Our History
We began our journey as a phone group within another 12-step fellowship, to whom we owe utmost respect and gratitude. Back in 2011, we started as a singular Big Book study on a Saturday night — which soon added several affiliated meetings to carry the message of recovery from compulsive eating.
Our group follows the legacy of the Primary Purpose Group of AA in Dallas, Texas. Our sponsors taught us that our problem was not with food, but with the behavior of compulsive eating. Many of us desperately tried to control our eating and our body, yet we failed every single time. We asked ourselves — what is wrong with me? Why can others stay on a meal plan, and I can’t, no matter how hard I try? Even if I don’t eat sugar, flour, whatever — I’m still obsessed about my eating and my body. Why?
We finally discovered that we are chronic compulsive eaters — those beyond human aid. We accepted that our illness of chronic compulsive eating could not be overcome by restricting, weighing and measuring food, attending meetings, having accountability partners — and so on. But we could recover by having a spiritual awakening, precisely how it is described in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous. In fact, if we substituted the words “compulsive eating” for “alcohol,” the Big Book was about us. And therefore, we had to seek the exact same solution — a spiritual one.
Armed with the Big Book, we launched into action. We carried the message in person, online, and on the phone, explaining to people that we are actually powerless over compulsive eating, not food. We also called ourselves recovered — because we are, and because the book tells us to do so.
We didn’t have much choice — it was either follow the instructions from the book precisely or die from this illness (or end up in a mental institution). We were that “special” group of people for whom nothing worked except strict adherence to these principles. So, if we wanted to save ourselves from ourselves, we had to follow the original 12-step instructions.
In July 2024, after more than twelve years, our home group voted to create a new fellowship. It was joined by several other groups, and we called ourselves Chronic Compulsive Eaters Anonymous. A general service board (CCEAWS, Inc.) was created, and in January 2025 we held our first general service conference.
Now we are carrying this message to the next chronic compulsive eater who desperately needs this freedom as much as we needed it. We carry it in many languages and in many countries.
If you find yourself in the same situation and are willing to do the work to recover — join us on this journey, and we will do everything we can to help you find freedom.



