The Five-Senses Meal Practice
Notice colors, shapes, and steam tracing the air. Let your eyes wander the plate as if it were a landscape. Seeing fully slows urgency and primes your mind to savor, not rush.
The Five-Senses Meal Practice
Bring your food closer and breathe in. Smell is wired to memory and emotion, often unlocking warmth. Let a familiar aroma soften your shoulders and invite gratitude before tasting a single bite.
The Five-Senses Meal Practice
Take a small bite and explore crunch, creaminess, and temperature. Count ten slow chews. Track how flavor unfolds—bright, mellow, then lingering. Matching your tempo to taste trims stress-fueled overeating.