What You’re Really Reaching For: The Throat Chakra, Emotional Suppression and the Coping Habits That Are Keeping You Stuck 

Picture the scene. 

It’s 9pm. The house is finally quiet. The day has been long and full and demanding in the way only days spent caring for others can be. 

You open the fridge. Or you pour a glass. Or both. 

And for a moment — a merciful, temporary moment — the noise in your head gets a little quieter. 

There is no judgement in that picture. 

I have sat in that kitchen. I have talked to thousands of women who have too. 

What I want to explore today is not whether this happens — it does, for many of us — but why. 

Because understanding the why is the only thing that actually changes the what. 

And the answer, I’ve found, often lives not in the stomach or the glass. 

It lives in the throat. 

The Throat Chakra: VISHUDDHA

In yogic tradition, the Throat Chakra (Vishuddha) sits at the centre of the throat and neck. 

Its name means “pure” or “purification” — and it governs our capacity to express truth cleanly and clearly. 

Vishuddha governs: 
  • Authentic self-expression — saying what you actually mean 
  • Speaking your needs, desires and boundaries aloud 
  • Being truly heard in relationships 
  • The courage to have difficult conversations 
  • Creative voice and communication 
  • Listening deeply — to others and to yourself 
When balanced, a woman: 
  • Speaks with honesty and ease 
  • Asks for what she needs without guilt 
  • Sets boundaries verbally, not just internally 
  • Feels genuinely heard and understood 
  • Is comfortable with silence as well as speech 
When blocked or suppressed: 
  • Words get swallowed rather than spoken 
  • Emotions are managed inwardly rather than expressed 
  • She says yes when she means no 
  • Resentment builds quietly behind a composed exterior 
  • She reaches for something to fill or numb what can’t be voiced 

That last point is the one I want to sit with today. 

The Swallowing Pattern

Here is something I find quietly profound about the throat chakra. 

When we cannot speak our feelings, the body often finds another use for the throat. 

We swallow them. 

Sometimes literally. 

Food and alcohol enter through the same pathway the unexpressed emotion was blocked in. 

The momentary comfort they provide is real. The warmth of food, the softening effect of wine, the way a favourite snack can feel like a small act of care in a day that offered very little — these are not imaginary experiences. 

They are the body’s clever, compassionate, completely understandable attempt to meet a need that isn’t being met any other way. 

The need to feel soothed. 

The need to decompress. 

The need to feel — just for a moment — that someone is taking care of you. 

Even if that someone is yourself, reaching for the biscuit tin at 9pm.

What The Research Shows

This isn’t just energetic philosophy. The research is substantial and sobering. 

Studies on emotional eating consistently show that the primary driver is not hunger or appetite — it is the need to regulate difficult emotions. Stress, loneliness, frustration, boredom and unexpressed anger are among the most common triggers. 

Women over 40 are particularly vulnerable to this pattern. Research shows that as oestrogen declines, the brain’s serotonin regulation changes — making carbohydrate-rich comfort foods more neurologically appealing as a way to temporarily boost mood. The body is self-medicating with food in a very literal biochemical sense. 

Alcohol tells a similar story. A significant body of research, including post-pandemic studies, shows that midlife women represent one of the fastest-growing demographics for increased alcohol use. The pattern is consistently linked not to social drinking, but to stress relief, emotional management and the quiet loneliness of always being the one who holds everything together. 

What these patterns have in common is this: they work. Briefly. Imperfectly. And at a cost. 

Comfort eating disrupts blood sugar regulation, cortisol rhythms, sleep quality and the hormonal balance that women over 40 are already working hard to maintain. 

Regular alcohol use — even at moderate levels — has been shown to elevate oestrogen, disrupt progesterone, worsen sleep architecture, increase inflammation and directly counteract the body composition goals that most women are working towards. 

More than that: neither food nor alcohol resolves the feeling that prompted the reach. The emotion, unspoken and unprocessed, remains. 

And tomorrow night, the pattern begins again. 


Signs Your Throat Chakra May Need Attention 

In communication and expression: 
  • Difficulty saying no — agreeing to things that deplete you out of habit or obligation 
  • Swallowing your words — thinking of what you wish you’d said hours after the moment has passed 
  • People-pleasing speech — saying what others want to hear rather than what’s true for you 
  • Unexpressed resentment — feelings that build because they’re never voiced 
  • Fear of conflict — avoiding necessary conversations at the cost of your own needs 
  • Feeling unheard — even when you’re speaking, something essential isn’t getting through 
In the body: 
  • Chronic throat tension, tightness or a “lump” feeling — especially in emotionally charged situations 
  • Jaw clenching or teeth grinding — the body holding what the voice won’t release 
  • Neck and shoulder stiffness — the physical weight of unexpressed burden 
  • Recurring sore throats or thyroid issues — in yogic tradition, Vishuddha governs the thyroid gland 
In coping patterns: 
  • Reaching for food when you’re not hungry — particularly after difficult interactions or unresolved tension 
  • Using alcohol to decompress — when the day has been emotionally heavy and there’s no other outlet 
  • Scrolling, numbing, distracting — any pattern that turns down the volume on feelings rather than processing them 
  • A sense of relief when plans are cancelled — not because you’re introverted, but because saying yes when you meant no is exhausting 
THIS IS NOT A WILLPOWER PROBLEM 

I want to say this clearly, because it matters. 

If you reach for food or wine to cope with stress, it is not because you lack discipline. 

It is not because you don’t know better. 

It is because you are a person with unmet emotional needs and a nervous system that is doing its best to manage them with the tools it has found that work. 

Willpower cannot override a nervous system in survival mode. 

A stricter diet cannot resolve a pattern that was never about food. 

What actually works — what I have seen work, over and over again in my practice — is creating other pathways. 

Other ways to feel heard. Other ways to decompress. Other ways to meet the need that food and alcohol were meeting — with something that doesn’t come at a cost to your health. 


Practices To Open And Balance The Throat Chakra

  1. The unsent letter

Write a letter you will never send. 

To the person you’ve been unable to say the difficult thing to. To the situation you’ve been holding. To yourself, about what you actually need right now. 

Write without editing. Without politeness. Without the version of yourself that makes everything okay. 

The act of moving unexpressed feeling from the throat to the page is one of the most relieving things I know. 

  1. The one honest conversation

Choose one relationship, one situation, one boundary that has been living in your throat unexpressed. 

Not the most difficult one. The one that feels most ready. 

Have the conversation. Say the thing. Ask for what you need. 

Notice what happens in your body when the words are finally out. 

  1. Sound and vibration

The Throat Chakra responds to sound — not polished, performed sound, but raw, genuine expression. 

Sing in the car. Hum while you cook. Try a simple chanting practice or yoga nidra with sound. Even speaking your feelings aloud — alone, in the car, in the shower — moves energy that has been stuck. 

There is research supporting the vagal nerve benefits of humming and chanting. The ancient practice and modern science are in agreement: vibration in the throat soothes the nervous system. 

  1. The pause before the reach

When you notice the urge to eat when you’re not hungry, or to pour a drink to take the edge off, try this first: 

Pause. Place your hand on your throat. Take three slow breaths. 

Ask: what am I actually feeling right now? What do I actually need? 

You don’t have to act on the answer immediately. But naming the feeling — even silently — begins to shift the pattern. 

  1. Throat-opening yoga practices
  • Supported fish pose (Matsyasana) — gently opens the throat and chest 
  • Lion’s breath (Simhasana) — a powerful release for throat tension and held emotion 
  • Shoulder rolls and neck release sequences 
  • Ujjayi breath — the ocean-sound breath that vibrates the throat and activates the parasympathetic nervous system 
Journalling prompt 

What am I not saying that needs to be said? And what have I been reaching for instead? 


The Strong Calm Lean Perspective

Inside the Strong Calm Lean Method, we don’t look at food and alcohol patterns in isolation. 

We look at what they’re doing for you. 

Because every coping mechanism — however unhelpful it might be in the long run — is meeting a real need. And that need deserves to be understood, not suppressed, shamed or white-knuckled away with more restriction. 

This is where the subconscious mindset work we do through PSYCH-K® becomes genuinely life-changing. 

PSYCH-K® works at the level of the subconscious — where the patterns that drive emotional eating, stress drinking and emotional suppression actually live. Not at the level of conscious decision-making, where willpower fights a losing battle. 

When we shift the subconscious belief — “I have to manage this alone,” “Asking for help is weakness,” “It’s not safe to say how I really feel” — the coping behaviour often softens naturally. Not because you forced it. Because the need it was meeting has finally been met another way. 

This, combined with the nutrition education, the strength training, the nervous system work and the community inside the program, is why the Strong Calm Lean Method creates change that lasts. 

We’re not fixing the symptom. 

We’re addressing the source. 

If you recognised yourself in this article — in the 9pm reach, in the swallowed words, in the pattern that keeps restarting no matter how many times you try to change it — I’d love to have a conversation. 

In your complimentary 30-minute Roadmap Call, we’ll look at exactly what’s happening in your body, identify what’s been holding you back, and map out the most effective path forward for you. 

And if I feel I can support your goals, I’ll share some options for working with me inside the Strong Calm Lean Method. 

You’ve given so much of yourself to others. It’s time to give a little back to yourself. 

Book Your Free Roadmap Call: www.karmabeing.com 

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