What Your Eating Habits Reveal
About Your Personality
Are you a fast eater, a slow eater or an
"isolationist"?
You are what you eat, or so
the saying goes. But it may be more accurate to say that you are how you
eat.
Last week, an
unscientific but all-too-relatable listicle on LittleThings.com broke down
different personality types based on eating habits, examining the personalities
of people who eat fast, slow, adventurously and everything
in between.
Is there any psychological
basis to these claims? Actually, there might be.
According to Juliet
Boghossian, a Los Angeles-based behavioral food expert and founder of food
behavior research firm Food-ology, we can
"absolutely" make inferences about someone's personality based
on their eating habits.
"Food-related habits can
in fact reveal facets of an individual’s personality and behavioral
tendencies," Boghossian told The Huffington Post in an email. "What
you want to observe is your 'consistent' or 'typical' food-related habits,
idiosyncrasies and rituals."
We talked to Boghossian and
Julia Hormes, a psychologist specializing in food behaviors at the State
University of New York at Albany, about what our eating habits really say about
who we are. Here's what they had to say about a few popular eating styles.
The Slow Eater
We all know the type: After
everyone else has finished their meal, you'll find this person plodding along,
eating one little bite at a time. When sitting down at the table, the slow
eater takes his or her sweet time -- and is always the last person to
finish the meal.
According to
Boghossian, slow eaters are usually people who like to be in control and
know how to appreciate life. They also tend to be confident and even-keeled.
People who eat slowly
only sometimes, however, may do so because of low energy or a sad mood.
"Our mood is known to
affect our eating rate," Hormes said.
While slow eaters might feel
pressured to catch up to everyone else, Hormes notes that there are some real
health perks to being a slow eater.
"Slow eating has
been shown to be associated with decreased energy intake, increased satiety,
and higher pleasantness ratings of meals," she said.
The Fast Eater
There's a good chance you or
someone else in your family fits the description of the fast eater -- and
if you grew up with a fast eater, you probably developed a habit of fighting
for seconds. This person tends to barrel through meals, cleaning the plate
before the rest of the table has finished even half of their meal.
Away from the table, fast
eaters tend to be ambitious, goal-oriented and open to new experiences, but
they may also have a tendency to be impatient, according to Boghossian.
"The speed at which you
eat reveals the speed at which you take on and enjoy life,"
she said.
There's nothing wrong with
eating efficiently, but super-fast eaters would be wise to
consider how quickly they're consuming. Eating too fast carries
with it certain health
risks, including weight gain.
The Adventurer
The adventurous eater is
always looking for the next gastronomic adventure. When it comes to food -- and
probably other areas of life -- this person is a thrill-seeker and a
risk-taker.
"Your one-of-a-kind
approach to life is something that you should never change," Phil
Mutz, the author of the LittleThings post, writes. "Just be careful not to
pressure others to be as adventurous as you; not everyone is meant to be an
explorer."
Being an adventurous eater,
according to Boghossian, "shows [one's] openness to trying new things
outside of [one's] experience/comfort zone."
The Picky Eater
This person may never have
grown out of their childhood likes and dislikes, or the tendency to
turn up his or her nose at an unfamiliar cuisine. This eater can
often be found asking a waiter if the dish can be served without
sauce or with dressing on the side.
There's a good chance this
person is a little neurotic away from the table, too.
"Research on 'food
neophobia' -- the reluctance to try new foods -- shows that it is related to
certain personality traits, including sensation seeking, anxiety, and
neuroticism," Hormes said. "Those high in food neophobia appear to
associate many avoided foods with a sense of disgust."
The Isolationist
The isolationist, one of the
more unusual eating types, approaches the plate methodically, eating one
food item in its entirety before moving on to the next.
"You are a very
detail-oriented person, and you are sure to always think things through
thoroughly," Mutz writes. "Though other people may not always
understand your way of doing things, deep down you know that there is a method
to your so-called madness. You are a very careful person."
Boghossian agrees this type of
eating behavior may suggest an individual's personality type.
"This behavior conveys a
task-oriented personality versus a multi-tasking individual," Boghossian
said. "Also, it conveys a disciplined and border-line stubborn tendency to
complete one task before moving on to another."