- Willpower is limited, especially when you are hungry, tired, stressed, or rushing between responsibilities. A better food environment lowers the amount of willpower you need.
- The four levers Clayton outlines are visibility, access, portion, and friction. Make the helpful choice easier to see and reach, then make the less helpful choice a little less automatic.
- Jennie shared how organizing food by macronutrient helps her know where to go when she needs protein fast. That kind of structure can remove a lot of decision fatigue.
- A small whiteboard on the fridge can help track fresh food, leftovers, and meal prep before they get forgotten. It is a simple way to reduce waste and make options easier to see.
- Breakfast does not have to look like breakfast. If chicken chili or leftovers help you hit the nutrition target for meal one, that can be a better answer than forcing traditional breakfast food.
- Portioning food before you are hungry makes it easier to avoid overcorrecting later. That can mean prepped meals, single-serve options, or keeping the right containers close to where you cook.
- Friction can be useful. Deleting delivery apps, removing saved payment info, changing your drive home, or storing trigger foods out of sight can interrupt automatic choices.
- A kitchen reset starts with clearing out old food, making healthy options visible, keeping grab-and-go protein and produce ready, and setting up backup options in the freezer.