It’s common to want to FIX your struggles with food and your weight. Common. But not helpful.

When you’re trying to fix, 

  • You may be thinking…. I need to STOP overeating, STOP eating emotionally, STOP eating the wrong foods. 

  • You may feel really urgent (maybe even panicked) to find a solution (program, coach, or book) that will take away the struggle. 

  • You likely beat yourself up and feel bad when you overeat or emotionally eat. It’s generally right after these situations that you want “to fix” most. 

The most common forms of fixing are food restriction, rigorous dieting and more frequent or longer exercise.  

If you’re trying to fix your relationship with food and bodies, you’ve likely forgotten: 

  • Your body is universally perfect because it’s here on earth. You came into this world divinely and nothing has changed. It’s only our culture and the biases we’ve absorbed that have led us to believe that something is wrong. 

  • Disordered patterns with food are coping mechanisms. You’ve put them in place to keep yourself safe and protected. 

  • By trying to fix unwanted behavior, you may spend more time and energy on the behavior instead of inviting in healing the part of you that created the unwanted behavior in the first place. 

When we try to fix, we see ourselves as wrong or broken. 

And this is simply not true. 

And, you’re not wrong for wanting to fix something painful! Of course, you want your life to be better. 

My invitation to you is to notice when you want to fix. When you catch yourself, gently remind yourself that the way to heal is through connecting with your inner state and practicing self-compassion. 


Just for Today, Are You Open to Letting Your Struggles With Food and Weight Go?

I know it's a lot. And you've been carrying it around for so long.

It may feel impossible for you to imagine what it feels like and looks like to not be struggling with food, your body, your health. 

What if the meaning behind the struggle is the struggle? 

Could the narrative you have in your mind about who you are when you overeat, eat emotionally, and worry about your weight is what's wearing on you? 

Notice what you say to yourself when you overeat. Are you bad? Disgusting? Out of control? Crazy?

What if you let those ideas loosen their grip on you? 

Imagine you're holding these ideas of yourself in your fist. 

Feel the weight, the pressure. 

Now open your palm and let the energy of these ideas be. 

Do they want to stay in your palm? Are they willing to drop? To float? 

When you're not holding onto these words, ideas and meaning so tightly, how does your body feel? 


Thank You Diet Culture

I spent most of my life not even knowing you existed. All I knew was that I needed to be smaller to be pretty. So I tried to be better with food.

I witnessed my mother diet, even though she didn't need to. But you convinced her otherwise. Because of that, I dieted too.

While dieting, I hurt my body. I overfilled her, starved her, dismissed her, and pushed her when she was dead tired.

I know I was the one choosing these actions. But you promised me that I'd be happier when I was thinner. You showed me thin people that were more attractive, healthier and more successful.

I thought I was sacrificing for a reason. But really, I was just sacrificing my sanity and autonomy.

I believed in your promises. Your promises gave me hope.

You never intended to keep your promises. You always meant to manipulate me and millions of people to believe that our bodies are wrong and bad.

When we believe our bodies are wrong, we turn to you to fix us. We've filled your purses, given you our time and energy and you’ve taken away our happiness and freedom.

So for that, fuck you.

I know all we can do is grieve. And heal. And unlearn every single thing you've taught us. You've taught us our bodies aren't worth respecting or worth listening to, but the truth is you're not worth respecting or worth listening to.

The truth is our bodies were never a problem, and have always been and always be inherently perfect.

I wish you didn't exist, but you do.

All we can do is accept you, and see you as a system that we don't need to engage with. When we turn our attention away from you, you won’t have the power to hurt us.

As surprising as this may sound, thank you. By unlearning your teachings, we’re learning how to be in our bodies. Because of your darkness, we have the opportunity to stand in the light.

Healing My Relationship With Food Helped Release My Addiction to Busyness

Being hooked on the hustle was all about my fear of being alone

I’ve been known to wear hard work and busyness as a badge of honor. In high school, I’d often run from softball practice to a babysitting gig, with just a quick shower and a snack on the run. In college, there was even more to keep me busy. Running on the cross country team, volunteering at the student credit union, and studying hard. There was no limit to what I could pack into my schedule. The more the better. I was in constant motion.

Busy and Hard Work Were the Same Thing

Wikipedia may not define busyness and hard work in the same way, but I did. Could one work hard without being busy? Could one be busy without working hard? Yes and yes. But I didn’t know how to separate the two. And frankly, I didn’t want to.

An Addiction to Busyness

I loved being so busy. Doing so much left me feeling so accomplished. My work ethic was something that set me apart from the crowd. In college, I had this snarky little voice that often looked down at my peers when they were sleeping in on the weekends or they told me about their B on an exam. “Hmmph. I guess you didn’t work hard enough.” I thought.

I was working late one night in the office when Bob poked his head in my office. At the end of the conversation he said “Tara, you’re the Tina Turner of public accounting.” It was a funny comment to hear. According to Bob, working until 9 pm put me on par with one of the greatest superstars of all time. That was just more fuel to toss on my hard work fire. What Bob may have overlooked is that he was in the office, too.

In a world where I didn’t quite know my worth, I reached and strived for the most logical way I could find it; hard work. I could earn my value and everyone around me agreed. Our names get posted in the newspaper when we achieve high honors. We get awarded great jobs because of our grades and extracurricular activities. Promotions don’t just land in our lap. We work for them. Our business revenues don’t increase on their own. Growth and expansion take effort. Lots and lots of effort.

Have you noticed this too? Busyness becomes a lifeline, something that assures our safety when we don’t know where we stand in the world. “I feel good when I accomplish something”, seemingly benign words may sound like common sense.

Yet, who are we when we aren’t working our asses off?

The Price We Pay for the Hustle

Are you running on fumes?

When you hit the proverbial wall at 3 pm, instead of finding yourself laying down on your bed for a nap, do you find yourself in the Dunkin’ drive-through for some cold brew and energy to get you through the second shift of your day?

We hustle to and sometimes through our exhaustion. And, without realizing why we’re hustling, there is a risk that you’ll keep doing it. The only thing that may stop you is when your body collapses, gets sick, or get injured.

I tore my shoulder rotator cuff while snowboarding a few years back. One of my kids cut in front of me and I reached back to stop myself from falling. Any medical doctor would say the cause of my injury was my fall. But it wasn’t. My body was exhausted. I was running three businesses. My three kids were in the thick of elementary school and middle school. My body kept whispering, this is too much. Slow down. Rest. I had the weight of the world on my shoulders and they couldn’t take another ounce of busyness.

But I didn’t, couldn’t, and had no idea how to listen to my body back then. All I knew was the hustle. The hustle worked until my body failed. Which may be happening to you. Our body knows what it needs and it knows when it needs rest. Prioritizing hard work at the expense of the care of your body never works in the long run.

Our body’s whispers will turn to assertive demands, which will turn into screams. When we don’t listen to the screams, she’ll take us out. She tried to tell us nicely. She was persistent. But she won’t be silenced. Not when it comes to keeping herself in balance. And that’s exactly who pays the price when we hustle for hustle sake. Our body.

If It’s Going to Be, It’s Gotta Be Me

I have a deep-rooted fear that I’m alone. It’s raw and when I leave it unchecked, it feels so friggin’ real. I can look around at my husband, my kids, my family, and friends, and my logical brain says, what are you talking about? You’re not alone.

The fear of being alone is indifferent to reality. I’ll have a vision of myself in this tiny rowboat in the middle of an ocean. It’s stormy, the waves are high, and the skies are gray.

I’m all by myself, doing life on my own. No one is there to keep me safe. No one is there to protect me. No one is there to send me a fuckin’ lifeline. If I’m going to survive the storm, I need to row. Just me. In my tiny rowboat.

No wonder I needed the hustle to survive the first few decades of my life. My busyness saved me until it broke me.

Slowing Down Is Scary

At first, I needed certain conditions in place to slow down and relax. Slowing down only came after every other responsibility was taken care of. Did I deserve a beach resort vacation? Yes, when I worked twice as hard to make sure to work, projects. and home were all taken care of while I was away.

I hear this from my clients too. At the end of the day, the dishwasher needs to be loaded, the kitchen cleaned, and laundry started, then and only then, can they relax. There is that earning thing again.

Healing My Relationship with Food

While I was working hard and living a self-imposed busy life, I was also taking on a part-time job called weight loss. I was good at being busy with trying to lose weight. My work ethic was ideal for reading books, following programs, tracking calories, running miles, and spending hours in the gym. I was disciplined and trying to lose weight with hard work was another way for me to stay busy.

Something started to shift inside of me when I started to practice yoga and meditation. I started to become aware of my patterns. Instead of living inside of the dysfunction, I could witness it. I started to notice the pain and suffering I was feeling around food. How critical I was of myself and my body, how often I thought about food and what to eat, the rollercoaster ride I took every time I stepped on the scale, and the overeating and bingeing.

Something needed to change and I started with food. It was the most painful thing in my life at the time. I could be busy, but I couldn’t do the aching belly from eating a sleeve of cookies and ½ bag of Hershey Kisses.

Noticing My Body

For the first time in my life, I started to follow my hunger and fullness sensations. While dieting, I dismissed them and tried to ignore them. I started to tune in to my body, which opened the door just enough for me to notice other signals my body was sharing with me.

When I was in the hustle, there was no time or patience for me to notice my body. But now, I was intentionally stopping and inviting these sensations in. It was like my body came back to life and said, “Thanks for listening! I have so much more to share with you.” And the sensations came through, whether I liked it or not. I couldn’t stop listening because I knew it was the healing I wanted and needed.

There was a time in my life when I needed to be busy. It was the only way I knew myself. But this self was fearful, she had something to prove. When she was busy, she didn’t feel alone. Her busyness kept her running from the rowboat.

It’s All About Connection

As I started to get to know my body, I found my safety. It wasn’t in my accomplishments, it was within my own energy and being. I don’t want to paint the wrong picture. I still hustle, until I catch myself. I notice when I push and work hard for no reason. It happens, but not for long. Because my body lets me know when I need rest and when I need to slow down.

I have the healing of my relationship with food to thank. It brought me back to my body, where I can be present to myself and the world around me. When I was fearful of being alone, hard work, busyness, and weight loss were all of those things I did to prove myself. I had to show the world I was worth loving and accepting. Now, I have a way of connecting to my wholeness. And that connection needs no hustle.

Your Business Needs a Morning Routine That Works for You

It’s never about doing what you’re supposed to do


Your morning routine is more than just starting your day right — it’s about aligning yourself with your business.

We all know that successful people have a morning routine. Oprah. Brene Brown. Michelle Obama. They meditate. They walk in nature.

This may inspire you to follow suit. I know that thinking. “If I do what they do, maybe I’ll get more of what they have.”

Hal Elrod’s Morning Miracle introduced me to start my day with an intentional daily practice. Before then, I was doing some of the right things. You know those things — meditate, yoga, workout.

I was fairly consistent, sitting on my meditation cushion for the minimal amount of time I thought was acceptable. I got to a yoga class a few times a week. I’d squeeze in a workout. I’d keep a journal on my bedside table, and would connect the pen to paper before I’d fall asleep at night if I wasn’t too exhausted.

These felt like a chore. It took a lot of effort for me to do these things. I felt bad when I conveniently forgot to meditate. Or skipped a workout.

I Started Letting Go…

And then something happened. I gave myself permission to stop doing what I thought I was supposed to do.

I stopped practicing yoga. Which is funny to admit since I’m a yoga teacher. I couldn’t force myself to unroll my mat and do one more Downward-Facing Dog pose.

I stopped working out to just get a sweat in. I’ve run marathons, loved intense, dripping sweat workouts. But my body was achy and tired. Forcing it to move fast and hard wasn’t fun. So I slowed down.

I did keep meditating. But only for 5 minutes. Long gone were the days when I sat for 20, 30, or even 40 minutes (this was a brief period, by the way). 5 minutes was all I could take. So I did do that.

And I did it as guilt-free as I possibly could.

And Realigned With My Business and Me

I was letting myself discover who I was as a human being if I wasn’t an accountant or a yoga teacher.

It’s not surprising that these behind-the-scenes shifts were happening in parallel with the transition of my businesses. I was letting go of my accounting business so I could spend 100% of my time and energy in my intuitive eating and transformational coaching business.

I wasn’t just letting my yoga practice and my accounting business go, I was letting myself discover who I was as a human being if I wasn’t an accountant or a yoga teacher.

When I stopped ‘shoulding’ myself, I was embarking on a process of discovering something new. All of this felt uncomfortable and uncertain. And necessary.

Like a new friend, I was getting to know myself. Something new was emerging inside of me.

I started to align with my business and discovered a morning practice that worked for me.

Here Are Some Ways To Try This Out for Yourself

This process took some time. As a business owner, I invite you to consider a few things I did.

  1. I got clear around how I wanted to feel every day. I want to feel energized and connected to my creativity. I want to feel light and present.

  2. I understood why feeling this way was so important to me. When I feel grounded, I’m available to my clients in the best way I can be. When I’m energized, I write my best content and create programs that I’m excited about offering.

  3. I noticed how each practice made my body feel before, during, and after I did it. I feel so calm after my new yoga routine. I love walking and so does my body.

  4. I dedicated myself to my morning routine. I schedule the time in my calendar so that it doesn’t get tossed aside in the busyness of my day.

  5. I’m open to changing my routine when it no longer works for me. I know that my needs change over time and I expect my morning routine to change too.

The more personal our business is to us, the more our business needs our presence and energy.

It doesn’t take discipline to follow through with a routine that feels warm and welcoming.

Closing Notes

Create a daily morning practice that includes stillness, reflection, movement, and fresh air, and notice how the more you’re connected with yourself, the more you will thrive in your business.

I encourage you to dive in and enjoy this magical process of letting go and self-discovery!