Categories
Auto-thoughts

Candy Was My First Coping Strategy

A Treat, a Ritual, a Constant

Candy was there from the beginning. Not just the kind from holidays or birthday parties. When I was young, my friends and I would walk the five blocks to the corner store, almost like a mini adventure — to flip through magazines, pick out candy, maybe grab a bag of chips. It felt like a choice, a treat, a moment. Now it’s everywhere. Lining the checkout lane. Disguised in Starbuck’s caramel drizzle. Waiting for you while you pump gas or buy groceries — always within reach, always promising a little lift. The kind we all rely on, often, to soften the edges of a life that can feel overwhelming. The kind I could buy with my own money. The kind that, for decades, got me through.

Sweetness That Shaped Me

Over the decades, it followed me — through childhood, through a few different fast-paced jobs in New York where candy was how I kept going, through a traumatic brain injury, and even into my own therapy practice, where I once used candy as a behavioral reinforcer for my youngest clients… and as a quiet reinforcer for myself, too. It was the most consistent tool I had: energy, pleasure, comfort, numbing — all packed into a colorful wrapper.

I used to think fruit was a second-rate substitute — nature’s humble offering next to the gold-wrapped brilliance of a Ferrero Rocher. Candy felt like something you chose; fruit was something you were supposed to eat. I didn’t realize then that my body was already adapting to a world where sweetness had to be bought, packaged, and unwrapped to feel real.

I Thought It Was Just Me

Only now — years after a Melanoma diagnosis, and the catalyst for a long slow return to myself — do I see that the candy wasn’t just a treat. It was part of the pattern. It shaped my blood chemistry, my energy swings, my mood loops. It sharpened the edges of my OCD-like thinking, giving me short bursts of relief followed by deeper crashes.

The crash was always there, but like most of us, I didn’t see it. I thought I was just moody. Just tired. Just “not myself.” I hadn’t always thought to trace it back to the sugar. We’re so conditioned to live in the spike — the rush of a quick fix — that the crash feels like normal. The exhaustion, the looping thoughts, the urgency to fix something — I thought that was my personality. But in hindsight, it was my chemistry.

Who I Thought I Was

I remember a boyfriend once told me I was moody, and I was genuinely surprised. I didn’t see myself that way. But of course I didn’t — I was living inside a body that had been run on candy and processed foods since childhood. That version of me felt like me. I didn’t have a “before.” I had rejected jarred vegetables as a baby, craved sweetness early, and found ways to get it on my own by the time I could walk to the corner store. Sweetness wasn’t a treat. It was a throughline. It shaped my taste buds, my nervous system, and maybe even my personality.

A Quieter Brain, A Calmer Loop

It’s only now, after a year of eating a whole food, plant-based, no-oil diet that I’m starting to meet a different version of myself. One who loops less often. One who can break the cycle faster. One who catches her breath sooner. My lipid profile is changing. My sleep is more deep and restorative. I no longer eat processed food — at all — and the sugar-fueled crashes that once defined my rhythms? They’re so distant now, I almost have to go looking to remember what they felt like. And, thankfully, the cravings are a thing of the past.

Not Just in My Head

What’s striking is that I didn’t change my eating to “treat OCD” or “cure anxiety.” I changed it to protect my brain — long-term — after a moderate TBI and cancer diagnosis. But the changes are showing up in my emotional landscape, too. Less internal noise. Fewer internal negotiations. More space to not manage everything. That’s new for me.

And this is what I wish someone had told me: that obsessive looping — especially the kind that hides in people-pleasing, guilt, and relentless self-monitoring — isn’t just psychological. It’s metabolic. It’s neurological. I wasn’t compulsively cleaning or checking doors. I was mentally tracking every word, gesture, and interaction, trying to stay good, stay safe, stay liked. And sugar, for much of my life, was part of the fuel that kept that loop in motion.

A Culture That Keeps Us Hooked

We live in a culture that hands us sugar (and caffeine) instead of rest. Cake for celebration. Candy as a form connection. It’s handed out at schools, at offices, in therapy rooms. It’s considered harmless, even fun. But for me — and maybe for you — it was fuel for the very loop I was trying to escape.

Maybe It Was Never You

I’m not writing this to villainize sugar. I’m writing it because I want to say something no one ever said to me:

If you’ve been stuck in looping thoughts, in control-seeking, in managing everyone’s reactions — maybe it’s not a character flaw. Maybe it’s a chemistry loop that’s finally ready to unwind.

I’m not all the way there. But I no longer believe that “there” has to come through force, willpower, or therapeutic contortions. Sometimes, it starts by clearing the crash, quieting the spike, and feeding the body in a way that makes clarity possible again.

Categories
Course Episodes Practices

What You Can Grow

What You Can Grow

Nurturing new patterns with small, steady care

You’ve started noticing what’s already growing in your inner garden—the thoughts that keep circling, the beliefs that tighten around your choices, the emotions that come and go like weather. You’re seeing the terrain. That alone is a powerful shift.

Now it’s time to tend it.

You don’t need to overhaul everything or force a sudden transformation. In fact, the most lasting change usually starts with small, honest movements: planting a different thought. Trusting a new feeling. Letting one old belief soften around the edges. This isn’t about self-improvement. It’s about self-relationship.

Amend the soil

You begin by changing the conditions around your thoughts. You imagine the possibility that your inner world can support something gentler, more nourishing. When a belief shows up that once kept you safe but now keeps you small, you meet it with curiosity. You ask: What else might be true? What would I love to grow here instead?

These aren’t questions for your best days. They’re for the moments when it all feels a little hard. When your first instinct is to withdraw, apologize, or disappear. That’s when the soil is most ready for something new.

Choose a tool that matches the season

You don’t have to use every method, every time. This is a garden, not a lab.

Sometimes you Leap: you act as if a new belief is already true. You walk a little taller. You reach out, even when you feel unsure. You play the role of someone who trusts herself—just enough to see what happens.

Sometimes you go HOme: you pause, breathe, and ask for a little help from something bigger. You listen inwardly for direction, like a root listening for water.

Sometimes you Imagine: not as fantasy, but as rehearsal. You picture yourself responding differently. You feel the new pattern as if it’s already part of you.

Sometimes you GO (Generate the Opposite): you catch yourself in a painful loop and plant a counter-thought. Not to argue, but to balance, or even just to see how it feels. To give yourself another path forward.

Each tool is a way of softening the soil around something that wants to grow. Each one—and others—will be explored more deeply in future posts, so you can find what works for you.

Follow signs of life

You don’t need proof before you plant. You need practice.

You might notice that when you affirm your safety, your breathing slows. When you remember your strength, you feel a little taller. When you name your truth, your voice steadies. These are signs that something inside you is shifting—not because you’re forcing it, but because you’re creating the right conditions.

Tend without pressure

There will be dry days. There will be weeds again. That’s part of the rhythm.

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about contact. Each time you check in, each time you choose a gentler belief, each time you trust your own rhythm—you strengthen your root system.

You don’t have to get it right. You just have to return.

And over time, you’ll notice something beautiful: the garden starts to feel more like home.

To support this, you can return to the daily noticing practice outlined in What You Notice —a way of naming what’s present without judgment, and opening the door to something new.

Then take a moment to name the opposites—just enough to offer yourself a different path:

  • A new thought you’d like to grow
  • A belief that supports healing or possibility
  • An emotion you’d love to feel instead

And finally, choose a tool. This part matters.
Pick one small way to nourish something new:

  • Will you Leap and try acting from the new belief?
  • Will you GO and generate the opposite?
  • Will you Imagine something gentler?
  • Will you return HOme and ask for help?

This is how you change what isn’t working. It’s like giving water to a dried-out plant. It doesn’t have to be dramatic—just intentional.

Put it on your calendar if you like. Return later. Play with it. You’re not trying to fix yourself—you’re learning to care for your garden.

Categories
Course Episodes Tools

Dig — Getting to the Root of Thought

You Can’t Change What You Don’t See

You can’t change what you don’t see—and most of what’s shaping your experience is buried. Like a gardener pulling weeds, or a basement you’ve been avoiding (hello, spiders), it’s the stuff below that needs our attention.

Auto-Thoughts and Beliefs don’t always live on the surface. They’re often just below awareness, shaping your life while staying hidden from view. That’s why we need Dig—not as a Marker but as a Tool.

Why Digging Matters

Imagine trying to dig a hole. You need four things:

  • A tool (like a shovel)
  • Power (your effort)
  • Consistency
  • Motivation

This tool focuses on consistency and motivation—the two forces that help us uncover buried Auto-Thoughts and Beliefs so we can make meaningful changes.

Even My Basement Was Hand-Dug

Speaking of digging… my basement was hand-dug.

Can you imagine that? Some determined soul, shovel by shovel, scraping out space beneath an existing home. And like any basement, it’s not always a place I’m eager to visit.

Sometimes I avoid going down there for weeks. When I finally descend, I find cobwebs, forgotten laundry, maybe a mouse or two. It’s a little musty. A little unnerving. And a whole lot of “Ugh, why did I wait so long?”

That’s exactly how our mental space can feel. When we don’t check in regularly—don’t do the inner digging—the emotional clutter builds up. We anticipate the worst. We start avoiding it entirely.

But a funny thing happens when we dig just a little each day:
The space stays manageable.
The fear softens.
The whole thing starts to feel familiar—even friendly.

Journaling = Your Shovel

To use Dig as a Tool, begin with journaling:

  • 3–5 minutes each morning, before the day rushes in

  • 7–10 minutes each evening, for reflection

  • Or any 10–15 minute window that works

Track what shows up: thoughts, patterns, reactions. The more consistent you are, the more power you build. Resistance softens. Insights emerge.

Watering Can with Water Small Mask

Prompts marked with the watering can symbol help you journal what’s growing—or what needs pulling.

When I Started to Dig

When I was diagnosed with cancer, something inside me knew: I needed to dig. I hadn’t realized how loud my internal cobwebs had become. Thoughts like “It’s safer to be silent” were still directing the show from behind the scenes.

These weren’t just present-day preferences—they were long-buried beliefs, planted when I was too young to question them.

Talk about motivation.

That moment was a turning point. But here’s what I want to say to you: Don’t wait for urgency to force your hand.

In my view, cancer was my soul’s desire to grow—spoken in the strongest possible language. If we can learn to listen earlier, to dig a little bit every day, we may not need the shout. The whisper might be enough.

You might remember from the Consequences Marker: I used to get irritated when others took up space with their voices. That was a clue. Following that irritation down through the soil helped me unearth a story that had silently shaped my entire way of being.

Weeds, Seeds, and Mental Gardening

Like any room in the house, the part of your mind holding your beliefs and stories works better when it’s clean and functional. Imagine trying to cook dinner with a pile of old resentments between the stove and sink. Doesn’t work.

On the farm, I’d often head out to grab one weed… and end up weeding for hours. It was almost meditative. That’s what it’s like now when I journal. One buried thought leads to another, and before I know it, I’m clearing space.

Ask yourself:

  • How can I more regularly dig into my own mental garden?
  • What would make it more enjoyable?
  • Do you have another practice (gardening, writing, organizing) that gives you that same rhythm? Could you borrow from that routine?

Not So Fast—Don’t Toss Every Story

Not every negative thought needs to be thrown out. Some stories are worth keeping close—at least for a while.

That silence story of mine? I’ve kept it around. It still informs the areas where I struggle. I can pull it apart again when needed. If I’d thrown it out too fast, I might’ve missed some vital insight.

Try this:
Put a red tag on the story that does the most harm. That one, we’ll work with.
Then, create a “keep for now” pile. Stories you’re unsure about. Let them show you more, over time.

Closing Encouragement

You’re the person behind the shovel. The tool is journaling. The power is already in you. Add consistency and curiosity, and what once felt buried becomes the beginning of something new.

Looking for connected patterns? These Elements go hand-in-hand with Dig:

  • Auto-Thoughts — What pops up first, sometimes without your permission.
  • Beliefs — The long-held stories that shape your world.
  • Consequences — What gets created when you don’t notice the other two.

Ready to Dig? Start with the Worksheet

You don’t need to do this all in your head. That’s what the Dig Worksheet is for—your place to track thoughts, tag stories, and keep what’s still unfolding.

Take a few minutes to fill it out today, and see what shows up when you give your mind space to speak.

Watering Can with Water Small Mask

Auto-Thoughts

Quick, automatic thoughts that pop up in daily life—often shaped by old beliefs and past experiences.