Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
ACT helps clients with eating disorders distance themselves from harmful thoughts and urges without needing to eliminate them entirely. Rather than challenging every disordered thought, ACT focuses on reducing the power of those thoughts over behavior.
Dietitians may use metaphors like “passengers on the bus”, where the client is the driver and their thoughts and emotions are the passengers. Some may be loud or distressing (e.g., “I can’t eat this” or “I’ll gain weight”), but the driver ultimately decides the direction. This helps clients build psychological flexibility—acknowledging their thoughts while choosing to act in ways that align with recovery values.
ACT also teaches committed action, helping clients move toward values like nourishment, energy, or freedom from obsessive food thoughts—even when discomfort is present. Over time, clients learn to sit with anxiety or fear while still taking meaningful steps toward healing.


































































