4.6 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 3 October 2023
⏱️ 22 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Snapping back to your Goldilocks zone after you fall short of the actions you know will lead to your goals is a must. Whether this occurs after a vacation, a holiday, a weekend with friends or family, or simply a slow slipping of standards, this is an important skill for sustainable nutrition. Learn how to do it without overreacting.
What is the Goldilocks zone? This is that golden mean where you're eating and training enough but not too much. You're looking, feeling, and performing good and are moving toward your goals.
For most people, they fall short by moving toward the vices of sloth or gluttony. Most people don't tend to train more than they should or underfeed themselves (though these people exist).
Many opportunities to turn away from the path toward your goals exist. You may go on vacation, enjoy a few too many desserts over the holiday period, indulge in too much beer during the summer, or have a long weekend with friends of family. You can likely think of more occasions.
No matter how or why you find yourself not moving toward your goals, symptoms arise. What happens to those who move away from healthy habits for too long is their senses are dulled. They essentially cannot realize that they feel bad because it's their normal state of being.
What does overindulgence look and feel like? For Andrew, it's feeling like a "turd sandwich." For Niki, it tends to result in bloat, feeling less comfortable, getting less high-quality sleep.
Let's examine what the Goldilocks zone looks and feels like.
The Goldilocks zone feels good. The bloat goes away. You're getting good sleep, training regularly (but not overdoing it), and eating at maintenance (or at a small deficit).
Niki feels comfortable in her clothes and generally feels good. For her, it takes a couple weeks to slide back into this.
Her recommendations for how to get back on track include the following:
For Andrew, it's a return to baseline. He tends to eat the same meals for breakfast, lunch, and snack. Not only does he know what he will eat but how much. He also knows which things he can adjust to reduce calories further, if needed.
For example, he can add walnuts to his yogurt, or not. He can reduce the oatmeal portion for breakfast or, potentially, even remove it.
It's takes practice, observation, and time to see if you're back on path, not doing quite enough, or, if you're overdoing it. Let's look at what overreaction looks like.
Overreaction for many likely comes from either a place of fear, guilt, ignorance, or some combination thereof.
You may fear the results from the recent behaviors, and instead of returning to actions you know that work, you think you have to swing the pendulum back hard.
Acting out of guilt looks similar. Because you overindulged, you feel you must almost punish yourself.
Lastly, you may simply not have a well-established baseline, so you swing the pendulum back strongly because you're not sure what else you can do.
When it comes to training, it likely looks to trying to burn yourself into a calorie deficit through cardio.
Healthy nutrition is sustainable nutrition. Effective training builds toward goals and can be done for the long haul.
Check out the Barbell Logic podcast landing page.
Get Matched with a Professional Strength Coach today for FREE!
No contract with us, just commitment to yourself: Start experiencing strength now: https://store.barbell-logic.com/match/
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hey listeners, this is normally when we would talk about holiday sale or how |
0:07.4 | now is the right time to start with online coaching because of how much money |
0:10.5 | you can save. However, as I met with our marketing team earlier this month to |
0:14.8 | discuss promotional ideas, we found ourselves focusing on the ideal outcomes |
0:19.3 | for people who want to work with a coach. And that called to mind how many of |
0:23.1 | our clients got into this for the form corrections and ended up making real |
0:27.8 | life transformations through strength training. We realized that the ideal |
0:31.9 | barbell logic client is not afraid of hard work. They don't just have goals, they |
0:36.5 | are driven by continual self-improvement. They pursue strength because they |
0:40.7 | care deeply about the people who they love who depend on them. We know that |
0:45.6 | price is always a consideration when it comes to deciding to sign up for |
0:48.9 | something. But our successful clients tell us that in addition to carefully |
0:53.0 | deciding where to invest their money, they're also very intentional about how they |
0:57.3 | invest their time. And when you care about your time that much, there is fear that |
1:01.8 | you could waste your time and not see the results you want. If any of this |
1:05.6 | sounds like you, I'm here to make you a promise. You give us six months of two to |
1:10.6 | four workouts a week and if you don't see changes in your strength or form, we |
1:14.8 | will give you all of your money back. That's all six months. The worst case |
1:19.3 | scenario is it ends up costing you nothing. The best case scenario is you invest |
1:24.1 | in yourself and you get exactly what you want out of your training. The only |
1:28.0 | risk is about on yourself. It's time to place that bet and put your money where |
1:32.4 | your goals are. Get matched with your coach now at www.barbelllogic.com slash |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Barbell Logic, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Barbell Logic and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.