This is Day 4 of the 21-Day Journaling Challenge held in Nov 2011. The challenge is now over but you can do the tasks in your own time. Visit the overview page for all the challenge tasks.
Hi everyone – Welcome to Day 4 of 21DJC! :)
Yesterday’s question was: “What is your ideal diet like?“. It was interesting reading your responses. Many of you seem to be in tune with what’s best for your body, which is great! Many of you stressed on a diet that’s filled in nutrition and void of empty calories since the latter does not benefit our body. Many of you are committed to removing unhealthy, junk food from your diet; At the same, a diet with high fruits and vegetables is a common vision across the board.
Ultimately all of us are different and have different needs, so go for the diet that you feel best about. There’s no need to feel compelled on a certain diet just because of what your parents, society, health magazines, or TV say.
If you eat something only to feel bad about it afterward, whether physically, mentally, emotionally or spiritually, then it’s a cue that it’s probably not the ideal for you. This includes eating junk food on the spur of the moment, then beating yourself up over it or feeling “guilty” about it after that.
While you can argue that it’s a “treat” and you “deserve” it, the point is you yourself already acknowledge the food is bad and feel bad about eating it afterward. This in itself suggests a misalignment in your wants/needs that needs to be worked through, vs. allowing the conflicting behavior to perpetuate.
Either you have a candy bar because you *truly* feel it’s the best thing for your body, or you don’t have that. You can’t be thinking “this candy bar isn’t good” and still have that in your ideal diet. That doesn’t make any sense at all; it’s a contradiction in itself. Ideal means something that’s the highest of it all; something you acknowledge to be the best of the best for yourself.
In the end, your ideal diet should be one which you feel 110% emotionally, physically, mentally and spiritually both in the short-run and in the long-run – nothing less than that. By having a clear idea of what your ideal diet is, it brings awareness to what you want to feed your body with. This makes it easier for you to achieve this goal in the long run.
While I have a vision of what my ideal diet is, I’m far from it at the moment – there are times when I go off track with my diet due to emotional eating, lack of my desired food, or circumstances. But the important thing is I always work on getting back on track. Being on your ideal diet may not happen overnight, but the important thing is you move closer towards it, and work on integrating it into your lifestyle, day by day. In time, you realize you are exactly where you want to be.
With that said, let’s now move to today’s question! ;)
21DJC Day 4
Today’s question is a fun one – one which involves some imagination and thinking outside of our current framework of time:
If You Are To Travel Back in Time to 3 Years Ago, What Advice Would You Give Yourself?
How old would you be 3 years ago? What was happening at that time? What would you say to yourself? And why?
(Today’s question can be found in #21 of 101 Important Questions To Ask Yourself In Life.)
Your Task Today:
- Reflect and answer today’s question. There’s no word limit – whether minimum or maximum. Write as few or as many words as you want. It’s all up to what you want to express!
- Share your answer. After you are done writing, copy and paste your answer in the comments area and post it there.
- Check out other participants’ answers. Other participants will be sharing their answers too, so feel free to read and reply to their answers. This is a group course, so let’s support each other in these 21 days.
((Images: Empty book for journaling, Time travel))
I would tell myself to live and let live, and never be afraid to be who you are.
Don’t put it off until tomorrow. Do it now. Exercise.
Even if it is 25 jumping jacks and that is all you are ever going to do every day for the next three years.
It doesn’t have to be more exciting than that. It’s better than the nothing you will most likely do if you over-think it or overwhelm yourself.
Do it now.
Every day.
It’s hardly anything.
Yet it is something.
Go!
be grateful for what you have!!! nothing really matters except feeling good.
3 years later, I would advise me to start pursuing my passion and doing what I really love.
Oh, this is so fun! exactly 3 years ago my husband and I were trying to get pregnant. Wanting to have a baby was, actually, just the biggest symptom of my 30 year-old crisis (luckily, I didn’t want a sports car). Seriously, we had been talking about it for a couple of years, but once I turn 30 my crisis started. Actually earlier.
Now that I’m 32 I feel empowered, so basically, the advice I’d give to myself is:
Now that you’re 30, you’re not a young girl any more, but a young woman.
Style, charm, and specially, self-confidence only comes with age.
You’d better start doing some more exercise and eating better.
You will never have the same body as when you were 20, but you’ll feel twice as sexy as when you were 20!
And, particularly to the fact of the baby (since I also have an older son, when I was 22):
having a baby in your twenties is WAY easier on your body (and generally on you) than when you’re in your early thirties!!!
My advice to myself would be:
1. It is stronger to accept help when you need it than to pretend otherwise
2. Remember that it’s OK to care about people, but not always to care for them
3. Trust yourself because unless you do, you won’t be able to trust anyone else
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