Practicing Mindful Eating and Self-Compassion

When I sit in cafés, I use to watch people around me. Most are either on their phones or hurriedly eating their lunch, eyes barely focused on what is in front of them. It struck me how disconnected we’ve become from the act of eating. Our meals meant to be a time of restoration and pleasure, have become just another task to cross off the list.

Food often becomes an afterthought, something we grab between meetings or quickly consume while scrolling through our phones. For many, the relationship with food has become transactional, something that satisfies hunger but rarely nourishes the soul. Yet food holds the potential for so much more—it can be a source of joy, comfort, and connection. To reclaim that deeper relationship, we need to turn our attention to mindful eating and self-compassion.

The Lost Art of Eating Mindfully

Mindful eating is an antidote to this rush. It invites us to slow down and reconnect with the sensory experience of food. This isn’t just about eating slower, though of course that helps; it’s about being fully present. When we take a bite, we should focus on the texture, the flavors, and the colors on the plate. We could ask ourselves: What does this taste like? How does it make me feel? It’s an act of curiosity and engagement that deepens our awareness of what we consume.

The Practice of Food Mindfulness

Practicing mindful eating requires intention, but it doesn’t have to be complicated. Here are a few steps to get started:

  • Start small. You don’t have to overhaul your entire eating routine overnight. Begin with one meal a day or even one part of a meal. Take a few minutes to savor your food without distractions.
  • Engage your senses. Before you take a bite, look at your food. Notice the colors, the arrangement. When you eat, feel the texture on your tongue, the burst of flavors. Chew slowly, allowing your senses to fully absorb the experience.
  • Listen to your body. Often, we eat out of habit or because it’s time, not because we’re hungry. Pause before a meal and check in with yourself. Are you really hungry? How does your body feel? Learning to recognize true hunger and fullness is a key part of mindful eating.
  • Be grateful. Reflect on the journey your food has taken to arrive at your plate. This sense of gratitude can elevate the experience, helping you appreciate every bite.

Rebuilding Through Self-Compassion

But mindful eating is only part of the equation. To rebuild a healthy relationship with food, we must also practice self-compassion. For many, food carries emotional weight, guilt, shame, or anxiety. These emotions often stem from unrealistic standards we set for ourselves or pressures from society.

One key to shifting this narrative is treating ourselves with kindness. If we overeat, it’s common to spiral into self-criticism. We tell ourselves we have no willpower. But it’s okay to eat more if we don’t do it often. Therefore, what if, instead of judgment, we offered ourselves understanding?

  • Challenge the inner critic. The next time you catch yourself feeling guilty about food, pause. Ask where that voice is coming from. Is it societal pressure, or perhaps old beliefs about what it means to be healthy? Replace that negative self-talk with a gentle reminder that one meal does not define you.
  • Celebrate progress, not perfection. Shifting your relationship with food won’t happen overnight. There will be days when it feels easy, and others when old habits resurface. The key is to focus on progress rather than perfection. Each mindful moment counts, even if it’s just a single breath between bites.

Embracing Food as a Source of Joy

Ultimately, rebuilding our relationship with food is about more than what we eat. It’s about how we approach food, both with mindfulness and compassion. When we shift from seeing food as something that controls us to something we engage with joyfully and without fear, we begin to heal that relationship.

Eating shouldn’t be a source of stress but one of comfort and connection, a way to nourish not just the body but the mind and the soul.

So the next time you sit down for a meal, take a deep breath. Let go of distractions and be present. Approach your plate with curiosity and kindness, and slowly, you’ll start to rebuild your relationship with food, one mindful bite at a time.

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Why Unplugging Your Mind Is Important to Find Yourself

When e-mails, text messages, conference calls, Webex, Whatspp, FB, Instagram, Tweeter, Google and anything else from your partner to your boss invade your lives, it becomes necessary for your survival to stop for a while and be silent. That’s why unplugging your mind is crucial.

Our always connected minds take us away from the best of ourselves and our creative potential.

Referring constantly to what one or the other has said, we forget to connect to our essential being, which is unique and precious.

We have become individuals driven by technological change that moved away from ourselves, from our awareness of being human, from the first component of Emotional Intelligence (EI). EI is recognized today as a condition of success in a Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous (VUCA) world, as it is the one we live in today.

Refocusing, looking inside, listening to silence and our inner voice. In the depths of ourselves we find an enormous amount of resources and our most authentic creativity: it is our treasure, a unique, rich and colorful, magical place where everything is open and possible.

In this space, we can find synchronicity, messages and insights that will enable us to make the right decisions for our lives. Real relationships can arise, authentic relationships between sincere people who are now masked by the ego that continues to rule us.

What to do then?

Give yourself moments of silence! Be for a while without your mobile phone. Go out for a walk without it, walk with no direction in nature and feel, look, listen, use all your senses to the maximum.

Be present in this unique moment and let yourself be pervaded by the harmony that surrounds you.

Practice your favorite hobby, and if you do not have it, think about finding one. Quietly cooking at home, knitting, painting, drawing, gardening and all the other activities that you may be passionate about.

Stop for a moment and stop moving from one activity to another, from one piece of information to another. Your brain can not take it anymore, it also needs a rest. Give yourself time to deepen the reasons for your choices and discover the reason for your being, your purpose.

People feel lost. Most probably they are really lost: they have disconnected from themselves to live in connection with the social networks.

Therefore, unplugging your mind is very important for your wellbeing. Learn to find some space for yourself and your deeper needs. And live your life fully. You deserve it!

How to Embrace Change

Life is constant change, Buddha and Aristotle already said it: change is a fact of life. But change has also been accelerating in recent decades. Massive disruption across the social, technological, political and environmental dimensions of our lives means that we are constantly trying to figure out how best to manage uncertainty. And for someone it can be scary.

The origin of this fear can be found in biology. Our brain is the result of two and a half million years of evolution. We have lived in caves much longer than we have in cities. This means that we have “coded” automatic responses to successfully respond to everyday threats.

If absurdly you see a tiger walking down the street, you would not try to understand what breed it is but you would rather try to escape as quickly as possible (flight). Another codified reaction would be to stay still, hoping that the tiger will not see you (freeze). The last possible reaction would be to fight it (fight), with very, very limited chances of success, so your brain would immediately discard it.

Flight, Freeze or Fight are the three primal reactions to events that we perceive as dangerous to our safety.

However, the wonderful circuits that have allowed us to evolve as a species are not suited to addressing the most subtle threats of our age, such as digitization, the pandemic or the risk of losing your job.

These fears are evolutionarily new and are not always easy to manage.

bengal tiger half soak body on water during daytime
Photo by Flickr on Pexels.com

Remember that the brain is designed for your survival, not your happiness. Therefore, to face changes, you have to understand them as opportunities and learn from the potentials they entail. Moreover, this is not as automatic as running away from something dangerous. On the contrary, it takes effort and training.

Let us see how you could get started by following these four tips.

1. First of all, it is important to train your mind daily. Just as you go to the gym or practice by yourself, you need to keep your brain muscle in shape. Try to do something different every day. For example, you could change sources of information when reading the news (also useful to understand various points of view), change your route to go to work, or try a new dish.

2. Second, you can try to consider what happens to you in a different manner. For instance, a good way is reading history to realize that although we live in an age where changes happen very fast, all these progresses have allowed us, for example, to increase our life expectancy.

3. Third, try to disconnect from technology and reconnect with yourself and your surroundings. If you are always immersed in the digital world, you will not have time to integrate learning and to find a certain and needed tranquility. For example, one day during the weekend or on vacation you can put your mobile in the “don’t disturb” mode.

4. Fourth, trust. If you look at the difficulties that you have already faced in the past, you will see that now they look easy to you. If you have already been able to overcome challenging situations, why should not you be able to do it now?

Are you afraid of change or do you like new challenges?

Photo by Braden Collum on Unsplash

9 Tips to Live a Better Life

Good habits and good mood have a close connection with good health and well-being.

Here are 9 tips that will help you find a bit of tranquility, improve your balance and get closer to the idea of ​​happiness that best suits you.

  1. Keep moving. Physical activity is one of the tools that most benefits our body. It can significantly reduce stress, control cholesterol levels, help you lose weight, oxygenate body tissues and eliminate toxins through sweating. In addition, it allows the development of endorphins that produce brain pleasure and decrease joint pain. If you can, don’t take the elevator but take the stairs, walk to work, or ride a bicycle. These are all activities you can do without necessarily going to the gym. Not only will your body benefit, but the environment will also be thankful.
  2. Improve nutrition. Pay attention to what you consume daily. Take time for each meal and choose healthy menus. Eat balanced and add fruit, vegetables and legumes to your diet. Try new recipes and prepare differently flavoured meals to discover new things. Avoid eating junk food, because it contains simple sugars and carbohydrates, which contribute to the slowdown of metabolism and obstruct the arteries. Also avoid fatty meals too.
  3. Drink plenty of water. The consumption of water, tea and juice allows you to eliminate free radicals. In addition, hydration is good for the skin, which will thus remain beautiful and healthy.
  4. Do something you enjoy. Take time to do an activity that you like during the day, which makes you relax, such as doing manual work, cooking, reading or learning to play a musical instrument.
  5. Disconnect yourself for a full day. Make an effort, put social media and cell phone aside for a day. It’s good to focus on yourself every now and then.
  6. Spend time outdoors. Walking in the forest, having a picnic, spending time outdoors are activities that make you reconnect with nature as well as being an opportunity to breathe some fresh air.
  7. Volunteering. Solidarity is one of the paths most used by people who seek tranquility and who want to be at peace with themselves. Good deeds will affect your life in a positive way.
  8. Stay positive. Look at things with pleasure, optimism and positive energy. Frustration brings negative consequences in life.
  9. Share moments with friends. Having a coffee with friends, talking about nothing, will help you feel much better.

What do you think? will you adopt one of these new habits?