Weight Management & RECBT

A Psychological Approach to Sustainable Change

Weight Management Is Not Just About Willpower

Weight management is often approached as a problem of discipline, restriction, or control. However, research and clinical experience consistently show that long-term difficulties with weight are more closely linked to emotional regulation, beliefs, stress tolerance, and self-relationship than to knowledge about food or exercise.

At the Hellenic Institute for Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (RECBT), weight management is addressed through an evidence-based psychological framework that supports sustainable behavior change without shame, punishment, or extremes.

How RECBT Approaches Weight Management

RECBT focuses on identifying and modifying the beliefs and emotional patterns that interfere with healthy regulation.

Common maintaining factors include:
• Emotional eating and stress-driven consumption
• All-or-nothing thinking (“If I slip, I’ve failed”)
• Low frustration tolerance around hunger, fatigue, or slow progress
• Self-criticism, guilt, and body-related shame
• Unrealistic standards and urgency (“It must happen fast”)
• Loss of control cycles followed by restriction

RECBT helps individuals replace rigid, self-defeating beliefs with flexible, rational, and compassionate thinking, supporting consistency over time.

Weight Regulation vs. Weight Control

RECBT emphasizes regulation, not control.

Control relies on pressure and avoidance.
Regulation relies on awareness, tolerance, and choice.

Clients learn to:
• Tolerate discomfort without impulsive reactions
• Respond to setbacks without abandoning effort
• Separate body weight from self-worth
• Build habits that are realistic and repeatable
• Reduce emotional eating by addressing emotions directly

Emotional Eating and Beliefs

Emotional eating is not a lack of discipline.
It is often a learned coping strategy for managing stress, fatigue, boredom, or emotional overload.

RECBT targets beliefs such as:
• “I can’t tolerate this feeling unless I eat”
• “I’ve already ruined it, so it doesn’t matter”
• “If I don’t succeed, something is wrong with me”

These beliefs are disputed and replaced with healthier emotional coping strategies and flexible self-talk.

Who Can Benefit

  • Individuals struggling with emotional eating
    • People caught in cycles of dieting and relapse
    • Adolescents and adults with body-image distress
    • High-achieving individuals with perfectionism and burnout
    • Clients seeking weight stability, not extreme control

RECBT Goal

The goal of RECBT-based weight management is not rapid weight loss.
It is the development of emotional resilience, self-respect, and sustainable regulation, allowing healthy behaviors to emerge and stabilize over time.

For information, assessment, or therapy services
Contact us

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