From Fear to Confidence:
How to Replace Old Habits and Lose Weight
Recently, a new client signed up with me, and during our nutrition consultation, I could sense that he had lost trust in himself. He’s a parent who is 25 kg overweight and wants to lose that weight, but emotionally, he doesn’t believe he's capable of it. When I asked him what made him feel incapable, he mentioned his habit of eating tea biscuits in the morning—a habit he's struggled to break for years. Every time he tried to quit, he’d end up returning to it.
He felt stuck, afraid that he wouldn't be able to break this old habit, and he subconsciously believed that this was simply his "destiny"—that he was destined to stay overweight.
I understand his pain. Wanting to stop a bad habit but finding yourself repeating it again and again is incredibly frustrating. It’s easy to lose hope when change feels out of reach.
However, I know what the solution is: it’s about what you focus on most. Your mental focus should shift to forming new, meaningful habits. The problem isn’t the tea biscuits themselves. The focus should be on finding a replacement habit—one that supports your goal of weight loss. You don’t need to fight against the old habit; you simply need to replace it.
You don't leave old habits—they leave you when they don't get enough emotional attention from you.
The good news is that new habits can start forming in as little as two weeks. This means the difficulty you experience at the beginning is only temporary. The tough part doesn’t last forever.
So, what should you do?
You can do this. Just take it one step at a time, and trust that the effort will pay off.
ND