Food for thought: Embracing our indulgences

By July 21, 2015

The original post of moderation began with Angela from The Diet Book Junkie, then passed to Erin from The Healthy Apron, then to Stef at The New Healthy [which is where I picked up the thread]. Each of the ladies took a different approach to the conversation. The one that spoke to me the most was Stef’s post on the backwards mentality she held for years –

It was my “all-or-none” mentality at work. It’s that little voice that says: ‘you already ate that [insert junk food of choice], you might as well just have an off-day.’

I struggled with this same mentality for a very long time.It was a indulge + punishment or sabotage behavior, losing myself and obsessing about what I’d decided to eat.  I often said to myself – if I ‘cheat’ today, the whole day is done. I may as well lose myself in this moment of indulgence and surrender to everything. In these moments of indulgence I would often get very, very hard on myself, thinking horrible things about the way I looked, acted, and attacked myself in every negative way possible. After years of working on my relationship with food I can now say: it doesn’t need to be like this. I also work with a lot of my clients on this very issue. So many of us believe that once we’ve ‘cheated’ [I hate using that word] everything goes out the window. What we don’t realize, and what Stef explained very, very well, is that life goes on. We don’t need to sabotage the entire day and ourselves just because we chose to indulge in something. Eating is good. Making healthy goals is good. Enjoying your favorite dessert is good. I like to compare this indulging + sabotaging behavior to yoga, or any physical practice. Every time you get on your mat you’re going to have a different practice. It doesn’t mean one day is better than the other. Some days, you’ll fall into your king pigeon pose with ease, other days you’ll find it challenging to camel pose for more than 2.4 seconds. When attending a yoga class you don’t see people roll up their mat 5 minutes into practice and leave the studio in a tiffy because their body is handing them unexpected challenges – not moving into a pose as it should, showing signs of pain in the oddest of areas, etc.  Instead, the yogi accepts that their body is in a different place than it was the day before. It’s not right, or wrong. It’s just different. They continue their yoga session, move through the poses, and smile at the changes their body has made, and the challenges they’ve been faced with. Same goes with eating. Everyday is a gift, everyday you’ll be challenged with something, but you don’t have to walk away from your practice of eating healthy. Bend through the tough poses and keep your eye on your goal – to live healthful, happy, and love yourself unconditionally, no matter what.

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This entry was tagged: food for thought, journey to health


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Hi! I’m Leanne (RHN FBCS)

a Keto Nutritionist, host of The Keto Diet Podcast, and best-selling author of The Keto Diet & Keto for Women. I want to live in a world where every woman has access to knowledge to better her health.

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