Mastering the Art of Eating Half a Donut
A little insight into how Iβve learned to do the seemingly impossible β stop eating while Iβm ahead, and itβs not how you might think //
Have you ever had a dozen fresh donuts sitting in front of you in the morning? Perhaps someone went out and got them for you by surprise. Youβre sitting in front of those donuts and think βlordy lordy, those look divineβ. They smell of heavenly sweet yeast and look perfectly golden brown with a picture perfect glaze thatβs right on the edge of its melting point.
Your brain cannot stop sending you signals of wanting the donut but your mind keeps reminding you that itβs off-limits.
βI really shouldnβtβ.
βItβs tempting, but no thank youβ.
βA moment on the lips, forever on the hipsβ.
βI canβt, Iβm trying not to eat carbsβ.
But they look and smell so phenomenalβ¦you canβt stop thinking of them.
βAlright maybe Iβll just try half. Will you split one with me?β
*eats half* β βomg this is divine I am having an out of body animalistic response to this idk whatβs happening all I know is I want more now but Iβm not allowed any more than thisβ
*ignores the rest of the donuts for a while by suppressing strong craving for more*
Later after dinner, you reward your earlier example of self control with another donut and justify it by thinking, βI held off this long, I think Iβve earned it by nowβ.
Can you relate?
Even if youβve never experienced this exact story, have you ever felt like you had to exercise Hulk-like power of self-control and discipline to choose not to partake in a certain food?
Have you ever said, βI canβt keep x in the house because if I do I will just keep eating itβ?
Have you ever heard someone say they treat themselves with a square of dark chocolate for dessert and thought, βwho the **** can just eat one small square of chocolate and stop there?β
The truth is, we, as a collective whole, are terrible at portion control.
There are multiple things that contribute to this, but the main culprit is NOT a lack of self-control.
James Clear, author of the New York Times bestselling book Atomic Habits, states in the book that, βself-control is a short-term strategy, not a long-term oneβ.
If you havenβt read his book on habits (you should), here is a brief explanation of his βHabit Loopβ
The Habit Loop shows that all habits are formed from this process: cue, craving, response, reward.
Use the previous donut example, this is how the habit loop might go:
Cue - sight and smell of glorious donuts
Craving - I need a donut in my mouth
Response - eats half a donut to practice self control
Reward - the satisfaction of having decent self-control and a small taste of the donut
The cycle then leads right back into another cue, which often times goes something like this:
Cue - feels like diet is already ruined creating a sense of βthis is my last chance to eat this before I get back on my diet tomorrowβ
Craving - needs to eat more donut at the thought of never being allowed it again
Response - eats another whole donut (or more), which is now 50% more donut than if they had just eaten a whole one at the initial craving
Reward - is now more than satisfied with taste of donut and quantity of calories
To finalize this example, this is typically the loop that follows next:
Cue - feelings of guilt and lack of control for overeating on unhealthy food
Craving - wants to regain self control and rid guilt
Response - goes on strict calorie restrictive, clean eating diet
Reward - regains sense of self-control and feels proud of selfβ¦until the next tempting cue comes along
Itβs not that we lack self-control, itβs that we are misplacing the use of it. We are not bad at portion control because of a lack of control, it is the control itself that makes us bad at portion control. Self-control is not sustainable.
When we start to focus on our health rather than our weight, out of a place of self-love rather than self-hate, all of those controlling rules start to fall away. Instead, you start to see the donuts as something that youβd delight in having a little bit of, but you are more than happy to say no to overindulging in it because you know it isnβt going to nourish you well, you wonβt like the way youβll feel after having too much, and you KNOW you are allowed to eat it whenever you choose to. When we are more health focused than weight focused, it removes all of those sneaky, tempting, rebellious feelings we get from slipping off of our βdietβ to having something βnaughtyβ. It takes away a lot of the appeal of eating too much of a bad thing because why shove it all into your face right now when you could also just have another half tomorrow if you wanted to? You can have it whenever you want.
We want what we canβt have. Itβs human nature. Itβs the habit loop.
Itβs why you drank way too much when you were underaged and now hardly at all. Itβs why the grass is greener on the other side. And itβs why you keep overindulging in the foods youβve labeled as βbad, not allowed, or off-limitsβ.
This used to be me. I was a dessert fanatic. I would tell myself that if I ate super squeaky clean otherwise that I could validate bingeing out on sweets when I got the chance. I couldnβt fathom the idea of stopping at a half a donut or really even just one whole one. I would almost always still want more until I felt physically sick.
And guess what.
This week, I mastered the art of eating half a donut. And I did it all out of self-love, not deprivation.
I realized that if I only had a whole sugary donut for breakfast, it would make me feel that sluggish, gross fullness that doesnβt really satisfy and leaves me hungry in like an hour. Instead, I knew that if I chose to eat half the donut and supplement it with a nourishing piece of avocado toast + some eggs that I would walk away from breakfast feeling that good good fullness as well as energized, healthy, and fueled until lunch. So thatβs what I did. And I never looked back. Never once did I desire to sneak that other half while no one was looking. I felt ultra satisfied with the amount I had and it didnβt make me feel like sugar overload.
And guess what the best part was?
The next day, I didnβt feel the need to go on a cleanse or eat really clean because of it. Actually, I went back in for the other half the next day. Because I COULD. And I made the same breakfast and it felt and tasted just as good as the day before.
That is what I call food freedom. The freedom to make conscious and clear decisions about the food you eat without deprivation or overindulgence.
THIS IS POSSIBLE FOR YOU.
If you feel like youβre constantly having a battle in your head about if you can or cannot eat certain things, I am here to tell you it does not have to be this way. I want to help you learn the art of portion control. And I mean real, true, sustainable portion control that isnβt driven by your flakey lack of self-control.
If youβre ready to master the art of eating half a donut, click the button below to sign up for six weeks of 1:1 virtual nutrition counseling with me where we will change the way you think about food, dieting, and yourself for GOOD.
If you have any questions or comments, feel free to comment on this post or hit me up on the contact page. Or, find me on any of my socials.
XOXO,
Kaitlyn
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