Tag: self love

A gentle reminder to focus on the good

A gentle reminder to focus on the good

It’s a great day to focus on all the things going right in your life ☀️ Your mind likes to draw your focus to what’s wrong/to do lists/what’s missing but you can change this. Focus on the good. Ruminate on the good. Think about everything 

Rock and a hard place

Rock and a hard place

Do you feel like you’re stuck between a rock and a hard place? Is something causing you frustration and you don’t know what to do about it? Have you searched and thought but still can’t find the right answer? If you thought through every angle, 

How to Make Homemade Cavatelli

How to Make Homemade Cavatelli

Some people show their love with gifts or words of affirmation, I show it with homemade pasta. I got this recipe from the blog The Clean Eating Couple. The owner of the website has tons of great recipes, you should definitely check it out-i’ll link her blog post here. The only thing I changed from Liz’s recipe is I like to use half white flour and half whole wheat. Either way, it’s delicious! Cavatelli is the perfect place to start if you want to make homemade pasta. You don’t need any fancy machinery, just a simple pasta board you can get for $9.00 on Amazon. This would be a great recipe to make with your family if you’re looking for fun things to do together! Enjoy!

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb whole milk ricotta
  • 2 cups white flour
  • 2 cups whole wheat flour
  • ½ tbsp salt
  • 2/3 cup water
  • A cavatelli pasta board (8$ on amazon, i’ll link the one I use here

Directions:

  • Mix all ingredients together in a bowl. At first the dough will be sticky but work the dough squeezing it together for about 2 minutes.
  • After the dough is formed into a ball, turn the dough onto a floured surface and knead for another 1-2 minutes. This helps the dough to become smoother.
  • Set dough aside and add more flour to your surface.
  • Take about 2 tbsps. of dough and roll into a thin strip, about ½ inch thick.
  • Using a scissor or knife, cut the strips into small balls (smaller than a dime).
  • Toss the balls with flour and then use the pasta tool to shape balls into cavatelli shapes. Form the shapes by pressing and rolling the balls down onto the pasta shaper.
  • Place the cavatelli on a floured baking sheet as you’re making them-shaking the sheet every few minutes to make sure they’re not sticking to one another.
  • Put the cavatelli on the baking sheet in the freezer for 1 hour.
  • When the cavatelli are frozen, pour them into a mesh strainer. Shake the excess flour off of them.
  • Store in a Ziplock bag or container in the freezer until ready to eat.
  • When you’re ready to cook the pasta, boil salted water in a pot. Add cavatelli to boiling water and cook for about 4-5 minutes, or until cavatelli float to the top of the pot.
  • Add sauce of your choosing & enjoy!
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
How to Make Homemade Cavatelli
What is Your Best?

What is Your Best?

Do your best. We hear this statement often. And what does it mean? Feeling you did your best should enable you to go to sleep at night feeling fulfilled and satisfied with the activities you engaged in that day. Wanting to do your best encourages you to put forth the effort needed to meet your goals. How do you define your best? The answer depends on your individual goals and gets harder to navigate the more you look outside yourself for the meaning.

Let it hurt, then let it heal

Let it hurt, then let it heal

Let it hurt, then let it heal.  There’s nothing wrong with feeling bad, with being unhappy, or with anger. When you have negative emotions feel them. Don’t push them away, don’t pretend they aren’t there. Acknowledge them, bring awareness to what you’re feeling, get curious 

The Gap Between Knowing Better and Doing Better

The Gap Between Knowing Better and Doing Better

 

There is a period, the time of which is different for everyone, where a gap exists between knowing better and doing better. It is when you have taken the step of becoming self-aware of what habits are no longer serving you, or are hindering you from enjoying your life, however you find yourself continuing to fall into the same unhealthy patterns nonetheless.

 

This gap between knowing better but failing to do better is in part due to our homeostatic impulse. The homeostatic impulse regulates physiological functions from breathing to body temperature. When you try to push yourself out of the familiar patterns you’ve grown accustom to, you face resistance from your mind and body. The mind likes the familiar, even if it makes you miserable. This impulse helped keep our ancestors alive, but today it helps to keep us stuck.

 

 You make active choices during only a small percent of our day, letting your subconscious run the show the rest of the time. When experiencing times of distress, it is even harder for us to make conscious choices, our brains turn to autopilot. We fall back on the things we’ve done in the past, which were often easy but unsustainable short term fixes, instead of consciously choosing habits that leave us feeling good in the long term.

 

When this gap between knowing better and doing better arises, you may fall into negativity. Often judging and shaming yourself for failing to choose the healthier option. Don’t judge yourself if you fall back into unhealthy coping mechanisms. Judgement and shame are never the answer.

 

Our tendency to fall back into what’s familiar, even if it’s not what’s best for us is why it’s imperative to make healthy coping habits part of your daily routine. Don’t solely keep healthy habits in your back pocket for when life gets hard. Practice them and strengthen them. This will reinforce the positive consequences of their use. The more practice you have, the more familiar these habits will become. The more familiar the healthy habit, especially when times get rough, the more likely you will turn to it instead of a destructive habit.

 

It’s important to keep in mind that what “healthy” means is different for everyone. For some people working out is a great stress reliever, others excessively exercise and use it to distract themselves from their emotions. For some people turning to food for comfort causes addictive behavior, for others a couple cookies helps improve their day.

 

Living a balanced life is a goal many of us are after but there is no one size fits all approach. Determining what works best for you takes time, work, and honesty. What actually leaves you feeling your best? What helps you cope with stressors? What leaves you feeling great about yourself?

 

If you’re having trouble making changes in your life, here are some things you can do:

 

  1. Journal about what’s causing you to feel stuck and why. Awareness is powerful.
  2. Set a daily intention to change. Get specific on what you want to change. Start each day affirming that intention.
  3. Each day, either the night before or morning of, take small specific actionable steps that are aligned with who you want to be. Start with something small like drinking a cup of water first thing when you wake up every morning. Make a promise to yourself and keep it.
  4. Habit stacking. Once you have that one small habit down, build on it. Stay organized. Get a calendar and schedule out your day. Write an “I get to list.” Remember that you want to do these things so frame them in a positive way. If having difficulty, add something you like doing to your habit stack. Tell yourself you can do the habit you like to do after you finish the harder habit.
  5. Remember to focus on and celebrate the achievements you have made; on the small wins you’ve had thus far.
  6. Practices like meditation, yoga, or drawing. Practices like this help you focus your attention in the present moment. They help restructure our brains and create new neural pathways. When new neural pathways are formed, we are able to restructure our default patterns and live more actively in a conscious state instead of a reactive state. Functional MRI brain scans confirm this-showing tangible evidence that consistent consciousness practices thicken the prefrontal lobes (the area where conscious awareness lives). Other forms of compassion based meditation (closing your eyes and thinking about someone you love) help strengthen the area of the brain called the limbic system which is the emotional center of the brain. All of these helps us rewire our brains and disrupt our default thought patterns and wake us up out of our subconscious driven auto pilot. From this new consciousness we can more easily witness the conditioned patters in our thoughts, beliefs and relationships. This honest self-awareness shows us our pathway towards change[1].

 

 

[1] “How to Do the Work” by Dr. Nicole LePera.

Raw Brussel Sprout and Egg Salad

Raw Brussel Sprout and Egg Salad

This dish is seriously delicious! It’s hands down my favorite salad I’ve ever made. It’s simple and easy to throw together for a quick lunch and is perfect to meal prep. It’ll keep you full and satisfied plus it gets those greens in! Brussel sprouts are high in fiber and antioxidants. They help protect against cancer and help with high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease, and diabetes. This salad will leave you feeling your best!

Go Out of the Way for Yourself

Go Out of the Way for Yourself

We go out of the way for the people we love. It’s often how we show them we love and support them. We make extravagant homemade dinners for our families, we pick out the perfect presents for our friends, we buy bagels for our meetings 

The Truth about Happiness

The Truth about Happiness

Challenge: make a list of the times you have felt genuinely happy or at peace.

This list will remind you that your happiness never came from things looking seemingly perfect on the outside. Your happiness came from being present and open and connected to yourself and to the moment. Let that be a guide as you move forward.

Brianna Wiest talks about this in her book “The Mountain is You.” Have you read it? If you have let’s chat about it! If not, I highly recommend it! It has a lot of great thoughts that will help you become the best version of yourself!

Sink Into the Good

Sink Into the Good

Everything in life is temporary. So when you feel content and satisfied, ground yourself in that feeling. If you’re used to chaos it can be tempting to focus on if or when things may go wrong. Worrying about all the ways your peace can be