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20th March 2026

Before You Break: The 10 Minutes That Actually Matter

By Jason Kirby PN1-SSRS, Living Proof Deep Health: The Heaviest Weight Is Doubt

There’s a moment I used to lose…over and over again.

Not the meal.
Not the calories.
Not even the “diet.”

The moment right before.

Standing in the kitchen…not even really hungry.
Just tired.
Scrolling my phone.
Already halfway convincing myself:

“It doesn’t matter. I’ll start over tomorrow.”

And if I’m being honest…
most of the time, by the time I got the food, the decision was already made.

That’s the part nobody really talks about.

You’re Probably Not Hungry

This took me a long time to understand.

I thought I had a food problem.

I didn’t.

I had a relief problem.

I was:

  • stressed
  • tired
  • bored
  • done with the day

Food just happened to be the fastest way to shut that feeling off.

And it worked…for a little while.

That’s why it’s so hard to break.

Because your brain isn’t asking, “Do I need food?”
It’s asking, “How do I feel better right now?”

The One Question That Changed It for Me

When I finally slowed down enough, I started asking myself something simple:

“Would I eat something basic right now?”

Chicken. Eggs. Greek Yogurt. Something simple.

And most of the time?

No.

I didn’t want food.

I wanted that food.

Fast. Easy. Comfort.

That was the moment it started to click.

There’s Always a Window (Even If It Feels Small)

This is the part that changed everything for me.

There’s always a gap between the urge and what you do next.

It doesn’t feel like it.
It feels automatic.

But it’s there.

And most of us don’t even realize we’re skipping it.

Urge → Action

No pause. No thought. Just go.

That’s autopilot.

And I lived there for years.

What I Do Now (Nothing Fancy, Just Real)

I didn’t suddenly become disciplined.

I just started doing this…sometimes.

Not even every time.

  1. I Pause (or at least try to)

Sometimes it’s literally just:

“Hold on.”

Put the phone down.
Step away from the kitchen.

Just…stop for a second.

Because I learned the hard way—
if I don’t pause, I don’t choose.

  1. I Ask Myself What’s Actually Going On

Not the perfect answer.

The honest one.

“I’m stressed.”
“I’m exhausted.”
“I don’t feel like dealing with anything else today.”

That alone changes something.

It slows everything down.

  1. I Give Myself 10 Minutes

This one was huge for me.

Instead of saying no, I started saying:

“If I still want it in 10 minutes, I can have it.”

No rules. No restriction.

Just…not yet.

And weirdly, that took a lot of the pressure off.

  1. I Do Something Different (Nothing Big)

I’m not out here doing anything impressive.

Sometimes I:

  • walk outside for a few minutes
  • drink some water
  • sit down somewhere else
  • just get out of the environment

I’m not fixing my life.

I’m just breaking the pattern.

  1. Then I Decide

And yeah—sometimes I still eat it.

But it’s different.

Because I chose it.

I didn’t just fall into it.

And that matters more than I realized.

This Is the Part I Wish I Knew Earlier

I used to think I kept failing because I didn’t have discipline.

That wasn’t it.

I just didn’t know how to handle that moment.

The 10 minutes before.

That’s where everything shifts.

Not perfectly.
Not overnight.

But enough to start changing things.

What This Looks Like Over Time

I didn’t get this right every time.

Still don’t.

But I started catching it more often.

One night here.
One decision there.

And that’s how it builds.

That’s how things actually change.

This Isn’t Just About Food

That’s the part that surprised me the most.

It’s not just about what you eat.

It’s about learning how to:

  • pause
  • sit with something uncomfortable
  • not immediately escape it

That carries into everything.

If You Take One Thing From This

You don’t need to be perfect.

You just need a plan for that moment…

…the one right before you break.

Because if you can handle that moment—even a little better—

you stop starting over all the time.

And you finally start building something that lasts.

– Living Proof: The Heaviest Weight Is Doubt

 Jason Kirby PN1-SSRS, Living Proof Deep Health: The Heaviest Weight Is Doubt

After losing over 130 pounds and rebuilding his life physically, emotionally, and mentally, Jason created Living Proof Deep Health to help others do the same. His coaching focuses on deep health: nutrition, habits, mindset, stress, sleep, recovery, confidence, and the emotional layers most programs ignore.

 

Reflection Questions

  1. When does this “moment before” show up most often for me?
    (Time of day, environment, specific situations)
  2. What am I usually feeling right before I reach for food?
    (Stress, boredom, exhaustion, avoidance, something else)
  3. Can I recognize the difference between physical hunger and emotional hunger in real time?
    Or only after the fact?
  4. When I ask myself, “Would I eat something basic right now?”—what is my honest answer most of the time?
  5. Do I pause before I act, or do I move straight from urge to action?
  6. What does my “autopilot” look like when I’m not paying attention?
  7. If I gave myself 10 minutes before acting, how often do I think the outcome would change?
  8. What is one simple reset action I could use instead of immediately turning to food?
  9. What am I actually trying to escape, avoid, or quiet when I eat in those moments?
  10. How do I feel after I react… versus after I pause and make a conscious choice?
  11. What would it look like for me to “win” just one of these moments this week?
    (Not perfect—just different)
  12. Am I willing to sit with discomfort for a few minutes, or do I immediately look for a way out?

Disclaimer: Educational content only. Not medical or mental health advice. Not a licensed physician or therapist. Consult qualified professionals for personalized care.

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