Ramit Sehti writes quite a lot on IWillTeachYouToBeRich about psychological tricks for hacking your own brain. One of his tricks that resonates most with me is defining commitments made to yourself so it is easy to fulfill them, and another is to collect little wins and trust that the little wins will add up into big wins over time.
I thought I had internalized these ideas. I was wrong.
So far on this blog, I’ve acted like I am some kind of perfectly-compliant slow-carb robot. A bunch of people around me have complained about how challenging certain aspects of the diet are, and I sympathize with that. While I haven’t struggled on a larger scale, I have struggled to get 30 grams of protein within 30 minutes of waking up. I’m often slow to actually make it out of bed, and most of my favorite meals that have that much protein take twenty minutes to make.
In the grocery store, I stumbled on a reasonable solution: turkey burgers. I can have them ready in ten minutes on my George Foreman grill, and I like eating them enough to be compliant. This worked for a few weeks, and I could tell the diet was functioning better that way. At some point, though, I looked at the nutrition facts on the burgers I was using, and decided to see if I could find leaner turkey burgers. This search resulted in disaster: none of the leaner ones I found tasted that good, they all cooked unevenly on my grill, and they were a pain to clean the grill up after cooking. The combination of these three things decreased my morning motivation, and I fell off the morning protein wagon almost immediately, and a few non-compliant weeks passed before I had a second thought about it.
I have two bags of the original turkey burgers in my freezer now. I look forward to getting back on track. I’m sure they’re not the best solution to my morning protein problem, but after reminding myself what’s actually important, I’m not worried about that anymore.
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