“It’s about What You’ve Assigned to the Salad”: Focus Group Discussions on the Relationship between Food and Mood
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Procedure
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme One: Reactive and Proactive Relationships with Food
3.1.1. Values Assigned to Food
It’s about what you’ve assigned to the salad. If you’ve assigned to the salad, this is healthy, and I’m doing this because I haven’t done this much, then it’s a good thing. However, if I’ve assigned to salad, I’m doing this because I’m restricting, then a salad is the worst thing like for me it will ruin my mood.(Josephine)
Well, I think possibly, I am terrified of food from the early ballet years. I’m never just going to eat carelessly unless I’m madly drunk. One time I did cry eating some chocolate mousse at a big meeting in _____, a long, long, long time ago. Other than that, it’s a decision driven occupation. Sometimes it’s good. Sometimes it’s great. Sometimes it’s not quite as good as you thought it might be. The creme brulee that you had to have. I guess. Terrified. I think we’re coming from a position of terror. However, then perhaps in an extremely different way., I’m just not going to put it in my mouth If I’m going to gain weight.(Mary)
I went on an alkalising diet last year, and it was very strict. I lost way too much weight really quickly. It was too strict. However, you find, food is company, and when you cut it out, you have no comfort anymore. So, all these emotions come out…. I think that’s why things like chocolate and cakes and all the yummy things are quite comforting. I know through years of sort of struggling with weight, that eating is to push the emotions down. If you remove all of that, the emotions are coming out.(Elizabeth)
3.1.2. Agency and Direction of Choice
If I eat bread in any form, whether it be organic or mass-produced grain that has no nutrition, then I start to get feelings of lethargy, and I start to lose the impulse to have anything energetic happen. I will perpetuate more and more reasons to not get up and do anything in a hurry. It will make me feel like I’ve been less accomplished. Therefore, contributing to more feelings about low worth because I haven’t achieved anything. If I compound the wheat intake with dairy (and I love ice cream), then I know that that also helps get me into a downward spiral of low energy, lethargy, lack of enthusiasm towards the things I need to do, which makes me feel guilt. We totally are affected by what we put into our bodies.(Amy)
It’s like an excuse in my brain. You’ve done really well. You should go and treat yourself to something nice. Or you’re upset. I should eat something. Whatever mood, I have an excuse to eat, and I use food as my emotional crutch.(Jesse)
There would be times where I would hit like an emotional low, and my way of coping with that was going and buying a block of chocolate and just eating it. Like the whole thing. However, then I feel guilt and shame for eating more than I should, and this makes me feel worse than I was feeling before.(Alexa)
3.2. Theme Two: Acknowledgement of Individual Diversity Relating to Eating and Mental Health
It’s very individualistic. Everybody’s body processes are different. Some people react to one food in one way, and other people react to that same food in a different way. So, what is considered to be healthy, and what’s considered to be unhealthy may not be the same for every single person.(Matilda)
I think it’s also hard not to beat yourself up if you’re doing something that is not working. Like, what is the best? Is it the food pyramid? Is it Paleo? Is it primal? Is it no grains? Not beating yourself up that you’re eating something different than everyone else. Recognising that everyone has their own types of food that works best for their body. I think everyone needs to come to that conclusion. It’s not a one shop fits all for everyone. To me, it’s just confusion, even though I know sort of what works best for me. Sometimes I eat well. Sometimes I don’t. You just do the best you can and not trying to realise you’ve got to understand it all.(Su)
I know when I’ve been like to see a dietitian in the past, and you’re going there because you’re wanting to get some healthy assistance. It is very much the dietary guidelines and diet pyramid. In the end, you just stop going because this is not what I want. Even with doctors in a way you feel like you aren’t being heard. I don’t want the grains, I don’t want the dairy, I’m looking at an alternative, you know, healthier. It’s frustrating, sometimes you go to the doctor about feeling sad. They don’t know about nutrition, they offer you a pill, you try and do something a little bit different. Go see a dietitian, it’s still that food pyramid and it seems that everyone’s still very behind the eight ball with all of this.(Emma)
3.3. Theme Three: Improving Mood by Removing Food Restriction and Eating Intuitively
I had orthorexia for a while, without realising it. Because I wanted to be healthy, and then, you know, like, no that food’s good, that food’s bad…….However, I was really anxious and panicky around food. I was protective around food, if I’m cooking, don’t come and pick at it when I’m eating, because that’s less food for me, this may be my only chance to eat. It did change my mood and my mindset, and I still am struggling with myself to try and eat intuitively.(Shae)
I went through postnatal depression. I had a huge period that I didn’t realise was disordered eating, like very disordered. Going on the diet bandwagon, lose the baby weight while having postnatal depression. I went on that food restriction, and I felt good losing weight. Then, it’s not sustainable. So, then the binge happens; and then I’m already low mood with the depression, and dealing with the baby, and then adding to it, because food was the coping mechanism or the control factor, I suppose. And then that body image stuff came into play.(Katie)
Because without having a good relationship with food and seeing food as like the enemy, or bad or feel guilty about it. You feel bad about yourself because you’re gaining weight. It can really affect my mental health and then the whole dieting cycle begins, which I think is really a big part of like the whole food and mood thing as well. However, when I eat the foods that I like, that my body tells me are good for me, and that I want without restriction—intuitively—when I’m not on a diet that makes me feel good.(Jane)
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nodes | Codes | Themes |
---|---|---|
Mood influencing food choices | Bidirectional Link Between Food and Mood | Reactive and Proactive Relationships with Food |
Food choices influencing mood | Relationships with Food | |
Disordered relationships with food | Food as Control | |
Comfort food used for low mood | Mind/Body, Gut/Brain Connection | |
Foods used as reward or commiseration | Short-Term vs. Long-Term Effects of Food on Mood | |
Each person physiologically reacts to food differently. | Bio-individuality | Acknowledgement of Individual Diversity Relating to Eating and Mental Health |
Each person psychologically has differing moods | Individual Differences | |
The relationship between food and mood is different for everyone | Intolerances | |
Dieting and food restriction decreases mood | Food Restriction and Dieting | Improving Mood by Removing Food Restriction and Eating Intuitively |
Weight focused thinking | Weight Focused Thinking | |
Listening to your bodies cues when it is hungry and when it is full | Listening to Bodies Internal Hunger and Satiety Cues | |
Eating mindfully, rather than when distracted | Mindful Eating | |
Food guilt causing low mood | Removing Food Guilt |
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Lee, M.F.; Bradbury, J.F.; Yoxall, J.; Sargeant, S. “It’s about What You’ve Assigned to the Salad”: Focus Group Discussions on the Relationship between Food and Mood. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 1476. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021476
Lee MF, Bradbury JF, Yoxall J, Sargeant S. “It’s about What You’ve Assigned to the Salad”: Focus Group Discussions on the Relationship between Food and Mood. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(2):1476. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021476
Chicago/Turabian StyleLee, Megan F., Joanne F. Bradbury, Jacqui Yoxall, and Sally Sargeant. 2023. "“It’s about What You’ve Assigned to the Salad”: Focus Group Discussions on the Relationship between Food and Mood" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 2: 1476. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021476
APA StyleLee, M. F., Bradbury, J. F., Yoxall, J., & Sargeant, S. (2023). “It’s about What You’ve Assigned to the Salad”: Focus Group Discussions on the Relationship between Food and Mood. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 1476. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021476