Full But Not Finished

Stefanie Michele

Full But Not Finished is for anyone who's tried to "just stop eating when you're full" and realized it's never that simple. Hosted by Somatic and Intuitive Eating counselor and coach Stefanie Michele, this podcast dives into the ongoing work of recovery -- where fullness doesn't always mean satisfaction, and where food, body image, and nervous system work is never finished. Each episode unpacks the psychology, nervous system patterns, and cultural conditioning that shape eating behaviors, showing why willpower alone doesn't work and what real regulation looks like. If you've lived the binge–restrict cycle, felt trapped in body image spirals, or wondered why "normal eating" feels out of reach, this is where we make sense of it — not with rules, but with integration, somatic tools, and a more human way forward.

  1. VOR 1 TAG

    25. Why Am I Always Thinking About Food? (Mental Hunger vs Appetite Explained)

    If you feel like you think about food more than other people, or your appetite just seems… bigger — this episode is going to matter. This episode is about appetite and mental hunger, and why both are so often misunderstood in binge eating recovery. A lot of people assume that thinking about food a lot means something is wrong. Or that if a "normal" meal doesn't satisfy them, they're doing something wrong. Or that needing more food than expected means they can't be trusted. But those conclusions are often based on standards that were never built for everyone in the first place. In this episode, I break down the difference between: appetite vs mental hunger (and why mental hunger can be real hunger) habit eating vs compulsive eating eating to appetite vs eating in response to guilt why you can feel full and still feel driven to eat how cumulative hunger builds and shows up as "bottomless" hunger the role of psychological pressure, perfectionism, and agency in eating patterns We also get into how appetite varies more than we've been taught to believe — and how using a fixed idea of what "enough" looks like can quietly create the very patterns you're trying to stop. This is for anyone who has felt like: "I eat more than I should." "I can't trust myself around food." "Why am I still thinking about food after I've eaten?" There's more going on here than willpower. More from Stef: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating (BE2IE) Self-Study Course iamstefaniemichele.com/iamstefaniemichelecourse.com Substack (essays on body image, appetite, and the nervous system) iamstefaniemichele.substack.com Instagram (daily thoughts + short-form content) instagram.com/iamstefaniemichele

    47 Min.
  2. 1. APR.

    24. Why Body Image Gets Harder on Vacation | Q&A

    Why does body image get so much harder when you go away, even when you thought you were doing pretty well?  You're out of your routine, around other people more, dealing with different clothes, different food, different plans, different mirrors, and less of what normally helps you feel like yourself. It makes sense that body image can get activated there.. In this Q&A episode, I'm answering listener questions about what gets stirred up on vacation and why it can feel so much bigger than it does at home. We talk about the difference between nervous system overwhelm and "food issues," why having zero structure can backfire, and how things like clothing, packing, and pre-trip shopping end up carrying way more psychological weight than they seem to. Topics include: ✈️ why body image can feel worse on vacation 🧠 overstimulation, too many choices, and nervous system overwhelm 🍽️ food FOMO vs actually enjoying your experience 🧳 packing stress and why getting dressed feels harder away from home 👙 pre-trip shopping urgency and the hope that the right outfit will make you feel okay 🪞 body image vs overall emotional state and what's actually driving what 🧩 anchor meals, routine, and staying grounded without becoming rigid 💅 the pressure to put more effort into your appearance when you're feeling exposed If trips tend to bring up body image spirals, clothing stress, or a sense that you need to get yourself just right before you can enjoy anything, this episode gets into what may really be happening underneath that.

    42 Min.
  3. 25. MÄRZ

    23. Body Image on Vacation: Triggers, Comparison, Aging, and Tools To Help

    After a recent trip to the beach with friends, I found myself thinking: body image doesn't ever "finish" or resolve in a permanent way. It shifts, it resurfaces, and certain environments bring it right back to the surface. In this episode, I talk through what came up for me on this trip and why body image often intensifies on vacation. Being out of your routine, in different clothes, around other bodies, and more aware of yourself physically can all heighten attention on your body. At the same time, things like mood, stress, hormonal shifts, and transitions can get misread as "something is wrong with my body," when that's not actually the full story. I also get into comparison and how quickly it pulls the nervous system into scarcity, especially in close proximity to other people. This isn't just a mindset issue, it's a physiological one, and it changes the way you interpret what you see. We also talk about aging as a layer of body image that adds a different kind of complexity, and why even a strong foundation in this work doesn't mean these thoughts or feelings disappear. And importantly, I walk through the tools that helped me stay steady while this was happening, including separating body image from food decisions, using posture and breath to counter contraction, interrupting spirals, and practicing a form of radical acceptance that allows you to stay in your life even when you don't feel great in your body. If you've ever gone on vacation and felt more aware of your body, more comparative, or more unsettled than expected, this episode will likely resonate. Part two will be a listener Q&A on body image and vacation.   Visit iamstefaniemichele.com/wednesdays for weekly emails and updates from Stef   RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    48 Min.
  4. 11. MÄRZ

    22. The Link Between Body Image, Shame, and Feeling Your Anger

    Anger is one of the most important emotions in recovery, and one of the hardest for people to let themselves feel. In this episode, I talk about why anger gets such a bad reputation, why so many of us are afraid of it, and why I think it is deeply connected to body image, shame, binge eating, restriction, and boundaries. Many people associate anger with aggression or danger. Others grew up in environments where anger wasn't allowed, especially for women, so it became something to suppress, avoid, or turn inward. And when anger gets turned inward, it often becomes shame. I talk about anger as a nervous system experience, especially its connection to the fight response, and how suppressed anger can show up in body image distress, binge eating, restriction, and difficulty with boundaries. In this episode we talk about: • why anger is often feared or avoided • how anger gets redirected into shame and self-criticism • the connection between anger and boundaries • why women are often conditioned to fawn instead of fight • how diet culture and body standards provoke legitimate anger • recognizing the somatic signs of anger in the body • simple ways to move anger through the nervous system Anger doesn't have to mean rage or confrontation. Sometimes the first step is simply being able to say: I feel angry. And when anger is allowed instead of suppressed, it can become a source of clarity, agency, and change.   Visit iamstefaniemichele.com/wednesdays for weekly emails and updates from Stef!  RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    40 Min.
  5. 4. MÄRZ

    21. Intuitive Eating Q&A: Saying No, Brunch Planning, and "Food Isn't Exciting Anymore"

    In this Intuitive Eating Q&A episode, we're unpacking three nuanced questions that often come up in recovery and food freedom work:   ✨ How to say no to food without slipping back into restriction ✨ Whether eating lighter before a brunch or event can still be intuitive ✨ Why food can feel less exciting after recovery — and what that means   Many people assume food freedom is only about permission and saying yes to previously restricted foods. But true intuitive eating also includes choice, discernment, and self-trust — including the ability to say "no thanks" when it genuinely comes from your body and not from diet mentality.   We also talk about practical eating, nervous system safety around food decisions, and the confusing overlap between restriction and choice (because externally, they can look identical).   And finally, we explore the experience some people have after binge eating recovery, when food loses its thrill or dopamine rush, and how to understand that shift without assuming something is wrong.   If you've ever wondered: Can I say no and still be intuitive? Is planning ahead for food events okay? Why does food feel less special now? This episode is for you.   Visit iamstefaniemichele.com for more information about how to work together. Also on Substack ‪@iamstefaniemichele‬ RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    36 Min.
  6. 25. FEB.

    20. Are Ultra-Processed Foods Bad? A Non-Diet, Intuitive Eating Perspective

    Processed foods are having a cultural moment, and the way they're discussed online is so extreme that it's hard to know what to trust without feeling stressed or guilty. In this episode, I'm talking about why the fear-based language around ultra-processed foods is such a red flag, and why I don't trust conversations that rely on absolutist claims meant to scare you into compliance (or sell you something). I also get into what's missing from most of the discourse: systems. Time, money, energy, access, chronic illness, and the realities of modern life matter, yet wellness culture keeps collapsing this into "personal responsibility," as if everyone has the capacity to live like it's their full-time job. I share how ultra-processed foods fit into my own all-in recovery and why I stand by that choice, while still being willing to talk about nutrition without turning food into morality. And I spend a big chunk of this episode on the psychology piece—because even when people are arguing about physiology, the psychological impact of restriction, scarcity, and moralizing food often creates the exact chaos they claim they're trying to prevent, especially when these foods are everywhere (and especially with kids). If you've been feeling spun up by UPF headlines or wellness content, this is meant to bring you back to a grounded, common-sense view that includes both physiology and psychology. Subscribe for more on binge/restrict recovery, body image, food anxiety, and nervous-system-informed approaches to eating. RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    37 Min.
  7. 11. FEB.

    19. I Need Help! Five Things I Needed to Help Me Recover from Decades of Food Noise and Body Image Anxiety

    If you're in recovery and you keep hitting the same walls, you might need more help than you want to admit. In this episode, I'm talking about what it looked like for me to recruit support during my all-in recovery from years of binge eating + restriction, and why it can feel so loaded to say, "I can't do this by myself right now." Here's what we get into:  Why needing help can feel like a character flaw when you're used to being capable The specific kind of overwhelm that makes "self-help" tools bounce right off How having a small "buffer" can change what you're able to tolerate in recovery  What it means when support creates stability so the actual healing work can happen The guilt math of asking for more help when you already feel like you ask for too much Why "accepting help" doesn't work if you're still punishing yourself for needing it What specialized support can do that love and reassurance can't (even when someone means well) The relief of making a clear decision in a hard season so you're not renegotiating everything daily A practical way to handle the inner critic: "not right now — we'll revisit later" How letting your body be part of the process can become a form of support, even if you're skeptical at first If you're in a season where recovery is asking more of you than you expected, this episode will make that feel a lot more normal. RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    41 Min.
  8. 4. FEB.

    18. From Burnout to Wintering: When Your Nervous System Is Afraid to Slow Down

    Many of us live in a nervous system state where movement, productivity, and momentum feel like safety. Slowing down doesn't feel restful — it feels threatening. And when the body starts asking for less, the mind often panics and tries to think, plan, or "fix" its way out. This episode explores what happens at the edge of capacity, when exhaustion collides with fear, and your system begins demanding a different pace. ✨ Why slowing down can feel terrifying even when you're exhausted ✨ How a lot of "motivation" is actually fear dressed up as productivity ✨ The difference between intuition and fear when your energy starts dropping ✨ "Wintering" — seasons where your system asks for less, whether you agree or not (from Wintering by Katherine May) ✨ How the body eventually forces a slowdown when the mind keeps trying to plan its way out ✨ Why consuming more content and "trying harder" often makes things worse ✨ A simple 10% practice: slowing speech, movement, and pace just enough to feel the body again The episode also connects this to eating disorder recovery, body image work, and nervous system healing — especially the pressure to keep fixing yourself, keep learning, and keep doing recovery "right," instead of allowing space for integration. Mentioned: Wintering (Wintering), Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals (Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals). RESOURCES: Binge Eating to Intuitive Eating Self-Study Course Read my Substack essays Read my short-form content on Instagram

    39 Min.

Info

Full But Not Finished is for anyone who's tried to "just stop eating when you're full" and realized it's never that simple. Hosted by Somatic and Intuitive Eating counselor and coach Stefanie Michele, this podcast dives into the ongoing work of recovery -- where fullness doesn't always mean satisfaction, and where food, body image, and nervous system work is never finished. Each episode unpacks the psychology, nervous system patterns, and cultural conditioning that shape eating behaviors, showing why willpower alone doesn't work and what real regulation looks like. If you've lived the binge–restrict cycle, felt trapped in body image spirals, or wondered why "normal eating" feels out of reach, this is where we make sense of it — not with rules, but with integration, somatic tools, and a more human way forward.

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