There was a time in my life when food was not something I could freely choose, it was something I hoped for. I remember days when eating once felt like a blessing and not a routine.
Hunger was not a diet plan more like a temporary fast; it was a reality I silently lived with.
Malnourishment slowly became visible in my body. I looked weak, tired, and unhealthy, not because I wanted to, but because access to proper food was difficult.
What many people do not understand is that lack of food changes more than appearance. It affects confidence, energy, emotions, and even the way you see yourself. When your body is constantly deprived, survival becomes more important than balance.
So when life finally changes and food becomes available, many people unconsciously begin to overeat not out of greed, but out of fear of returning to lack.
That was my reality.
I started eating more because I wanted to look healthier. I was tired of looking fragile, tired, and underfed. Seeing my body finally gain fullness felt comforting because it reflected a life that was improving. Food became more than nourishment; it became reassurance. Every meal silently reminded me that I was no longer in the same difficult place I once was.
But with time, I learnt something important, healing from hunger does not mean losing control with food. The body needs nourishment, not punishment nor excess. Many people who once lacked food develop emotional eating habits without realizing it. They eat beyond necessity because their mind still remembers scarcity even when their present reality has changed.
We live in a world designed to overeat, advertisements constantly push cravings, social media glorifies unhealthy eating habits, and stress makes people run toward comfort foods. People now eat out of boredom, sadness, anxiety, or pressure rather than actual hunger. Somewhere along the line, eating stopped becoming survival and became emotional escape.
I had to learn balance, I had to understand that eating healthy is not about consuming everything available but giving the body what it truly needs. There is nothing wrong with wanting to look healthy or gain weight after seasons of malnourishment, but it is also important to listen to the body and not let past deprivation control present habits.
Now, I eat with more awareness, not to fill emotional emptiness, not because food is suddenly available, but because my body deserves proper care. I have learned that true health is not found in starving or overeating but in balance.
Sometimes, the greatest healing is learning that you no longer have to eat like you are afraid tomorrow will take food away again.