Monday, March 23, 2026

Finding Peace with Food

 Let me explain something I've learned through my own struggles and through watching others navigate the same battle.

When you stand in front of the refrigerator at midnight, or find yourself reaching for another handful of something you don't even taste, or feel that familiar shame settle over you after eating more than you intended, you are not weak. You are not broken. You are not a failure.

You are a human being who has discovered, somewhere along the way, that food can temporarily silence the things you don't want to feel.

And that discovery? It made perfect sense. Food is always there. Food doesn't argue back. Food offers a moment of comfort in a world that often offers very little. Of course, you turned to it. Of course, any of us would.

But here's what I want you to know today. That pattern, as understandable as it is, is also something you can gently, lovingly, and permanently shift. Not through shame. Not through harsh rules. But through understanding what's really happening and offering yourself better ways to respond.

Understanding What Lies Beneath the Bite

Before we talk about solutions, we need to honour the truth of what's happening.

Overeating is very rarely about hunger. Real, physical hunger is a gradual thing. It builds. It can wait. It is satisfied by almost any food.

The kind of eating that leaves us feeling ashamed afterward is different. It comes on suddenly. It demands specific foods, usually sweet, salty, fatty. It feels urgent, almost desperate. And it is almost always connected to something happening in your inner world.

A stressful day at work.
An argument with someone you love.
A lonely evening with nothing to distract you.
A memory that rises up and hurts.
A fear about the future that you can't quite see.

These are the real reasons we reach for food when we're not hungry. We aren't feeding our bodies. We're trying to feed something in our hearts that feels empty.

And here's the kindest thing you can do for yourself: stop judging that impulse. Of course, you want comfort when you're hurting. Of course, you want relief when you're anxious. The problem isn't that you want those things. The problem is that food is a poor long-term solution for emotional pain.

It works for a moment. And then the pain returns, now accompanied by shame about having eaten. It's a cycle that never leads to where you actually want to go.

A New Way Forward

So, what do you do? How do you break a pattern that has become automatic, that feels almost like breathing?

You begin with gentleness. You begin with curiosity. You begin with the understanding that this will not be solved by another diet, another set of rules, another way to measure your failure.

1. Invite Compassion In

The next time you notice yourself reaching for food when you're not hungry, pause. Just for a moment. And instead of the usual voice that says, "Stop it, you know better, what's wrong with you," try a different voice.

Try: "Something is hurting right now. What is it?"

Ask yourself gently: What happened just before I wanted to eat? What was I feeling? What was I trying not to feel?

You may not have an answer right away. That's okay. Just asking the question, with kindness, begins to shift something. It begins to separate the eating from the emotion, and that separation is where your freedom starts.

2. Find Your People

You were never meant to do this alone. None of us were.

If there is a support group in your area, Overeaters Anonymous, a church-based program, or a therapy group, consider giving it a try. Walk in the door. Sit in the back. Listen. You will almost certainly hear your own story in someone else's words, and that recognition is medicine.

If formal groups aren't for you, identify two or three people in your life who can be your anchors. People you can call when the urge to eat hits. People who will not judge, who will simply listen, who might even say, "Let's go for a walk instead."

This is not a burden to them. This is what love does. This is what community is for.

3. Replace the Ritual

Eating when you're emotional is a ritual. It has steps. It has comfort. It has a predictable outcome.

You cannot simply remove that ritual without replacing it with something else.

So what could that something else be?

A cup of tea, held in both hands, sipped slowly.
A short walk around the block, feeling the air on your skin.
A phone call to someone who makes you laugh.
A few minutes of writing down everything swirling in your head.
A warm bath.
A prayer, if that's your language.
Five minutes of sitting still, just breathing.

None of these things will give you the same immediate rush that food does. But they also won't leave you feeling ashamed afterward. And over time, they will become new rituals, new pathways for your heart to travel when it needs comfort.

4. Practice the Smallest No

Self-control is not something you either have or don't have. It is something you build, one tiny choice at a time.

Start impossibly small. When you want the second helping, pause for thirty seconds before deciding. When you're reaching for the snack, take three bites instead of the whole thing. When you're eating, put your fork down between bites and actually taste what's in your mouth.

These are not about deprivation. They are about waking up. About being present. About reminding yourself that you are the one choosing, not some automatic impulse.

And when you succeed, even in the smallest way, acknowledge it. Say to yourself, "I did that. I chose. That matters."

5. Understand the Deeper Hunger

Here is a question worth sitting with: What are you really hungry for?

Is it rest? You've been running so long without stopping.
Is it connection? You feel alone even in a crowded room.
Is it meaning? You're not sure why you're doing any of this.
Is it peace? Your mind never stops churning.
Is it love? You're not sure anyone truly sees you.

Food cannot answer these hungers. It can only distract you from them for a little while. But the distraction is not the solution. The solution is naming the real hunger and finding ways to feed it that actually work.

That might mean therapy. It might mean deeper conversations with the people in your life. It might mean spiritual exploration. It might mean finally making a change you've been avoiding for years.

Whatever it is, it is worth pursuing. Because you are worth pursuing it.

A Word About Relationships

You mentioned that overeating affects relationships, and you're right. But let's be clear about how.

It is not your weight that strains your connections with others. It is your attitude toward yourself.

When you are caught in the cycle of shame and overeating, you become smaller. You pull back. You assume others are judging you. You snap at people because you're already angry at yourself. You isolate because it feels safer than being seen.

This is the real damage. Not the eating itself, but the disconnection that follows.

And here's the hopeful truth: when you begin to treat yourself with compassion, everything else shifts.

You become easier to be around because you're not constantly at war with yourself. You become more present because you're not lost in shame. You become more loving because you have love to give, rather than needing all your energy to hate yourself.

This is not about losing weight. This is about gaining yourself.

There will be days when you fall back into old patterns. Days when the urge is too strong, the pain too sharp, the comfort of food too tempting. On those days, I want you to remember something.

One meal does not define you. One day does not undo your progress. One choice does not make you a failure.

You simply begin again. That's all. You breathe, you forgive yourself, and you make the next choice differently.

This is how change happens. Not in dramatic, overnight transformations. But in the quiet, persistent act of choosing yourself, over and over, even when you've just chosen against yourself.

You can do this. Not because you're perfect. But because you're human, and humans are capable of remarkable change when they're offered the right combination of truth and grace.

Start today. Start now. Start with one small choice.

And know that someone out there, many someones, are cheering for you.

You are not alone in this. You never were.

 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

A Guide to Staying Calm When Rudeness Surrounds You

Let's be honest with one another. The world feels shorter now. Shorter news cycles, shorter attention spans, shorter fuses. Everywhere you look, people seem wound tight, ready to snap at the slightest provocation. And if you're honest, perhaps you've felt that tension in yourself too. The quick flash of irritation at a slow driver. The sharp word to a coworker who asked one too many questions. The silent seethe when someone cuts in line or dismisses your effort.

If this sounds familiar, I want you to know something important.

You are not a bad person for losing your patience. You are a human person living in a time that demands more from our nervous systems than they were built to handle.

But here's the hopeful truth: Patience is not a personality trait you either have or don't have. It is a muscle. And like any muscle, it can be strengthened, trained, and called upon even when it feels weak.

Understanding What Lies Beneath

Before we talk about how to keep your patience, we need to understand what steals it.

Very rarely is impatience simply about the thing right in front of you. That slow walker, that long line, that colleague who isn't pulling their weight—these are not the true sources of your frustration. They are simply the places where your frustration lands.

The real sources are often deeper:

  • Stress that has been accumulating for weeks or months
  • Physical pain or exhaustion that lowers your tolerance
  • Unprocessed grief or disappointment you haven't allowed yourself to feel
  • Fear about the future, about money, about health, about relationships
  • Feeling unheard or unappreciated in the spaces that matter most

When these underlying conditions are present, your patience threshold drops. What would normally be a minor annoyance becomes a major trigger. You aren't reacting to the moment. You're reacting to everything that moment represents.

And here's the kindest thing you can do for yourself right now: stop covering it up.

 The effort to pretend you're fine when you're not, to smile when you're screaming inside, to hold it together when you're falling apart, that effort itself consumes patience you don't have.

Where to begin.

Not with a list of rules about what you should and shouldn't do. Not with shame about the times, you've already failed. But with honest, compassionate attention to what is actually happening inside you.

1. Name What You're Carrying

Take a quiet moment, even five minutes, and ask yourself:

What am I stressed about right now?
What am I not saying that needs to be said?
Where am I hurting, physically or emotionally?
What am I afraid will happen if I slow down?

Write the answers down if it helps. Speak to them aloud if you're brave. But do not judge them. They are simply facts about your current state. And you cannot address what you refuse to acknowledge.

2. Know Your Triggers, And Honor Them

We all have specific situations that test us more than others. Maybe it's being interrupted. Maybe it's feeling micromanaged. Maybe it's dealing with technology that won't work. Maybe it's certain people who seem to push every button you have.

None of this makes you weak. It makes you knowable.

When you learn your triggers, you gain power over them. You can prepare. You can plan. You can say to yourself, "I know this situation is hard for me. I will need extra grace here." That awareness alone can change everything.

3. Build Your Patience Toolbox

Patience is not about never feeling frustrated. It is about having tools to use when frustration comes.

Here are some that have helped many:

The Pause. Before you speak, before you react, before you send that email, stop. Take one breath. Just one. In that breath, you create space between the trigger and your response. That space is where your freedom lives.

The Walk Away. There is no shame in removing yourself from a situation that is overwhelming you. Say, "I need a moment," and take it. Go outside. Get water. Look at something beautiful. You are not avoiding the problem. You are gathering yourself so you can face it better.

The Honest Word. When you feel your patience slipping, you can name it without blame. "I'm feeling frustrated right now. Can we take a short break and come back to this?" This is not a weakness. This is leadership.

The Body Check. Notice what happens in your body when patience fades. Clenched jaw? Tight shoulders? Shallow breath? These are early warnings. When you feel them, you can intervene before the explosion.

4. Consider Professional Help Without Shame

There is a reason I mentioned therapy earlier. It is not because you are broken. It is because you are human, and humans sometimes need guides.

A good therapist is not someone who fixes you. They are someone who walks with you while you do the work. They help you see patterns you cannot see alone. They give you tools tailored to your specific life. They offer a space where you can say anything without being judged.

If your patience struggles are affecting your relationships or your work, this is not a sign of failure. It is a sign of wisdom. It is you choosing to get help rather than letting the damage grow.

When Others Test You

Sometimes your patience is tested not by circumstances, but by specific people. The coworker who never listens. The family member who pushes every button. The friend who takes and takes and never gives.

Here is a hard truth wrapped in a gentle one: you are allowed to protect your peace.

This does not mean cutting everyone off at the first sign of difficulty. Relationships require work, and work requires patience. But there comes a point where repeated exposure to someone who disregards you is not a test of patience; it is a drain on your soul.

If you are in a relationship that matters to you, consider seeking help together. Couples counselling, mediation, and a trusted advisor are not signs of failure. They are signs that you value the relationship enough to fight for it.

But if you have tried, and tried again, and the other person remains unwilling to meet you with mutual respect, you may need to consider distance. This is painful. It is not what you wanted. But sometimes the most patient thing you can do is stop subjecting yourself to the same wound over and over.

At Work: A Special Word

The workplace is where patience is tested most relentlessly. Deadlines, personalities, misunderstandings, competing priorities, it is a pressure cooker.

If you are struggling at work, consider telling someone you trust. A boss who knows you are working on patience can be an ally rather than an adversary. They may offer flexibility, support, or simply understanding.

And when you find yourself surrounded by people who are not pulling their weight, remember this: you can take responsibility without taking over.

You can do what needs to be done without resentment. You can lend a hand without counting the cost. But you can also, calmly and professionally, name what is happening. "I've noticed I'm taking on extra tasks. Can we talk about how work is distributed?"

This is not complaining. This is communicating. And communication is the patient person's greatest tool.

Love Is Patient

There is a reason those words appear in every wedding, in every conversation about lasting relationships. Love without patience is not love, it is demand, control, and condition.

But here is what we often miss: love is also patient with itself.

You will not become perfectly patient overnight. You will lose your temper again. You will say things you regret. You will fail at this, sometimes spectacularly.

And when you do, love invites you to begin again. To apologize. To repair. To try once more.

That is what patience really means. Not falling, but always getting back up. Not perfection, but persistence. Not having it all figured out, but staying in the room with the people you love, even when it's hard.

A Final Thought

The world is not going to slow down. People are not going to become more considerate overnight. The triggers will keep coming.

But you can change. You can grow. You can become someone who, even in the midst of chaos, carries a quiet center.

Not because you have mastered some technique. Not because you never feel angry. But because you have learned to pause, to breathe, to choose.

And in that choosing, you will find something precious. You will find that patience is not about enduring others. It is about becoming yourself—the self you want to be, the self you are proud of, the self who can love, work, and live without being consumed by the fire of the moment.

Start today. Start small. Start with one breath, one pause, one choice.

You can do this. And the people who love you will be grateful you did.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Finding Your Way Back to Belief: A Gentle Path Forward

 There are moments in life when believing in anything feels impossible. Perhaps you've lost someone dear and the world feels emptier. Perhaps the suffering you've witnessed makes the idea of a loving God seem distant, even cruel. Perhaps you've simply looked at the noise and division and thought, "How can anyone be certain of anything?"

If you're in that place right now, I want you to know something important.

You are not broken. You are not alone. And this emptiness you feel is not the end of the story; it may actually be the beginning.

Start Where You Are

The first thing to understand is that doubt is not the opposite of faith. Doubt is actually part of faith's journey. Every person who believes deeply in any tradition has walked through seasons of questioning. The very fact that you're wrestling with these questions tells me something essential about you: you care. You care enough to ask hard things. You care enough to want something real, not just something comfortable.

And that matters.

So let's set aside, for a moment, the pressure to find the "right" answer. Let's set aside the voices telling you what you should believe or how you should feel. Let's simply start with you, with what is already true in your own heart.

The Questions Are Not the Problem

Begin by gently asking yourself some questions, not as a test, but as an exploration:

  • When you think about the world, what gives you hope?
  • When you witness kindness or sacrifice, what do you feel stirring inside?
  • Is there a moment in your life when you felt connected to something larger than yourself?
  • What values do you already hold, perhaps without realizing they came from somewhere?

You see, we all believe in something. Even if we cannot name God, we believe in love, in justice, in the value of a human life. These beliefs did not appear from nowhere. They are echoes of something deeper, threads that connect us to traditions and truths we may not yet fully understand.

Your task is not to invent belief from nothing. Your task is to recognize what you already carry.

Understanding the Purpose of Belief

Belief serves us in ways we sometimes forget. It comforts us when life feels unbearable. It gives us boundaries when the world feels chaotic. It connects us to others who share our deepest values. It holds us accountable to something higher than our own impulses.

But here is the beautiful truth: you do not have to have all the answers today.

Belief is not a destination you arrive at and never leave. It is a path you walk, one step at a time. And the walking itself, the seeking, the questioning, the openness, is already a form of belief. It is believed that there is something worth seeking.

A Gentle Way Forward

If you are ready to move forward, here is a path that has helped many before you. It is not a race. It is not a test. It is simply an invitation.

First, sit with your own story.

What have you already believed, even without naming it? What values have guided your choices? What moments have felt sacred to you: watching a sunset, holding a newborn, standing at a graveside, forgiving someone who hurt you? These are not accidents. They are clues to what you already hold true.

Second, approach learning as exploration, not obligation.

Read about different traditions, not to judge them or defend them, but to understand them. Read about Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Indigenous spiritualities, Stoicism, and humanism. Read not as someone looking for the "right answer," but as someone curious about how others have answered the same questions you carry.

You may find that something resonates. You may find language for what you already felt. You may find a community that welcomes your questions rather than demanding your certainty.

Third, consider experience over argument.

Belief is not primarily about winning arguments. It is about living differently. If you can, visit a place of worship different from your own. Sit in the silence. Observe the ritual. Talk to someone who believes and ask them not for proofs, but for stories. Ask them what their belief does for them on a Tuesday afternoon, not just on a holy day.

If travel is possible, let yourself be immersed in cultures shaped by different beliefs. But if travel is not possible, know that the journey inward is just as far and just as revealing.

Fourth, give yourself permission to not know.

Some of the wisest people I have known carried their questions gently, like precious things, without needing to force them into answers. They lived well, loved deeply, and trusted that what mattered most would eventually become clear.

You can do the same.

What You May Find

If you walk this path with openness and patience, here is what often happens.

You begin to recognize that you already believe in things you hadn't named, in kindness, in hope, in the dignity of every person. You begin to see that these beliefs connect you to traditions far older than yourself. You begin to feel, perhaps for the first time, that you are part of something larger, not because you have all the answers, but because you are willing to keep asking the questions.

You may find a faith that gives you structure and comfort.
You may find a spirituality that feels like coming home.
You may find that the search itself has become a kind of belief.

And you will certainly find that you are not alone.

A Final Thought

The failure of belief you feel right now is not permanent. It is a season. And like every season, it will pass.

What remains, what has always remained, is you. Your questions. Your longing. Your quiet hope that there is more to this life than what we can see, touch and measure.

That hope is itself a kind of belief. It is a belief waiting to be named, waiting to be welcomed, waiting to be lived.

So be gentle with yourself. Take your time. Ask your questions. And trust that the path you are on, even when it feels uncertain, is leading you somewhere true.

You don't have to believe in everything today. You only have to believe that belief is possible.

And that, right now, is enough.

 

Friday, March 20, 2026

The Things We Don't Say

 Sometimes, when people say they aren't worried, they really are.

I have learned this over years of sitting across from people, listening to what they say and trying to hear what they don't. It happens in living rooms and coffee shops, at community centre tables and on park benches. Someone will lean back in their chair, wave a hand in the air, and say, "Oh, I'm not worried about it."

And if you know how to listen, you can hear the worry hiding underneath.

It is in the slight hesitation before the words. The way the eyes drop for just a fraction of a second. The too-bright smile that doesn't quite reach the corners. The subject change comes too quickly.

I'm not worried.

But they are. They are worried about their health, their money, their kids, and whether they will be a burden. They are worried about the future, about the world, about whether anyone will notice when they are gone. They are worried about all the things that keep people awake at 3:00 a.m. when the house is quiet, and the mind won't stop.

And yet, they say they aren't.

Why do we do this? Why do we coat our deepest fears in the language of indifference?

Because worry feels vulnerable, feels weak. Worry means admitting that there are things in this life we cannot control, and that is a terrifying thing to say out loud. So, we dress it up in denial. We put on a brave face. We tell ourselves and anyone who asks that we are fine, we are fine, we are fine.

But fine is a small word that carries a lot of weight.

Sometimes, when people say they don't care, they really care.

I think about the senior who insists it doesn't matter if his daughter calls. "She's busy," he says. "She has her own life. I don't need to hear from her every week." And maybe he even believes it, for a moment. But then the phone stays silent, and his eyes drift to the window, and you can see that it does matter. It matters a great deal.

I think about the woman who says she doesn't care about her birthday. "It's just another day," she says. "I don't need a fuss." But when the card arrives in the mail, when the neighbour stops by with a small cake, when someone remembers, her face changes. The walls come down. And you realize that the not caring was always a shield, never a truth.

We say we don't care because caring leaves us open to disappointment. If you don't care, you can't be hurt. If you don't care, you can't be let down. If you don't care, you are safe.

But safety is lonely. And most of us, deep down, would rather risk the hurt than spend our lives alone. We don't know how to admit it.

And sometimes, when people say they don't know, they do, but they'd rather not.

This is the one I hear most often. It comes up in conversations about the future, about difficult decisions, about things that feel too heavy to carry.

"What do you want to do?"
"I don't know."

"What do you think about that?"
"I don't know."

"How are you feeling about all of this?"
"I don't know."

But they do know. They know exactly what they want, what they think, how they feel. They know because they have been turning it over in their minds for weeks, for months, for years. They have examined it from every angle. They have imagined every outcome. They know.

Knowing is not the problem. The problem is that knowing means having to act. Knowing means having to decide. Knowing means having to say something out loud, and once it is out loud, it is real.

And real is scary.

So we take refuge in not knowing. We hide behind uncertainty. We tell ourselves that if we haven't decided yet, we haven't failed yet. If we haven't chosen, we haven't closed any doors. If we don't know, we can't be held responsible for what happens next.

But the not knowing is its own kind of weight. It sits on your chest while you try to sleep. It follows you around like a shadow. It drains the colour out of the days because you are always waiting, always postponing, always holding your breath.

I was talking to a senior recently about a decision he needed to make. It was a big one, the kind that changes things. He kept circling back to the same phrase: "I just don't know what to do."

I sat with him for a while. We talked around it. We talked about other things. And then, somewhere in the middle of a sentence about something else entirely, he stopped. He looked at me. And he said, quietly, "I know what I want. I've known for months. I don't want to say it."

There it was. The truth, hiding in plain sight.

He knew. He had always known. He just needed permission to admit it.

Most of the time, we know. Most of the time, we care. Most of the time, we are worried. We just don't know how to say it. We haven't found the words. We haven't found the right person to say them to. We haven't given ourselves permission to be honest about the things that matter most.

And that is where the rest of us come in.

If you are reading this and you have someone in your life, a parent, a friend, a neighbour, a spouse, who might be carrying things they aren't saying, here is what I want you to know:

You don't need to fix them. You don't need to solve their problems. You don't need to have the right words or the perfect advice.

You just need to be there.

You need to sit with them in silence. You need to ask questions and then wait long enough for the real answers to surface. You need to make it safe for them to say the things they have been holding inside. You need to let them know, without saying it directly, that you can handle their worry, their caring, their knowing.

Because most of the time, that is all anyone really wants. Not answers. Not solutions. Just someone who will stay in the room while they figure it out.

And if you are the one carrying the things you aren't saying—the worry, the caring, the knowing—here is something to consider:

You don't have to carry it alone.

The people who love you, the people who show up, the people who ask how you are and mean it—they are not looking for perfection. They are not expecting you to have it all figured out. They are just looking for you. The real you. The one with the fears, the feelings, and the things you'd rather not say.

You can tell them. You can trust them. You can let them in.

It won't solve everything. But you might be surprised at how much lighter the load feels when you don't have to carry it by yourself.

Sometimes when people say they aren't worried, they really are.
Sometimes when they say they don't care, they really care.
And sometimes when they say they don't know, they do.

Most of the time, actually.

Most of the time, we know. We care. We worry.

We just need someone to remind us that it's okay to say so.