mental health

Ready to break free from unhelpful coping behaviours?

mental health awareness week

Habits are formed through repetition. When you repeatedly turn to an unhelpful habit to manage your emotions, it becomes deeply ingrained and challenging to break free from. As humans, we tend to resist change and prefer to stick with what's familiar because change is uncomfortable for us. However, we often become motivated to create change, when staying the same starts to become more distressing than the discomfort of making the change.

As it's Mental Health Awareness Week, I’m discussing how we form destructive behaviour patterns and steps we can take to start to dismantle them.

When coping with emotional pain such as grief, loneliness, anxiety or overwhelm, we look for something to sooth our pain. Food is often used as a comfort and this is a normal human behaviour. However, when food becomes your sole reliance for coping (or if you are restricting it for a sense of control), it poses a problem.

If you're grappling with your relationship with food, mental health, or both, it's essential to recognise that these coping habits will have developed over time because they served a purpose. In the past, they helped you navigate through emotional experiences. Back then, these behaviours were all you had to cope with those challenges.

We tend to repeat behaviours that have proven effective in the past, and over time, these patterns become automatic and embedded. However, somewhere along the way, these patterns may have become painful or challenging for you. It's critical to first understand their origin and, with a self-compassionate approach, accept them for what they were. It’s important to remember, that using food to sooth doesn't make you a bad person, a failure, or any of the self-critical labels you might apply to yourself. Once you've gained that understanding, you can begin to unravel what's keeping this pattern or habit in place.

It's possible that turning to (or restricting) food feels like the only way you know how to deal with your emotions. Maybe you haven't discovered any other strategies for coping with them yet.

Furthermore, these habits often provide immediate relief from distressing emotions an escape from reality and provide temporary solace. Have you thought about what might be more helpful for you?

Here are some useful steps:

1. Identify the habit: Notice the specific behaviour with curiosity (rather than judgment) What triggers it? what would you routinely do and when does it typically occur?

2. Notice when it is happening in the moment – awareness is key. Again, without judgement, notice your automatic response to the trigger and kindly give yourself a moment to pause and take some deep breaths.

3. Observe bodily sensations, feelings and thoughts- Accept that you are having an emotional experience and notice any physical signs such as your heart beating faster, sweating. Continue to take deep breaths.

4. Proceed with an alternative more helpful next step. This is different for everyone – it might be a body scan, guided relaxation, Epsom salt bath, listening to your favourite music or taking a walk.

5. Keep practicing – avoid fretting if you don’t catch yourself every time. Creating a new automatic habit takes practice and repetition.

 

Doing things to help lift your mood including balanced eating, making time for sleep and movement can all help you with emotional resilience. Take a look at my Mood breakthrough guide to help you take some first steps towards this.

You can download this HERE.

 

Tasty breakfast recipe + effective relaxation tool - top pick's for June

egg muffins

I’m delighted to bring you this months top picks…..

My favourite relaxation tool…..

Since using my Sensate every night, when I’m ready to go to sleep, I have personally found that I’m falling asleep quicker, sleeping deeper and rarely waking up at all during the night.

Sensate is a relaxation and meditation tool that syncs to your phone to different calming tracks and uses vibrations to help take you deeper in to your meditation.

You can use this any time of the day to help you calm your central nervous system and reduce anxiety and stress. The infrasonic waves help to tone the vagus nerve which can become desensitised when exposed to chronic stress.

If you would like to try it for yourself, Sensate have agreed to offer £20 off  using my code MRN20

 

Pomegranate, the gut and mood

Research has found that the polyphenols found in pomegranate may have neurocognitive protective properties thought to support mental health and mood. When consumed, polyphenols mostly remain in the large intestine to be metabolised gut bacteria and help to promote a healthy gut microbiome. This summary explains how this may have a positive impact on our mental health.

 

Tasty breakfast recipe that works well for picnics too!

Egg muffins

INGREDIENTS (MAKES 12)

  • Coconut oil for greasing the tin/cases

  • 12 large free range eggs

  • Seasonings – this can be customised according to personal taste, but at a minimum you will require:

  • 1 tsp salt 1 tsp ground pepper

  • 1 tsp turmeric

  • 2-3 fillings – vegetarian or meat/fish as you choose: 225g onion, diced 225g spinach 225g mushrooms, diced 1 chilli, chopped 1 bell pepper, diced 2 slices of smoked salmon/turkey breast /chicken breast/ham etc

 METHOD

  • Preheat your oven to 180°C.

  • Use the coconut oil to grease your muffin tins or cases. (You can melt the coconut oil first if you find it easier to handle, but usually direct contact with your hands will melt the oil enough to spread. )

  • Mix together your fillings in a bowl and then evenly divide between the twelve muffin cases

  • In a jug, beat the eggs, add the seasonings and mix well. 

  • Pour the egg mixture into the cases that you filled in step 3. 

  • Bake for 18-20 mins checking that when a fork is pricked into the centre of the muffin, it comes out clean.

  • Enjoy warm. Once cooled, store in an airtight container in the fridge

Are you struggling with your eating and your relationship with food + your body? If so head over to The Food Freedom Collective free group, for daily support and weekly live videos to tackle your challenges

If any of these resonate then this community is for you :

💠You are on and off diets all the time

💠You find yourself binge eating

💠You are an ‘emotional eater’

💠You restrict food in order to lose weight

💠 You can’t stop thinking about your weight, appearance or food

💠 You feel overwhelmed and confused no longer knowing what you ‘should’ eat