EP 293.5: How Much of Your Day Is Spent Thinking About Food? The 4 Strategies That Change Everything **Must Listen Fav!** cover art

EP 293.5: How Much of Your Day Is Spent Thinking About Food? The 4 Strategies That Change Everything **Must Listen Fav!**

EP 293.5: How Much of Your Day Is Spent Thinking About Food? The 4 Strategies That Change Everything **Must Listen Fav!**

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A client said something recently that tore me into pieces: "I realized I've been so consumed with thinking about my next meal or obsessing over what I can and can't eat that I totally missed my son's baseball season. I was physically there but mentally checked out. I was somewhere else entirely." If that hits you in the gut, this episode is for you. Today we're talking about the energy thief no one names: food obsession. Because eating disorders aren't just about food — they're time thieves. They steal your presence from your own life. And your life, friend, is real and beautiful and messy, and it's happening right now, whether you're there for it or not. In this episode, I walk you through the honest question that changes everything — how much of your day is spent thinking about food? — and gives you four practical strategies to reclaim that mental energy and come back to the people you love. The picture that might feel familiar: She has it all together on paper. But here's her actual day: feet hit the floor and she's already calculating what she'll eat. Planning breakfast in the shower. Thinking about lunch through her morning meetings. By evening she's exhausted — not from her job, not from her family, but from the constant mental chatter. Her husband asks about weekend plans and she's already spiraled into anxiety about restaurant menus. If you know her — if she could be you — keep listening. The question at the heart of this episode If you had to estimate what percentage of your waking thoughts are consumed by food planning, food guilt, food anxiety, or food rules — what would it be? For me, in the hardest seasons, it was 80–90% of my day. A constant conversation inside my own ears. And that sacrifice was costing me everything. Which brings us to the quote that shifted everything: "If you don't sacrifice for what you ultimately want, then you become the ultimate sacrifice." What do you ultimately want? It's probably not to think about food all day. It's connection. Presence. Energy for what actually matters. Peace in your own mind. But when food perfection runs the show, you become the sacrifice — your time with your spouse, your conversations with your kids, your ability to be fully in your own life. The 4 strategies to reclaim your presence 1. The Three-Second Check-In Throughout your day, pause and ask: "Where is my mind right now?" If you catch yourself in food thoughts during a conversation, a meeting, a moment that matters — don't judge it. Just notice it. Then ask: "What would it look like to be fully here right now?" Life goes on whether or not you participate in it. This tiny check-in brings you back. 2. The Energy Audit For one day, keep track of how much mental energy goes to food thoughts. Every time you catch yourself planning, worrying, calculating, or obsessing — mark it in your notes app or on paper. At the end of the day, count it up. That's your energy audit: a real look at how much of your life force is being redirected away from what matters most. When you're on autopilot, you don't realize how time-consuming it is. This makes it visible. 3. The Presence Practice Next time you sit down to eat — phone away, multitasking off — be fully there for the experience. Notice the taste, the texture, the satisfaction. This isn't about the food. It's about practicing presence, including presence with yourself. So often we eat standing, rushing, avoiding the experience entirely. Being present at your own table is where it starts. 4. The Connection Redirect When you catch yourself spiraling into food thoughts, immediately reach toward someone you love. Text your kid. Call your spouse. Hug your dog. The goal: redirect that mental energy toward connection instead of obsession. Try making dinner a device-free zone — and a free zone for your mind, too. Ask your people about their day. Really listen. (In Lindsey's family: "What was the most challenging part of your day, and what was the best part?" — it drives real conversation every time.) What happens when you choose present over perfect: Your relationships deepen — because you're actually there for them, not just physicallyYour work improves — because you're not distracted by food anxietyYour energy increases — because you're not exhausting yourself with mental food battlesAnd most importantly: you start to remember who you are — the woman with opinions about things other than calories, with dreams bigger than numbers, with love to give that was never contingent on eating perfectly A few lines from the episode: "Eating disorders aren't just about food. They're time thieves. They steal your presence from your own life." "If you don't sacrifice for what you ultimately want, you become the ultimate sacrifice." "Your kids don't need a perfect mom. Your spouse doesn't need a perfect partner. They need you present, engaged, and fully there." "You're worth loving right now — food struggles and all. The people ...
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