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Self Test for Compulsive Overeating
This series
of questions may help you determine if you are a compulsive overeater. Many members of
Overeaters Anonymous have found that they have answered yes to many of these questions.
- Do you eat when you're not hungry?
- Do you go on eating binges for no apparent reason?
- Do you have feelings of guilt and remorse after overeating?
- Do you give too much time and thought to food?
- Do you look forward with pleasure and anticipation to the
time when you can eat alone?
- Do you plan these secret binges ahead of time?
- Do you eat sensibly before others and make up for it alone?
- Do you hide your food?
- Have you tried to diet for a week (or longer), only to fall
short of your goal?
- Do you resent others telling you to "use a little
willpower" to stop overeating?
- Despite evidence to the contrary, have you continued to
assert that you can diet "on your own" whenever you wish?
- Do you crave to eat at a definite time, day or night, other
than meal time?
- Do you eat to escape from worries or trouble?
- Have you ever been treated for obesity or a food-related
condition?
- Does your eating behavior make you or others unhappy?
- Is your weight affecting your health?
- Do you feel lethargic or daze like?
- Do you crave specific types of food
products, such as wheat, milk, flour, rice?
- Do you have withdrawal symptoms from not
eating certain foods?
- Have you ever blacked out or passed out
from overeating?
- Have you experienced episodes of
schizophrenia?
Overeaters Anonymous is a
Fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience and mutual support, are
recovering from compulsive overeating.
We welcome everyone who wants to
stop eating compulsively. There are no dues or fees for members; we are self-supporting
through our own contributions, neither soliciting nor accepting outside donations. OA is
not affiliated with any public or private organization, political movement, ideology or
religious doctrine; we take no position on outside issues.
Our primary
purpose is to abstain from compulsive overeating and to carry this message of recovery to
those who still suffer.
See Also "What
is Food Addiction?"
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