The Tolerant One
You can sit with hunger and discomfort without reacting. What does this tolerance feel like?
The Short Answer
Tolerance doesn’t mean ignoring hunger or white-knuckling through discomfort. It means being able to observe the sensation without immediately acting on it — creating a gap between stimulus and response. In that gap, you get to choose.
Something to Sit With
The next time hunger arrives, try not responding for a few minutes. Not to prove anything. Not to test yourself. Just to notice what happens when you observe rather than react.
What does the hunger do? Does it intensify? Subside? Change character? Does it occupy less space when you stop fighting it?
This is what tolerance feels like: not the absence of sensation, but the presence of choice.
Learn More
Why Tolerance Matters.
Distress tolerance — the capacity to withstand negative emotional or physical states without reacting impulsively — is one of the core skills in Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT). Research has consistently linked low distress tolerance to problematic eating patterns, including emotional eating and loss-of-control eating. The mechanism isn’t complicated: when discomfort feels unbearable, the brain looks for the fastest exit. Food is often nearby.
But the relationship runs deeper than impulse control. A 2021 study in Eating Behaviors found that distress tolerance moderates how emotional dysregulation translates into eating behavior. In other words, even when emotions are running high, people with higher tolerance don’t necessarily eat differently. The tolerance acts as a buffer.
This isn’t about having superhuman willpower. It’s about expanding the window between “I feel something” and “I must do something about it right now.”
What Tolerance Actually Feels Like.
The sensation is noticed, not obeyed. Hunger registers as information: There’s a signal here. But there’s no compulsion to act immediately. You can observe it the way you might observe rain — it’s happening, and you’re aware of it, but you don’t need to do anything about it this instant.
There’s space around the discomfort. The feeling doesn’t consume the whole field of awareness. It’s present, but so are you. So is everything else — the task you’re working on, the conversation you’re having, the walk you’re taking.
The urgency is recognized as manufactured. Most hunger isn’t an emergency. The tolerant eater knows this viscerally, not just intellectually. The body’s alarm system is noted but not mistaken for an actual alarm.
Curiosity replaces reactivity. Instead of Make this stop, there’s room for What is this, exactly? Is it physical hunger? Boredom? Stress wearing a hunger mask? The tolerant eater has time to ask because they’re not already moving toward the kitchen.
Building Tolerance Through Interoceptive Awareness.
Research on interoception — the perception of internal body states — shows that people who can accurately sense and interpret their body’s signals tend to eat more intuitively. A 2023 randomized trial found that mindfulness training significantly improved both interoceptive awareness and adherence to healthy eating patterns.
The connection makes sense: you can’t sit with a sensation you can’t clearly perceive. Tolerance requires first being able to notice what’s actually happening in the body — distinguishing genuine hunger from anxiety, fatigue, or habit. Mindfulness-based interventions have been shown to enhance this awareness, creating a foundation for tolerance.
A network analysis identified specific bridges between mindfulness and interoceptive awareness. Among them: noticing how food and drink affect thoughts and bodily sensations, and the ability to notice and let go of distressing thoughts. These aren’t abstract skills — they’re trainable.
The Limits of Tolerance.
There’s an important caveat. Some people have too much distress tolerance — they endure discomfort for so long that they disconnect from their body’s legitimate signals. This is common in restrictive eating patterns. For these individuals, the work isn’t building more tolerance but learning to respond appropriately to genuine needs.
Healthy tolerance is the ability to feel discomfort without being controlled by it, while still honoring what the body actually needs.
Further reading:
- Linehan MM, DBT Skills Training Manual, Second Edition — Chapter on Distress Tolerance
- Simons JS, Gaher RM, “The Distress Tolerance Scale: Development and validation of a self-report measure” — Motivation and Emotion, 2005
- Burr EK et al., “Ability to Tolerate Distress Moderates the Indirect Relationship between Emotion Regulation Difficulties and Loss-of-Control Over Eating via Affective Lability” — Eating Behaviors, 2021
- Loucks EB et al., “Adapted Mindfulness Training for Interoception and Adherence to the DASH Diet: A Phase 2 Randomized Clinical Trial” — JAMA Network Open, 2023
- Brown T et al., “Body Mistrust Bridges Interoceptive Awareness and Eating Disorder Symptoms” — Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2020
- Mehling WE et al., “Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness” — ongoing development of the MAIA-2 measure