Food Anxiety
We have the burden of choice and the burden of often conflicting
information. From here, reflection can turn to chronic, tiring or even
oppressive deliberation - hence, the anxiety, the excessive worry or unease
about the outcome or impact of what should just be a simple food choice.
Is it any wonder we may feel so much apprehension
with the call to make every choice smart, informed (and then re-informed),
socially-conscious, environmentally conscious, fair trade provided, humanely
sourced, forward-thinking, allergy-friendly, coupon savvy, good fat
proportioned, antioxidant rich and lean tissue supporting, pesticide-free,
hormone-free, and additive-free, etc.? Unless we are farming, raising and
foraging our own with Grok standards in mind, we are bound to screw it
up on at least a few levels.
So, what then would sanity look like in this
scenario? How do we recover enough mental space to feel some degree of ease,
not to mention the pleasure in eating again? Try a few of these modest
proposals.
1.
Reclaim eating for sustenance.
It is common to talk about “eating to lose weight,” “eating to fight
illness,” “eating to gain muscle,” “eating to prevent aging.” Let’s put the
truth back in that, shall we?
You are eating to live - to survive, to allow your body enough nutrient
and energy input to keep you alive and functioning. Each day, that is your main
goal. Very simple in fact. That said, you can eat toward nourishing ongoing
physical vitality as your primary goal. You can eat with a nutritional emphasis
on building muscle mass. You can eat in such a way that prioritizes optimum
metabolic functioning and fat burning.
2. Do
not politicize every choice you make.
The morality of eating these days can careen a decently sensitive
and conscientious person off a cliff. How many labels and certifications does
it take to satisfy a healthy standard? From what I can tell, the
number keeps growing.
Do I understand the usefulness of these standards? You bet. Organic and
pastured offer in most cases substantive health benefit. Heritage breeds of
produce and livestock may be more nutrient-rich.
3. Dump
the idea of perfection.
Food is important. Good food choices can help you claim good health and
lifelong vitality but parsing out those exact choices, structuring intakes with
precision, giving yourself no room for choice in the moment, adhering to the
principles with exactitude sounds like a miserable way to live.
4. Do
not dramatize your missteps.
In truth, some days people leave the “20” of the 80/20 principle in the
dust. Maybe it started out as a well-intended gesture toward moderation. Cheats (if we are going to call them that) are not catastrophic.
Long-term, repetitive behaviours are.
5.
Scrutinize your motives.
Plenty of people over the years lose themselves in anxiety over their
eating because they put their identities in their choices. Maybe they feel
invested in a self-righteousness or perfectionist compulsion that goes back
psychic decades. They impose excessive control and experience emotional
anxiety with food while some other part of life feels wholly overwhelming. It
is a coping mechanism, a grounding means to feel security or authority in their
lives. This is no way to live.
Clean eating is a great action step and real vitality feels great.
6. Get
back to the actual experience.
Forget the health story of what is in front of you. Forget its sourcing.
Forget what your coworkers or mother-in-law would say about it. Cut off all
language and just be with your food the way a young child is.
Exchange words for sensation. Forgo judgment for mindfulness. Give
yourself over to the sensory experience of what you are putting in your body.
Smell it. Feel the texture. Take it in visually. Get in your own body’s
responses to it.
7. Be
grateful for every bite you take.
It is not a huge step from mindfully experiencing your food to being
grateful for it in the moment. When we drop the story about something, we can
finally be present with it. There is a lightness to the moment. We are open to
the enjoyment of it. How could we not be grateful for the chance to nourish our
bodies?
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