Get the guide

As dietitians, we’re trained to support health, but knowing what to say when a client opens up about dieting trauma is hard. With this guide, you’ll learn how to recognize common phrases that can accidentally derail your clients’ progress and how to reframe it so you never walk out of a session wondering if you said the right thing again. 

10 Well-Intended Comments That Miss the Mark with Struggling Clients

Because knowing what not to say is just as important as what you do say

free guide!

Build deeper trust with your clients 

Ready to show up with clarity and compassion? 

This guide is for you if you want to…

Create a safe, supportive space for healing

Be more confident showing up in these conversations 

Fine-tune your language to fully support your clients

get the
guide now

I know you’re here because you want to help your clients navigate disordered eating, body image issues, and years of diet trauma. And, after working with hundreds of women who were ready to stop dieting and start trusting themselves again, I learned (sometimes the hard way) about what helps and what doesn’t when a client is struggling with food and body images.

That’s why I created this guide. It’s not about calling you out. It’s about equipping you with the tools you need to show up with more awareness, confidence, and compassion in conversations and moments that matter most.

With love,
Katy

Hello, friend!

Inside the 10 Well-Intended Comments guide, you’ll get…  

  • The 10 most common phrases clients who struggle with food or body image say

  • A step-by-step guide to analyzing your typical responses and reframing them to support your clients with compassion and tactfulness 

  • Exact phrases to open the door to deeper conversations, longer (and deeper) client relationships, and creating real, lasting change for your clients.


GET THE GUIDE

Get the Well-Intended Comments That Miss the Mark guide