Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Food Is Food
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Titre
Date
Durée
I Never Wanted To Work As An Eating Disorder Dietitian
14 Apr 2026
00:18:35
In this episode of Food is Food, Talia shares about her own relationship with food and how she unexpectedly found her path as an eating disorder dietitian.
She talks about:
The early influences on her relationship with food, including a brief experience with disordered eating
How her career evolved from a desire to work as a sports dietitian to working in eating disorders
The personal and professional experiences that shaped her understanding of eating disorders and recovery
If you’ve ever felt confused by conflicting nutrition advice or questioned your relationship with food, this podcast will help you feel less alone and open the door to a more compassionate, flexible way of thinking about food.
Support the Podcast: If this episode resonated with you, you can support Food is Food by:
Following or subscribing to the podcast
Leaving a 5* review
Sharing this episode with someone who might find it helpful
Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and supportive purposes only and is not a substitute for individual medical or dietetic advice.
Welcome To Food Is Food!
14 Apr 2026
00:01:31
Are you frustrated by the amount of nutrition misinformation that you hear?
Me too.
I'm Talia Cecchele, specialist eating disorder and disordered eating dietitian and founder of the TCN clinic. I support people to overcome food rules, stop restrictive dieting and stop feeling so out of control with food and eating.
In this podcast, I really want to bring nuance to the conversations that we have about nutrition because our relationship with food is so complex and it can be really harmful to view food in a black and white or all or nothing way. We'll be chatting about all things nutrition, intuitive eating, body image, diet culture, psychology and the consequences of under-eating and all through a non-diet and weight inclusive lens.
I really hope to create space that allows us to better understand how our thoughts, emotions and life experiences shape our relationship with food and our bodies.
So if you're feeling a little bit lost about how to eat normally or you feel like food is overtaking your life, then you're in the right place.
Support the Podcast: If this episode resonated with you, you can support Food is Food by:
Following or subscribing to the podcast
Leaving a 5* review
Sharing this episode with someone who might find it helpful
Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and supportive purposes only and is not a substitute for individual medical or dietetic advice.
Why You Are Already “Sick Enough”: The Hidden Impact of Undereating | With Jennifer Gaudiani
30 Apr 2026
00:48:55
In this episode of Food is Food, we explore the complex and often misunderstood concept of being “sick enough” in the context of eating disorders and undereating.
What You’ll Learn:
How diet culture, medical gaslighting, and internalised beliefs keep people stuck
The truth about “feeling fine” while undernourished (and why it’s misleading)
Why your metabolism isn’t broken
The biological reality of undereating - from bone health and biochemistry to heart health and cognitive change
Resources & Links:
Sick Enough: A Guide to the Medical Complications of Eating Disorders and Undernutrition (2nd Edition) by Dr. Jen Gaudiani
About our Guest: Dr. Jen Gaudiani is the founder and medical director of the Gaudiani Clinic. Board certified in internal medicine, she completed her undergraduate degree at Harvard, medical school at Boston University School of Medicine, and her internal medicine residency and chief residency at Yale.
Founded in 2016, the Gaudiani Clinic offers specialized, trauma informed outpatient medical care to individuals seeking support for eating disorders, undernourishment related to complex medical issues, and weight-inclusive primary care.
The fully updated and significantly expanded second edition of Dr. Gaudiani’s bestselling book, Sick Enough: A Guide to the Medical Complications of Eating Disorders and Undernutrition is now available wherever books are sold.
Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Welcome & introduction 01:00 – What does “sick enough” actually mean? 07:00 – Why feeling “fine” doesn’t mean you’re nourished 12:30 – The house-on-fire analogy explained 16:30 – Can you really break your metabolism? 24:00 – Extreme hunger and why it’s biologically normal 30:00 – Diet culture, stigma, and hunger across all body sizes 31:30 – Heart rate: athlete vs undernourished body 36:00 – Blood markers: cholesterol, white cells & medical myths 43:00 – Undereating and its impact on your brain 49:00 – Perimenopause, ageing, and eating disorders 52:30 – Closing thoughts
Support the Podcast: If this episode resonated with you, you can support Food is Food by:
Following or subscribing to the podcast
Leaving a 5* review
Sharing this episode with someone who might find it helpful
Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and supportive purposes only and is not a substitute for individual medical or dietetic advice.
Understanding RAVES™: A Flexible Framework For Healing Your Relationship with Food | With Shane Jeffrey
22 Apr 2026
00:42:32
In this episode of Food is Food, Talia and Shane Jeffrey explore the RAVES Eating Model — a compassionate, flexible framework designed to support a more peaceful and nourishing relationship with food.
What You’ll Learn:
What the RAVES Eating Model is and how each principle supports recovery
Why regularity and adequacy form the foundation of nutritional wellbeing
The role of variety, social eating, and flexibility in long-term recovery
How RAVES can be adapted to suit your unique needs, preferences, and life context
Common misconceptions about structured eating frameworks
SAFETY: neurodiversity affirming approach to developing neutral food relationships
Shane is an Australian based Accredited Practicing Dietitian and Credentialed Eating Disorder Clinician with over 25 years of experience in the eating disorder field across both the private and public sectors. Shane is the director and lead clinician at Brisbane based River Oak Health, a multidisciplinary private practice service dedicated to the treatment of eating disorders and other eating, weight and body image concerns. treatment service in Brisbane. As the developer of the RAVES™ Eating Model, Shane has a strong interest in keeping nutrition messages simple, service development and supporting clinicians through professional supervision and workshop events.
Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Welcome & introduction 02:00 – What is the RAVES model? 06:00 – Regularity & adequacy: building the foundation 14:00 – Variety, social eating & spontaneity explained 22:00 – Common misconceptions of RAVES 27:00 – Adapting RAVES for neurodiversity 34:00 – The SAFETY framework and client-centred care 39:00 – RAVES workshops and certification 49:00 – Closing thoughts
Support the Podcast: If this episode resonated with you, you can support Food is Food by:
Following or subscribing to the podcast
Leaving a 5* review
Sharing this episode with someone who might find it helpful
Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and supportive purposes only and is not a substitute for individual medical or dietetic advice.
Understanding the Spectrum: Disordered Eating vs Eating Disorder
07 May 2026
00:26:12
In this episode of Food is Food, Talia clarifies the differences between disordered eating and eating disorders, emphasising the importance of recognising signs and seeking support. It explores the spectrum of eating behaviors, diagnostic criteria, and factors contributing to eating disorders, providing valuable insights for anyone concerned about their relationship with food.
Episodes drop every Thursday.
What You’ll Learn:
Difference between disordered eating and eating disorders
Spectrum of eating behaviours from intuitive eating to clinical diagnosis
Factors contributing to eating disorders: biological, psychological, sociocultural
Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Welcome & introduction 02:30 – How common eating disorders really are 04:50 – Understanding diagnoses & overlap between eating disorders 09:35 – Why disordered eating is hard to define 11:30 – The spectrum: from intuitive eating to eating disorders 12:20 – The “3 Ps” model: why eating disorders develop 15:35 – Barriers to seeking support & cultural considerations 18:30 – What is disordered eating? Signs to look out for 21:10 – The role of intention behind food behaviours 22:50 – What “normal eating” actually looks like 25:10 – How disordered eating can develop into an eating disorder 26:40 – Final thoughts: when to seek support