulsive eating, Maté shows the mechanism in the brain
  • Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating by Michelle May: Summary, Key Ideas & Review

    The book in one sentence: A physician and an eating disorder therapist, both in personal recovery from binge eating, teach you the mindfulness-based skills to break the eat-repent-repeat cycle without another diet.



    What Is Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating About?

    Picture Connie, the book’s opening case study. She starts Monday with steel-cut oats, a packed salad, and gym clothes in her bag. By noon, she’s had a rough meeting with her boss and eaten a burger with her coworkers. By evening, her family is out at a ball game and there is a large pizza and no one watching. She eats all of it. She hides the box in a neighbor’s trash can and is in bed with the lights out, crying, when her husband comes home. She is already planning the new diet that will fix everything on Tuesday.

    That specific loop, with minor variations, is what millions of people are living. Not just overeating. The secrecy, the trance-like eating, the hiding evidence, the shame, the next diet that launches the whole thing again. Binge Eating Disorder is the most common eating disorder in the U.S., affecting 3.5% of women and 2% of men over their lifetimes. Far more people than have anorexia or bulimia. And for decades, the most common “treatment” offered was another diet, which makes the cycle worse, not better.

    Michelle May is a physician who built the Am I Hungry? Mindful Eating framework after her own history of yo-yo dieting. Kari Anderson is a licensed counselor with a doctorate in behavioral health who went through inpatient treatment for binge eating herself, then spent twenty years treating others in clinical practice. Together, they designed a ten-week group program, ran a pilot study that showed statistically significant reductions in binge eating severity, and wrote this book to make the program accessible outside a clinical setting. What they offer is practical, researched, and personal in a way that distinguishes this book from most of what’s available for binge eating recovery.


    What Is the Mindful Eating Cycle and How Does It Help?

    The core tool in this book is the Mindful Eating Cycle, a six-question framework that maps every eating decision:

    • Why? What is driving the urge to eat, physically or emotionally?
    • When? Is this genuine hunger, a habit, a trigger, or a rule saying it’s time?
    • What? Are food choices based on body wisdom and real preference, or “allowed/forbidden” categories?
    • How? Is eating happening with attention and intention, or fast, secret, and disconnected?
    • How much? Is the amount guided by hunger and fullness, or by external cues like the package running out or feeling numb enough to stop?
    • Where? After eating, does energy go toward living your life, or into hiding, shame, and lethargy?

    The reason this framework matters is that binge eating doesn’t begin with food. It begins somewhere in that sequence, well before the first bite. A binge triggered by a stressful work situation looks different at its root than one triggered by a diet rule finally snapping. Knowing which entry point drives your specific pattern is what makes it possible to interrupt the cycle at the right place.

    May applies the same six questions to four different eating patterns (instinctive eating, overeating, binge eating, and restrictive eating) so readers can see what each pattern is actually accomplishing and where it breaks down. The binge eating cycle, traced through all six questions, makes visible what the binge is actually doing: it is an attempt to regulate a physical, emotional, or mental state when no other tool is available. That framing is not a moral judgment. Bingeing works, temporarily. The problem is the aftermath, and the cycle it reinforces.


    Why Does Binge Eating Keep Coming Back After You Diet?

    Here is the central argument of the book: the eat-repent-repeat cycle is not a willpower failure. It is a structural problem. Any system built on external rules will eventually break, because no one can be in control indefinitely. And when control breaks, if there is nothing else in place, binge eating fills the void completely.

    May describes this as the difference between being “in control” and being “in charge.”

    Being in control is the diet mindset. Rules determine what you eat, when, and how much. You follow the rules until something cracks, then you have blown it, and the binge follows almost automatically. There is no middle position in this system: either in control or out of it.

    Being in charge is different. It means having the awareness and skills to make conscious choices in any situation, not because a rule allows it but because you understand your own body and needs well enough to decide. A person who is in charge can eat something off-plan without triggering a binge, because the choice was made consciously rather than reactively. Nothing was violated. No rules exist to break.

    May uses a pendulum metaphor throughout the book that captures this cleanly. The restrict-binge cycle is a pendulum swinging hard between two extremes, powered by the energy each extreme feeds it. Mindful eating, gradually and over time, removes energy from the extremes until the pendulum slows and finds center. The goal is not to lock the pendulum in place, just to stop the violent swinging.

    “Instead of trying to stay in control, then subsequently losing control, mindfulness helps you pause so you are in charge.”

    The book does not suggest the restrict-binge cycle is your fault. It points out that the system cannot work, which is meaningfully different from being told you lack discipline. More restriction won’t help. What’s needed is a different relationship with eating altogether, built on self-knowledge and actual coping skills rather than compliance and willpower.


    What Are the Practical Tools in This Program?

    1. The Body-Mind-Heart Scan

    Before any practical skill can work, you have to be able to identify what you’re actually experiencing. For many people who have been dieting and bingeing for years, this basic capacity has eroded. The Body-Mind-Heart Scan is the foundational practice for rebuilding it.

    When the urge to eat arises, pause and check in across three layers:

    • Body: Are there actual physical hunger signals? Where are you on a 1-10 hunger scale?
    • Mind: What thoughts are running? Rationalizing (“I deserve this”), catastrophizing (“I’ve already blown it”), or old diet rules?
    • Heart: What emotion is present, specifically? Not “I feel fat” (a thought), but the actual feeling: lonely, anxious, bored, overwhelmed, ashamed.

    The scan is brief, done away from food, and creates just enough pause to receive real information before making the next decision. May recommends practicing it throughout the day, not only when hungry, because body awareness built in calm moments is what becomes available in high-urge moments.

    2. The Three-Option Framework

    When you want to eat but you’re not hungry, you have exactly three options. May presents each one without prescribing which to choose, which itself is part of the healing:

    • Eat anyway, consciously. Choosing deliberately to eat when not hungry is not a binge. It’s a decision. Made with awareness, it produces a finite amount of eating and possibly some regret, but not the shame spiral that triggers the next round.
    • Redirect your attention. Do something incompatible with eating: hands occupied, focus engaged. Build a list in advance, in a calm moment, so it’s available when needed.
    • Meet your true need. Identify what the eating urge is actually signaling and address that directly. This is the hardest option and the most lasting one.

    The framework matters because it eliminates the “I’ve already blown it” trap. There is no moment in this system where blowing it makes sense. Every moment is a new decision point.

    3. Peeling the Onion: The “What Else?” Question

    Surface-level emotional awareness (“I’m eating because I’m stressed”) rarely helps much on its own. May’s approach is to keep asking “What else?” until the real driver surfaces.

    A craving for holiday cookies might start as “they taste good.” One layer down: they remind you of childhood. Another layer: of simpler times, comfort, belonging. The final layer: you feel overwhelmed by adult obligations, and the holidays are adding pressure instead of delivering the magic you remember. That final layer, something food genuinely cannot fix, is where the real work begins. Rest could help. Setting a limit on holiday plans could. A conversation about what you actually want the season to feel like could.

    4. The Three Voices

    May names three internal voices that govern the binge-restrict cycle:

    • The binge voice: rationalizes, gives permission, escalates (“you’ve already blown it, may as well finish the whole thing”), then condemns.
    • The restrictive voice: demands perfection, measures self-worth in food compliance, promises that strict control will eventually produce the life you want.
    • The self-care voice: unconditionally compassionate, realistic, invested in actual well-being rather than temporary relief.

    The self-care voice says things like: “Of course you want to eat. You’re exhausted and it looks good. The downside is you know how you feel after. What do you actually need tonight?”

    The entry point for cultivating this voice is the phrase “Of course!” Validation before pivot. “Of course I want this. Of course I feel this way.” Validation opens the door for honest reflection. Condemnation closes it immediately.

    5. Fearless Eating

    Food should be chosen by answering three questions honestly: What do I want? What do I need? What do I have? A decision that satisfies all three produces eating that is both pleasurable and nourishing. A decision driven only by “what do I want?” produces the temporary pleasure and subsequent regret of mindless indulgence. A decision driven only by “what do I need?” produces the deprivation and resentment of dieting.

    No foods are forbidden in this framework. May’s argument is that forbidden foods hold disproportionate psychological power. Any exposure threatens the “control” and activates the binge voice. Making food charge-neutral, over time, is what removes the urgency.

    “When a craving doesn’t come from hunger, eating will never satisfy it.”


    Is Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating Worth Reading?

    Read this if you’ve been through the restrict-binge cycle enough times to know that dieting isn’t solving it, you’re ready to try something structurally different, and you’re willing to do the inner work alongside the practical skill-building. It’s also a strong companion to therapy if you’re already working with someone on binge eating.

    Skip it if you’re in an acute phase of BED that needs professional clinical assessment first, or if your eating patterns are rooted in trauma that requires specialized therapeutic support. May and Anderson are clear in the book itself: the group program with a trained facilitator produces better outcomes than the book alone. For moderate to severe BED, this is a primer and a companion, not a replacement for professional care.

    One caveat: the program was designed as a ten-week group experience. The peer validation, shared stories, and therapeutic group process are not replaceable by reading alone. The book is excellent. It is still a book.


    Books Like Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating

    BookAuthorBest For
    Overcoming Binge EatingChristopher FairburnClinical CBT approach; more structured and research-intensive
    Breaking Free from Emotional EatingGeneen RothDeeper emotional and relational layer; more philosophical than practical
    Intuitive Eating WorkbookEvelyn TriboleThe foundational non-diet framework; May draws on these principles
    The Hunger HabitJudson BrewerNeuroscience of habit loops and mindfulness for overeating
    Eating MindfullySusan AlbersAccessible mindful eating primer; good starting point if May feels intensive