Diet: Facing Lousy Choices
It's 11:30 AM. You've been up since 5 o'clock and the hunger meter is
on high. "What to eat?" you think to yourself.
You pore over the menu for the deli downstairs but nothing you can
allow yourself looks that good. Sure, you could go out for fast food
but there's a meeting coming up and you don't really want to move your
car and then have to find a new parking spot when you return.
So you decide not to go out. That leaves eating in.
You look at your choices, wishing you'd had the foresight to bring
something from home. There's the vending machine in the break room,
filled with plastic-wrapped, rubber-textured sandwiches, bagels,
muffins and Danish. Ugh, you keep spinning the carousels, hoping that
by some miracle, there will be a vegetable snack plate or something
half-way decent. You narrow down your choices to a cup of noodle soup
or a chicken breast sandwich.
Now you have another choice: eat something to take the edge off or
power through the minutes of temptation until you are sitting in your
meeting and eating is out of the question. After an hour of dreary,
repetitive discussions, your hunger may have calmed down.
How you handle it each day, depends on your mood. Often, if we can get
through that one tempting half hour, we're set for the afternoon and
can easily wait for our well-planned light dinner. On other days, you
know in your heart that if you don't eat something, you won't be able
to concentrate on your work because all you can think about is food
while you try to conceal the embarrassment of a gurgling stomach.
On those days, take the chicken sandwich, remove the bun, and microwave
the miniscule piece of chicken provided. Then cut it into tiny pieces
and eat slowly with a plastic knife and fork. If you can make the
pea-sized pieces last for 15 or 20 minutes, you'll feel like you've
actually eaten an entire meal and be on your way to a pleasant
non-food-focused afternoon on a very limited caloric intake.
If you truly want to control your weight, you can do it anywhere. The
key is never to eat until you've had a lengthy internal dialog with
yourself that forces you into a full awareness of your food intake and
then select the lesser of all evils and consume it as slowly as you can
manage.
Even trapped in the office with nothing more than a killer vending
machine, you can turn bleak choices into a self-esteem building triumph.