Portion control, the good ol' divide (the portion) and conquer (overeating) approach, is not without merit. But what if you redefine the portion size from how many mouthfuls you can have to how many mindfuls you need to feel full, if you shift your attention from a mouthful to a mindful, from a serving to a savoring?
What's a mindful? A mindful, to coin a term, is a unit of mental absorption in whatever it is that you are doing. For example, as you look back at a typical day, perhaps most of it was spent in a state of robotic, mindless monotony, with the exception of a couple of moments when you were really present, thoughtful, and mindful of something. Maybe you found yourself scratching your head over some challenging problem. Maybe, at the end of your lunch break, you caught a glimpse of a bird swaying on a tree branch. Maybe, when finally home, sitting in your car in the driveway, you had a sense of perspective. Whatever their content, these moments of being mindful are just that: states of being attuned to the moment, absorbed in the here and now.
In application to eating, a Mindful is a moment of being conscious of eating. Maybe it will last ten seconds, maybe half a minute. But however long, it is a unit of awareness, a serving of mindfulness.
A Savoring, to coin another term, is a unit of mindful appreciation, a moment of conscious enjoyment, a highlight. To have a savoring, you first have to have a moment of eating consciousness (a mindful). After all, how can you enjoy a moment if you are not aware of it? So, whereas mouthfuls and servings are the units of fullness, mindfuls and savorings are the units of mind-fullness.
To help you shift from fullness to mind-fullness, I suggest that at the end of your meals, you look back at your experience and take stock of how conscious you were of your eating and of the moments of eating you enjoyed. How many mindfuls did you have? Which moments were you actually fully conscious? Were you present when you tasted the food? Were you present when you picked up the fork? Were you present when you had a sip of water? How many savorings did you have? Which specific moments of delight did you register? What did you enjoy? Did you consciously enjoy biting into that apple? Did you consciously enjoy the aroma of the bread? Was your mind full?
Set a goal: one mindful per serving, one savoring per meal. Challenge yourself, set a more ambitious goal: one mindful per mouthful, one savoring per serving.
Shift from the unpleasant fullness of the body to the pleasant expansion of the mind! Redefine "enough."
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
have you experinced an oryoki meal? if so what were your impressions. It is a formal system designed to create mindful eating.
See Pavel Somov, Ph.D.'s Profile
Dear Arithrianos: I am familiar with the custom. I agree that it is a "formal" system - in fact, it is a protocol fo sorts. And as such it has both advantages (of channeling mindfulness) and existential disadvantages of constricting the spontaneity of an eating moment. I think that full-time Zen-style eating is rather hard to integrate into Western lifestyle. I do, however, think that a more modest goal of, say, infusing some mindfulness (of process, taste, onsent of fullness) can be quite beneficial.
Say, you are in a large, dark space and you need to make it across. You have a flashlight but the batteries are weak so if you turn it on the flashlight will last, perhaps, a third of a distance. In other words, you'll walk with light for a while and then you'll be back in darkness. Alternatively, you could turn on the light, see what's ahead, turn it off and then walk mindfully "on faith" so to say. After a while, you'd turn it back on and off again and again. This way you can make all the way across on "limited" but spaced awareness. Same with mindful eating. You don't have to turn every mouthful into a mindful, but by having a few mindfuls as you eat, you are keeping the light of your awareness on enough to have a conscious meal.
i apologize if I am "preaching to the choir." Be well and thank you for your input.
Pavel
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with