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Take your life back from food: 5 ways to reclaim your time and energy

Michelle May

Take-your-life-back-from-food

Imagine what it would be like to take your life back from food! Think about what you would do if you could reclaim your time and energy.

Reclaim your time and energy

Busy? Overwhelmed? Wish you could discover a few extra minutes every hour?

For many people, time and energy are more valuable than money. Where do you spend it? Where do you squander it? More important, where could you invest it for a greater return?

Productivity coaches often have their clients do a “time study” to see where their time really goes. Here’s my twist. In addition to tracking your activities, it’s helpful to notice when your attention drifts away from what you’re doing to something else. That is mindfulness.

Try it. Make four columns on a piece of paper with these headings: “What I’m Doing,” “Start Time,” “Stop Time,” “Thoughts.” Simply notice what you do throughout the day. When your thoughts wander take a second to jot down what you were thinking about.

What I’m doing       Start time    Stop time       Thoughts

Writing an article     7:40 am         8:15 am      I’m hungry! Time to eat breakfast.

You’re probably thinking, “I don’t have time for that!” Exactly!

However, awareness is the first step toward change.

Thought for Food

Many people are surprised to discover how much time and energy they spend thinking about food, eating, dieting, and/or their weight and body. Notice how much time you spend:

  • Time spent thinking about foodThinking and talking about food.
  • Thinking and talking about diets.
  • Reading articles about nutrition or losing weight.
  • Looking at recipes.
  • Watching cooking shows or food segments.
  • Watching news stories about health, diets, or weight.
  • Watching videos about weight loss.
  • Watching commercials about food and diets.
  • Talking about who has lost or gained weight (and how).
  • Thinking about not eating the food you really want.
  • Wondering what there is to eat.
  • Thinking about how “bad” the food you want really is.
  • Looking for food.
  • Buying or preparing food.
  • Eating food (ironically, very little time compared to the amount of time spent thinking about it).
  • Cleaning up after eating (or hiding the evidence!).
  • Feeling physically uncomfortable and tired after eating more than you needed.
  • Mentally adding up calories, points, carbs, or whatever you happen to be counting.
  • Logging what you ate or how much exercise you did into an app.
  • Feeling guilty for eating.
  • Thinking about how “bad” you are for eating a “bad” food.
  • Exercising (or thinking about exercising) to pay penance for what you ate.
  • Wishing you were thinner.
  • Thinking about your weight, your hips, your thighs, your belly, your “bat wings.”
  • Feeling bad about your body and yourself.
  • Telling yourself you’re out of control.
  • Thinking about starting a new diet.
  • Repeating the entire process over and over.

Silently and steadily, you squander your valuable time and energy on something that should be natural and effortless—fueling and nourishing your body so you can live your life. And where has it gotten you?

You have a choice: Reclaim your rightful ownership of your time and energy or continue to waste it thinking about food.

Here are five strategies that when practiced consistently, free you up to live the vibrant life you crave.

5 ways to take your life back from food

1. STOP!

Whenever you catch yourself thinking or talking about food, eating, dieting, or weight, say STOP out loud (or at least loud in your head). Unless you’re physically hungry, don’t fritter away your valuable time worrying about food.

2. Redirect your attention.

Trust your body to let you know when you actually need food so you can focus your attention on other enjoyable, more productive activities.

3. Let go of guilt.

When you stop obsessing about everything you eat, you’ll discover an untapped well of time and energy. Amazingly, when you stop restricting, depriving, and punishing yourself, you’ll naturally begin to seek balance, variety, and moderation in your diet. Although it seems counter-intuitive, a participant in one of our Mindful Eating Retreats expressed it like this: “I had been seeking a sane way of dealing with the food and I believe this marks a turning point in my life.”

4. Eat mindfully.

The best time to think about eating is when you’re eating. If you love food so much, act like it! Turn off the TV, sit at the table, notice the aromas, textures, and flavors, and pay attention to your hunger and fullness signals so you’ll feel great when you’re finished.

5. Invest wisely.

Look back at your time study. What’s missing from your day? Could you be trying to fill that gap with food–or distracting yourself by focusing on your weight instead?

You’re in charge of where you invest your most valuable resources. Nourish your body, mind, heart, and spirit for a more balanced, fulfilling, and vibrant life.

This article has been updated from a previously published version.

Enjoyed this article? Here are three more to help you:

Diet culture: An outdated paradigm whose time is up!

Don’t Panic! Mindful Eating is a Long-Term Investment

Is Perfectionism Eating You Up?

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