Tag Archive for: behavior modification

3 Ways to Create A Positive Eating Environment at Work

With our perpetually busy schedules, it can be impossible to carve out some time to enjoy a nice meal. Often mealtime is sandwiched between meetings or may even be during a meeting. It used to be that when I was at work, I ate at my desk and returned emails and phone calls in between bites of my lunch. This ultimately worked against me.

 

I found that I wasn’t taking the time to appreciate what I was eating. My meal became a background activity while I did more work. I didn’t take the time to listen to what my body’s hunger and fullness cues were, I was just mindlessly eating what was in front of me.

 

When I realized that this is what I was doing, I knew that I needed to make a change. Every day I carved out 20-30 minutes in my schedule for lunch. During this time, I walked away from the desk and sat at my kitchen table to eat lunch so I can focus on the food I was eating. Only then was I able to appreciate my meal and listen to my body’s fullness cues.

 

Creating a positive eating environment does not have to be a burden. When work is busy, taking an extra twenty minutes to eat can seem impossible, but it doesn’t have to be. Those 20 minutes should be a time to refocus yourself and can be a much-needed break from work. You can pack lunch ahead of time, as not to waste time waiting for your food to be prepared. Then, take the time you need to eat your meal and decompress.

 

Here are 3 ways you can create a positive eating environment

 

  1. Step Away from the Desk 

Most people are now working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Whether this is the case for you, or you are still going into the office, do your best to step away from the desk to eat. If not, it’s all too easy to just turn to the computer monitor and keep working through your lunch break. Find a nice bench outside or a table in the kitchen and have a sit-down meal. Create an eating space separate from work.

 

  1. Turn off All Distractions 

 When you’re away from your desk, treat it as a true break from all work distractions. Don’t check email or text. Do your best to turn off those distractions and focus entirely on the meal in front of you. Any work issues will surely be there when you return to your desk.

 

  1. Don’t Talk Shop

 If you decide to eat out with a coworker, commit to not talking about work. You have left your workspace and deserve a nice refrain from all the stress involved there. Refocus the conversation to something positive.

 

I realize these tips are probably things you’ve heard before. But the question is…are you consistently doing them?

It’s often NOT a lack of knowledge that trips people up. It’s LACK OF CONSISTENT BEHAVIOR.

So, which tip above will you commit to this week? Let me know in the comments below.

 

Is the Scale Weighing You Down?

Sometimes when you are embarking on a journey to a body you love, you use certain “benchmarks” that you use to track your progress.  In the past you probably were a slave to the scale, tracking your weight loss progress as often as you can at different points throughout the day.  The scale would often serve as your permission or denial of certain foods or skipping certain meals and snacks.

If you have been on this intuitive eating journey with me for some time, I hope you have begun to realize the scale is not a progress tracker.  When the scale indicates weight loss or weight gain, this is not indicative of success or failure.  If you have been torturing yourself on a fad diet that offers little variety and is not meeting proper health requirements, but you lose weight on it, are you really succeeding?  Maybe you have been honoring your hunger and eating well, but your weight is taken a doctor’s appointment and the number is not indicative of how healthy you feel– does that make you a failure?

The answer to both of these questions is no.  If you have lost weight through extreme, unhealthy measures, you put yourself at risk for gaining it back once you resume regular eating habits.  If you are happy with how your body has been feeling then by no means does that make you a failure, even if the “great” and “powerful” scale is reporting no weight loss.

The scale is just a material object.  YOU dictate how successful you feel.  YOU are the one learning how to live a healthy lifestyle.  So let the scale collect some dust for a bit and focus on the progress you are making in other ways.  Without this “weight” on your shoulders, you are sure to feel lighter and freer right away!

Your turn to take action: What are some new ways you will measure your success?