Body Image & Food Struggles

Struggling with your relationship with food or your body can feel exhausting, confusing, and isolating. Whether it’s constant thoughts about food, cycles of restriction or bingeing, or never feeling “good enough” in your body, you’re not alone. AND, it doesn’t have to stay this way.

We offer compassionate, evidence-based eating disorder and body image therapy to help you rebuild trust with your body, food, and yourself.

Symptoms you may be experiencing

Constant thoughts about food, calories, or weight


Feeling like your self-worth is tied to your appearance

Restricting food or labeling foods as “good” or “bad”


Over-exercising to “compensate” for eating

Body checking or avoiding mirrors altogether


Not feeling like “you” when it comes to your body

Even if you don’t have a formal diagnosis, your experience is valid and deserves support.

Eating Disorder Therapy Texas

For many people, disordered eating develops as a way of coping with difficult emotions, life experiences, or overwhelming stress. It may be connected to anxiety, perfectionism, a need for control, low self-worth, or struggles with body image. Disordered eating patterns can also emerge during major life transitions, experiences of grief or loss, challenging family dynamics, or early messages about food, weight, and appearance. Additionally, cultural and societal pressures surrounding body image can play a significant role in how someone relates to food and their body.

Eating disorders are not about lack of willpower. Instead, they’re often rooted in deeper emotional and psychological experiences.

Why This Happens

Eating disorder therapy in Texas
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You don't need an eating disorder diagnosis to struggle with your relationship with your body. For many people, body image concerns become a constant background noise, affecting self-confidence, mood, relationships, and overall well-being. You may find yourself avoiding photos, criticizing your appearance, comparing yourself to others, or feeling like your worth is tied to how you look. Over time, these thoughts can take up more space than you realize and make it harder to feel comfortable in your own skin.

Body Image Struggles (Even Without an Eating Disorder)

Body image struggles are often connected to anxiety, perfectionism, and past experiences—not just appearance. And they’re something you can work through with the right support.

Therapy for body image isn’t about forcing yourself to love your body overnight. It’s about creating a more neutral, respectful, and sustainable relationship with yourself.

In our work together, we’ll focus on:

  • Reducing obsessive or critical thoughts about your body

  • Challenging comparison patterns and unrealistic standards

  • Building self-worth that isn’t dependent on appearance

  • Increasing comfort being seen and engaged in your life

  • Developing self-compassion and a more supportive inner voice

How Therapy Can Help You

Eating disorder recovery isn’t about “just eating normally.” It’s about healing your relationship with food, your body, and yourself.

In therapy, we’ll work together to:

  • Reduce food anxiety and obsessive thoughts

  • Break cycles of restriction, bingeing, or emotional eating

  • Build a more flexible, balanced approach to eating

  • Develop coping skills that don’t rely on food or control

  • Improve body image and self-compassion

  • Understand the why behind your patterns

  • Reconnect with your body’s cues and needs

We use evidence-based approaches like CBT, DBT, and ACT, tailored to you, not a one-size-fits-all plan.

We know how vulnerable it can feel to talk about food and body image. Our approach is warm, nonjudgmental, and grounded in real-life change, not perfection.

Why Choose Us

A woman therapist sitting on a cream-colored sofa in a bright living room, smiling, with a large green houseplant behind her and a window with light curtains to her right.

Kristin has an extensive history working with disordered eating, body image, and the mood disorders that come along with them.
She is a part of the Houston Eating Disorder Specialists (HEDS), and has worked across multiple levels of care including support groups, Intensive Outpatient (IOP), and Partial Hospitalization (PHP), supporting individuals, families, and groups through meaningful and lasting change.

Ready to take the next step to a better you?

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