Choice

This is our life. It is completely up to US how we want to live it. While we all say we believe this, do we all actually practice this in our lives? From what I have seen, I’d say the answer is NO. Always do I see people give in to the pressures of what is expected of them, and come out the other end saying “They didn’t give me a choice”, or “I had no choice.” Always I see people unwilling to make the hard decision, so they pretend that they never had one, and justify it to themselves (and others) with “I did what I was supposed to do.”
Let us not disillusion ourselves into thinking that we don’t have a choice when the path we actually want to take is high risk, and the safe path is what is expected of us.
 Examples:
A high school senor has a passion for film and media, but unfortunately the family business is in restaurant management. He is in line to take over the family business, so he’s pretty much locked into that. ……………..
WRONG. He has a choice. His family won’t like it, but it’s not THEIR life, now is it. It was their mistake for counting on a person with his own free will, to follow THEIR plan.
A rising star on the set of one of her model shoots is asked to do something “unsavory” by (and to) her manager. In the interest of keeping and advancing her career she complies. She does this under the blanket of “I had no choice”, so she can live with herself having made that decision.
WRONG. The option to not comply was always there. The fact that it may have cost her career doesn’t make it any less of an option. Tough decisions always have high risk. Had she chosen not to comply, she would have kept her dignity, and saved herself mental scarring.
    Saying to ourselves “I had no choice” allows us the comfort of diverting responsibility to others or circumstance. The price we pay for this comfort is allowing “circumstance” to map out our lives for us. We end up living the default life our present path has put us on. When we do this, all chance for happiness and/or greatness is lost; just another sheep in the heard.
We always have a choice.
The fact that one path has high risk doesn’t make it any less of an option. If we do not take that path, we have to live with that choice we made. No way around it.
Risk is a part of life. If we are BIG risk takers, we could become rich, wealthy, or just really happy. OR, we could become poor, homeless, even dead. That’s what risk IS.
But if we take NO risks, we are guaranteed to become nothing. Nobody. And miserable on top of that.

Sleep

More and more I am finding people making a habit of putting sleep as a last priority. It seems so many of us are trying to fit as much activity in one day as possible. I suppose we believe that we can get more value out of a day by doing this. So we pack as much in as possible because over time and experience, we have learned that we can function on 5~6 hours of sleep a day.

I empathize with this mind set. Heck, I used to have this mindset.

Here is the problem: What do we mean by “function.” If by function, we mean that we can get up, walk around, socialize, and take care of our mundane daily tasks, eat and appear normal, then yes, we can do that. But unfortunately we are not functioning at full capacity this way. We are instead on “autopilot”, or what I like to call “Zombie Mode”. Unfortunately we ARE NOT getting much value out of our day like this, because neither our mind nor our bodies are able to reach their full ability, full potential. Our creative ability is handicapped, We can’t give our “all” in our exercises, and our problem solving skills are hampered.

Rather than having a 16 hour day of growth, we have an 18 hour day of the daily grind.

We are human beings. In order for us to function at full capacity we need 7-8 hours of sleep a day …. period. This is an unfortunate weakness of the species, but hey, it is what it is.

We should all be listening to our bodies. And similarly to what I said in a previous post: If you’re hungry, eat, If you’re tired, ….sleep.

Minimalist eating habits

I am in no way qualified to instruct others how to have proper diet. But I do have some basic eating practices that have served me well, and I have no doubt they will serve others well too. These are just three basic practices I use as guidelines when it comes to my eating rituals. They are as follows:

 

1) Lose the food commitment

One habit we should break, that I have seen much more in men than women, is this unnecessary commitment to a piece of food people make. Men don’t commit to much, but for some reason we believe that there is this unwritten rule that once you bite into, or purchase a food item, we must consume the entire thing. On the other side of that coin, there are many times when I have heard a woman say “I only want half a cookie. Someone else can have the other half, or I am just going to trash it.” I have yet to hear a man say anything like this.

When we purchase and/or begin eating a food item, the only commitment we have, is to use this food item to satisfy our hunger or craving. Once our hunger/craving is satisfied ……. done …over. Whatever is remaining of the food item is not longer necessary. Dispose of it. What are we so committed to? Getting our moneys worth? That’s just ridiculous. We spent the money to get the satisfaction we needed …… nothing more. Once the satisfaction is had, we got our moneys worth. If we still feel bad about wasting the food after we spent so much money on it, wrap it up and consume it later when we get hungry again.

I recall once not too long ago I had a craving for a M&M’s completely out of the blue (this seldom happens). I don’t keep any snack food around the home so I went out for it. Unfortunately the store only had a big bag of them (like 16oz). So I purchased the bag for $4.99 (I’m guessing here). I had myself two handfuls of them, and by the second handful I realized that this handful did not satisfy as much as the first. In fact I paused long enough to realize that my M&M craving was gone. So I just dumped the reminder of the M&M’s. They never left the grocery store, but it was sooo worth the $4.99 (Or whatever it cost).

Satisfy our hunger. Hell, even satisfy our cravings. Just be mindful of when this satisfaction has been had. Also keep in mind that there is no bite of a delicious food that is more pleasing than the first bite.

 

2) Eat slowly.

In the hustle and bustle of this consumerist world where all of us are always in a hurry, it seems we have gotten into the habit of sucking chow (military term for eating quickly). We aren’t even allowing our self the time to taste the food we wanted so badly. It is no wonder why the first few bites were not enough to satisfy; the first few bites barely happened.

If we truly want to enjoy our food we must be in the moment with our food and saver it. Eat slowly. Our mind should only be on the tastes and textures in our mouth. Then, only then, are we really getting our full value out of it.

Also, It is only when we pace ourselves in our eating that we allow our bodies to “catch up” so we can better gauge our hunger status. Most times, we are eating so fast that we reach the satisfactory quantity of food long before our bodies tell us that they are satisfied. Then, by the time our bodies DO catch up, we have overstuffed ourselves. We went from “satisfied” to “FULL.” Now we have eaten TOO MUCH. Among other reasons why this is a bad thing, remember that this “raises the ceiling” of what our bodies consider satisfactory for the next time we eat.

 

3) Three meals a day? Really?

I don’t know when this rule was created, and I don’t care. Scrap it. Instead, how about this: If we are hungry, eat. If we are not hungry, don’t eat. Simple, and strait forward. We should be listening to our bodies. Our bodies know better than we do, what we need. Always keep food close and ready for consumption, just in case hunger strikes randomly (and it does). Eating when we are not hungry just because it’s the designated meal time is just excess.

 

With these three practices, we get much more value out of our food, even if we are not eating as much of it.