The Clean Eating Obsession

When healthy eating becomes unhealthy thinking, you’ve crossed a line. Orthorexia—obsessive focus on “clean” eating—creates anxiety, social isolation, and paradoxically poor health outcomes. Research by Bratman identified this pattern: declining social events, intense guilt over deviations, rigid ever-tightening rules. Health includes mental health. A sustainable approach is imperfect, flexible, and doesn’t consume your life.

This companion covers when healthy becomes unhealthy, the perfectionism trap, finding balance, and loosening the grip. (4 min read)

One thought like this, every morning.

You don’t need more information about eating. You need the right idea to show up at the right time — before hunger, before decisions, before habits kick in.

Every morning, 365 Changes sends you one. Not a meal plan. Not a rule. Just a question or idea to sit with while you make coffee. Each one is simple, but they accumulate — and slowly, the way you think about eating starts to shift.

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There’s more to read here — a companion essay that goes deeper into this topic. It might explore why willpower fades by evening, how your kitchen layout shapes what you eat, or what it really means to become someone who simply eats well. Each one takes a few minutes and leaves you thinking.

There are 500 of them across five areas — identity, environment, knowledge, decisions, and troubleshooting — and a Reader membership unlocks them all.

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