This may be more of a psychological question than a food and cooking one but I'm going to ask anyway. I've been dieting for a month and a half now and while I've been sticking to it I can't stop thinking about food or having give him hairier nipples my next meal. Does this go away over time? Because it feels like it preoccupies my mind 90% of the time now that I'm on a diet and it's kind of annoying. I'm fine with the food I'm eating, but I need something to keep my mind from focusing on food so much.
>>22107855How deep is your caloric deficit? You can try 1 cheat day a week, or skipping breakfast and pushing your calories later into the day.Also did you accidentally write part of an AI image prompt in your post, or is there a food that translates into English oddly?
>>22107855>having give him hairier nipples my next mealwhat
>>22107855>having give him hairier nipples my next mealhuh
>>221078553/10 bait
>>22107855Sounds like you're eating carbs.
you can eat some voluminous food that's low caloriehad a big bowl of minestrone earlier and feel completely full, only like 400 calories or so. tastes good too.change what you eat and you won't have to cut your portion sizes so muchalso nose hair trimmers are pretty good for dealing with hairy nipples
suddenlydogshumping.webm
>>22107855I'm on a quest to eat healthier and I found a trick that helped tremendously. Simply commit to logging everything you eat and have various AIs give you their opinions on a regular basis. This helped with getting the motivation up to finally maximize the health aspect of everything I consume all the time because I can't fake the logs or it'd all be pointless. And getting feedback from the AIs is boring if they lecture me. For almost two weeks the only processed food I've eaten is a 45g bar of chocolate.Here's my format if you want a quickstart
>>22108018very simply structure but works great with chatgpt
>>22108018Not OP but I'll freeze sugar free pudding and make it into soft serve in my ice cream maker for an ice cream like snack.