Friday May 01, 2026

Why Eating Feels So Chaotic With ADHD: Binge Eating, Bulimia, & Executive Function Challenges

If eating feels chaotic, unpredictable, or hard to keep up with, especially with ADHD, there are real reasons for that. This episode breaks down why eating can feel all over the place, not because you are doing something wrong, but because your brain is being asked to manage a process that depends heavily on executive functioning, timing, and regulation across the entire day.

In this solo episode, Dr. Marianne explores the connection between ADHD, binge eating disorder, and bulimia, including how impulsivity, dopamine, and executive function challenges shape eating patterns in ways that are often misunderstood. You will hear why eating may feel easy to delay and then suddenly urgent, why follow-through can feel inconsistent, and why this pattern is not about willpower.

ADHD and Eating Disorders: Why Eating Feels So Chaotic

Eating regularly requires more than hunger. It depends on time awareness, task initiation, decision-making, and the ability to shift attention. ADHD directly affects these processes, which means eating can feel disorganized, delayed, or unpredictable. This episode explains why chaotic eating patterns often reflect executive function challenges, not a lack of effort or care.

Impulsivity, Dopamine, and Binge Eating

Impulsivity in ADHD is not just about acting quickly. It reflects differences in how the brain pauses and redirects. When binge urges show up, they can feel immediate and intense. At the same time, dopamine differences in ADHD can make food a fast and effective way to shift focus, regulate emotions, or create relief. This episode explores how these systems interact and why food can become a powerful regulator.

Executive Function Challenges and Follow-Through With Eating

Executive function challenges can make it harder to plan, prepare, and initiate eating, even when you want to. You might forget to eat, delay eating, or feel overwhelmed by decisions. This episode breaks down how these patterns develop and why eating consistency is not just about intention, but about access to executive functioning in real time.

Restriction, Glucose, and Intensified ADHD Traits

When eating gets delayed or inconsistent, even unintentionally, glucose levels can drop. This affects the brain’s ability to regulate attention, impulses, and emotions. Lower glucose can intensify ADHD traits, making it even harder to initiate eating or pause during urges. This episode explains how this cycle develops and why it can feel so hard to interrupt.

Why This Is Not About Willpower

Chaotic eating patterns are often framed as a lack of discipline, but this episode reframes them through a neurodivergent-affirming lens. When your brain is under-fueled and your executive functioning is stretched, it makes sense that eating feels harder to manage. Understanding this can reduce shame and open up more supportive approaches.

Related Episodes

Midlife Bulimia Recovery: Coping With the Internal Chaos on Apple and Spotify.

Eating Disorders & ADHD: Neurodivergent-Affirming Recovery With Taylor Ashley, RP @taylorashleytherapy on Apple and Spotify.

ADHD & Bulimia: Dopamine, Impulsivity, & the Hidden Link to Binge Eating With Kirsten Book, PMHNP-BC on Apple and Spotify.

Work With Dr. Marianne

If you are navigating ADHD, binge eating, bulimia, or eating patterns that feel chaotic and hard to predict, you do not have to figure this out alone. Dr. Marianne works with many clients with ADHD in both therapy and coaching, helping them understand their brain, reduce shame, and build ways of eating that are actually doable in real life. You can learn more about working with Dr. Marianne via her website, drmariannemiller.com.

Comment (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to say something!

Copyright 2023 All rights reserved.

Podcast Powered By Podbean

Version: 20241125