Eating well and savouring

Since I gave birth to my little one, I can鈥檛 recall having a meal I have savoured fully. I鈥檝e had a few meals out with family and friends, mid-morning coffees with colleagues at work, and indulged in a couple of delicious take-away meals delivered to my door. I think eating well isn鈥檛 purely just about what you鈥檙e eating, but it鈥檚 also about the how.

Eating well can also be about having simple, but really wholesome and good quality food. Quality over quantity. Also, eating slowly and delicately means I am able to relish what I鈥檓 eating and allows my body time to recognise that I鈥檓 already full. Most of the time, I鈥檓 multitasking while eating so I become unaware of when I鈥檓 really full. Eating well can also mean eating mindfully and sharing. A meal can be really simple, but made to be really beautiful when shared with others.聽

Here are a few easy things I can do for myself this week:

  • Savour a homemade and indulgent breakfast and coffee at home.
  • Take a real lunch break. If you can, eat outside to break it up again.聽
  • Prepare healthy and easy snacks on the weekends or when you鈥檙e shopping. This way you are less tempted by quick sugary or salty food. It鈥檚 better for your mental concentration and energy levels. Maybe consider some of the following:
    • zucchini slice or muffin
    • banana muffins or bread
    • celery with nut butter
    • hummus with carrot or cucumber sticks (cut night before and leave sealed in container in fridge)
    • corn chips, unflavored
    • small bags of unflavored popcorn
    • roasted nuts
    • muesli bars
    • granola/muesli and yoghurt
    • cut up watermelon or rockmelon (keep in air-tight container in fridge)
    • small cans of tuna and crackers
    • olives in jar
    • papadams (microwaved not fried, much healthier!)
    • wheat biscuits and cheese and tomato slices
    • fresh fruit (i.e. apples, grapes)
Tagged in What messes with your head, food, mental health