How to Eat Your Favorite Foods and Lose Weight
Can you really eat your favorite foods and still lose weight?
Maybe it’s the meatloaf that your grandmother used to make. Maybe it’s the apple pie á la mode you shared with your spouse on your first date. Regardless of what it might be, in this article I'll show you how you can eat your favorite foods and lose weight.
We All Have Favorite Foods
We’ve all had favorite foods. And sometimes, it’s true, those things aren’t the healthiest of choices.
But the psychological impact of these foods cannot be ignored or dismissed. And when you deprive yourself of these foods, the impact feels greater than it actually is — which means the counteractions you’ll take as a result are likely to be greater, too.
Sally's Experience
Let’s say, for instance, your favorite food of choice is the same as it is for Sally, a patient who has been working with me for the past year. Her comfort food is a warm, gooey, chocolate chip cookie and so-cold-it-hurts glass of milk.
Normally, Sally went to the grocery store with a shopping list and a full stomach. This way her willpower muscle was not fatigued and the chocolate chips stayed out of the shopping cart. One recent instance, though, was different. It was her daughter’s birthday party and she wanted chocolate chip cookies for the party.
At first, Sally didn’t think about it. The chocolate chips and other ingredients went into the cart without much thought. However, later in the day when she got hungry she remembered the grocery store purchase.
“All day long today, for some reason, I’d been thinking about having a cookie,” she wrote to me in an email. “I thought about going home, making the cookies, and sharing a few with my family before the birthday party, but I kept battling back that thought.”
That night, after Sally’s three children went to bed, something completely predictable happened. She went ahead and made the cookies, then ate them all before she went to bed.
“Ugh!” she wrote. “I felt like a total failure. Worst of all, the house smelled like cookies, and my daughter woke up and came down to the kitchen as I was polishing off the last one. It was humiliating.”
Tip: Eat Your Favorite Foods
When it comes to the way we eat, perfection simply isn’t possible. In fact, studies even show that your food choices don’t have to be perfect to be healthy. The recommendation to eat your favorite foods doesn’t mean, of course, that you shouldn’t strive to get better and better about the way you eat.
Time and again, my patients have demonstrated that people who take small but consistent steps toward big health goals are almost always more effective in their pursuits than people who try to do everything at once. What it does mean, though, is that we should acknowledge that our connection to food is far deeper than what’s on the nutrition label.
3 Ways to Eat Your Favorite Foods
When it comes to favorite foods, I ask my patients to do three things.
1. Be mindful about when you eat your favorite foods.
2. Discover new favorite foods.
3. Upgrade old favorite foods.
This takes time. We simply cannot do this overnight. It took a long time to develop the psychological connections that make these foods meaningful to us, and it will take a long time to untangle those connections and build new ones.
Identify Your Favorite Foods
So, first things first: You need to know what these favorite foods are — and that can start by building a simple list of the sorts of foods that you understand aren’t particularly healthy but you reckon might be harder to give up than other things. For Sally (and me too, by the way) that list would have included chocolate chip cookies.
After that, it’s time to find some new comfort foods — and that means it’s time to do some epicurean exploration. Sift through cookbooks. Consult friends and family members. Spend plenty of time perusing social media sites dedicated to healthy recipes.