If you keep “fighting yourself” around food and exercise, it’s usually not a willpower problem – it’s competing motivations in your brain, and the one with the strongest feeling wins in the moment.
If you want a quick “why am I not doing what I know?” check, download my updated 8 Habits That Healthy People Do (and why they don’t stick) Guide + Checklist at the end of this post.
If you’re a smart woman, this is the part that makes you feel extra irritated:
You know walking helps your mood.
You know sugar messes with your energy.
You know strength training matters after 50.
And yet… somehow you’re eating pretzels out of the bag while telling yourself you’ll “start tomorrow,” like tomorrow is a magical land where no one is tired or overstimulated.
Here’s what I see all the time with midlife women: you’re not inconsistent because you’re lazy.
You’re inconsistent because your brain is running two different stories at once – and one of them feels more urgent in your body.
Not more true.
More urgent.
I use a basic coaching tool that looks like this:
Circumstance → Thought → Feeling → Action → Result
The idea is that events (circumstances) are neither good nor bad, but what gives them meaning is our thoughts about them. Those thoughts that we have about things that happen in the world generate emotions (feelings) in our body, which impact the things that we do, or don’t do (actions). And over time, what we do creates the results that we get.
Here’s an example:
But also…
Same morning. Same alarm. Different thought. Different feeling. Different outcome.
And here’s the key:
The thought that produces the strongest feeling wins.
If you feel like you’re fighting yourself, it’s not proof you’re weak. It’s proof you have competing thoughts – and the one that carries the strongest emotion will win in that moment.
Most women try to solve this by arguing with themselves.
“Come on. You KNOW better.”
“Just do it.”
“Why can’t you be normal?”
That’s like trying to win a debate with someone who has snacks and a weighted blanket.
Your brain is not impressed by your logic when you’re tired and depleted.
It’s impressed by:
If you’ve ever thought, “Why did I do that?” after eating past comfortable or skipping movement… the answer is usually:
Because there was an upside.
Cookies taste good.
Staying on the couch is easy.
Scrolling turns your brain off for a minute.
That doesn’t make it your best choice. But it does make it understandable.
This is exactly why I revamped my 8 Habits guide – it doesn’t just tell you what to do. It helps you figure out what’s getting in the way so you can stop recycling the same shame.
Most women don’t need more information about health. They need a way to follow through when they’re tired, overstimulated, and done with everyone – because that’s when real life happens.
Here’s a little rule I live by:
If a behavior didn’t work for you in some way, you wouldn’t keep doing it.
So instead of:
“I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”
Try:
“What is this doing for me right now?”
Not as self-therapy. As data.
Because the minute you admit, “This snack is giving me relief,” you stop treating yourself like a malfunctioning appliance and start asking better questions, like:
Radical honesty is not self-criticism. It’s saying, “This behavior has an upside,” so you can stop making it personal and start making it workable.
Use this like a menu. Pick one.
| Trigger moment (real life) | What your brain is trying to get | A doable swap (not a personality transplant) | A simple script to say to yourself |
| 9:30 p.m., kitchen “just to check” | Comfort + quiet | Make tea, brush teeth, sit down | “I’m not hungry – I’m depleted. I can soothe without snacking.” |
| After a stressful call/text | Relief | 3 minutes outside, slow breaths, music | “Food is not the only off-switch.” |
| “I deserve it” after being “good” | Reward | Plate a portion, eat sitting down | “Yes, I can have it. And I’m going to enjoy it like a grown woman.” |
| Skipping movement because you’re tired | Conservation | 10-minute walk, stretch while coffee brews | “I’m not training for the Olympics. I’m training for my life.” |
| Afternoon slump + snack hunting | Energy | Protein + fiber combo (yogurt + berries, turkey roll-ups, nuts + fruit) | “Let’s feed my body, not my boredom.” |
If you want help pinpointing your biggest “competing models,” the updated 8 Habits guide + checklist is the fastest way to spot your pattern without overthinking it.
Pick one sticky moment (evening snacking, skipping workouts, sugar at 3 p.m.).
Write two sentences:
That’s it. No fixing yet. Just clarity.
Choose ONE place to insert a tiny speed bump:
Your pause can be as simple as: hand on chest + one breath.
Not your best version. Your easiest.
Examples:
This is how habits stick: not through intensity – through repeatability.
You don’t need the perfect plan. You need an “easiest version” you can repeat on normal days – especially the messy ones – so your brain learns, ‘Oh, we do this now.’
Abstract: “Be more consistent with exercise.”
Concrete: “After I pour my morning coffee, I walk for 10 minutes – before I check my phone.”
Abstract: “Practice moderation with sweets.”
Concrete: “I put dessert on a plate, sit down, and eat it like it matters – no standing at the counter.”
Abstract: “Manage stress better.”
Concrete: “When I feel that chest-tight ‘I can’t handle one more thing’ feeling, I step outside for 90 seconds and breathe before I reach for food.”
Why it matters: your brain doesn’t follow slogans. It follows clear, specific instructions in real situations.
A pause point doesn’t have to be dramatic. One breath before seconds, one question before snacking, one tiny choice that gives you your agency back.
If this post hit a nerve in the best way – and you want to stop doing the “I know what to do… why am I not doing it?” loop – download my updated 8 Habits That Healthy People Do (and why they don’t stick) Guide + Checklist.
It’s not a list of tips you already know. It’s a clarity tool that helps you spot why your follow-through breaks down – and what to do about it next.
When do you reach out for food? Do you eat with intention? Move with intention? Do you create complicated rituals or do you try easy habits that could actually stick?
Tags Healthy Eating
Thank you for sharing this very helpful advice.. I am passing it on to my family and friends.
Judy, that means a lot – thank you.
I’m so glad it resonated with you. If it helps even one person stop fighting themselves and start feeling a little more sane around food and exercise, it’s doing its job.
And I love that you’re passing it on. We could all use fewer lectures and more “oh… that makes sense” moments.