How It Works
CEA-HOW is built on three principles. Every aspect of the program flows from these three words: Honest, Open-minded, Willing.
H · O · W
Honest
Recovery begins with rigorous honesty — with ourselves about the nature and extent of our problem. We cannot recover from something we refuse to acknowledge. Honesty means telling the truth about what we eat, what we feel, and what drives us to food.
Open
We approach this program with openness to new ideas, new ways of living, and a Power greater than ourselves. Many of us came to CEA-HOW after years of trying other approaches. Openness means being willing to try something different — even when it feels uncomfortable.
Willing
Willingness is the action that makes honesty and openness real. We become willing to follow direction from a sponsor, to make the phone calls, to weigh our food, to do the step work. Willingness means showing up — even when we don't feel like it.
"The program works for those who work it. The tools are simple. The commitment is real."
Requirements vs. Suggestions
CEA-HOW is honest about what the program asks of its members. Some elements are required — not because we're rigid, but because we've found they're what makes recovery possible.
The 12-Step Structure
The 12 Steps are the spiritual backbone of CEA-HOW. Working through them with a sponsor is how members experience lasting change — not just in eating, but in every area of life.
Steps 1–3: Foundation
- Admitting powerlessness over food
- Coming to believe a Higher Power can restore us
- Turning our will and lives over to that Power
Steps 4–9: Action
- Searching, fearless moral inventory
- Admitting the exact nature of our wrongs
- Becoming ready for defects to be removed
- Humbly asking for removal
- Listing those we've harmed and making amends
Steps 10–12: Maintenance
- Continuing personal inventory
- Seeking through prayer and meditation
- Carrying the message to others who suffer
Daily Commitment Breakdown
Here's what CEA-HOW members typically commit to each day. It's a real investment — and for those of us who have struggled for years, it's one worth making.
Food: 3 Meals
Three weighed and measured meals, no sugar or flour, committed to your sponsor the evening before. This structure removes the daily negotiation with food that exhausts compulsive eaters.
Phone: 4 Calls
Four outgoing calls to CEA-HOW members. These calls break isolation — the environment where compulsive eating thrives. You are never alone in this program.
Writing & Step Work
Daily written work with your sponsor — answering questions, working through the steps, and building self-awareness. Writing is how we identify the patterns driving compulsive behavior.
Spiritual Practice
Prayer, meditation, or quiet reflection. You define what this looks like — CEA-HOW is a spiritual program, not a religious one. Many members simply spend a few minutes in stillness morning and evening.
A Day in the Life
What does a typical day actually look like for a CEA-HOW member in recovery?
Ready to See if This Is for You?
The best way to understand CEA-HOW is to experience it. Take the self-assessment, or find a meeting and see for yourself.