🌿 If you’re navigating entrepreneurship and chronic illness, or simply craving a more sustainable way to grow your business without sacrificing your health, energy, or self-care priorities, explore Chronically You & Profitable (CYAP).
About this Episode:
In this episode of Business with Chronic Illness, I'm joined by Jessica Setnick, RD, CSSD, LD—a registered dietitian, eating disorder specialist, and founder of a nonprofit making eating disorder care accessible—to talk about the invisible energy drain keeping entrepreneurs burned out: food shame.
Jessica opens up about her own journey of having to go to therapy just to learn how to charge for her services, what she calls the "Mother Teresa trap" that keeps service-based entrepreneurs undervaluing their work. She shares how shame around food, eating, and body image is completely invisible (you can't look at someone and know what they're eating), and why this hidden struggle is stealing the energy women entrepreneurs need to recover from burnout.
We dive into why stress changes your brain chemistry and turns food into mood-altering medication, the critical difference between shame and regret (and why one keeps you stuck while the other moves you forward), and Jessica walks through practical ways to spot shame-based patterns that are draining your business capacity.
By the end of this episode, you'll walk away with:
- A framework for recognizing food shame - the specific signs that shame (not just your chronic illness) is keeping you burned out, including eating differently alone versus with people and overthinking every food choice.
- Understanding the stress-food-shame cycle - why your body uses food as medication when you're burned out, how this is brain chemistry (not a character flaw), and why weight stigma myths like "eat less, move more" ignore hormones, stress, and chronic illness.
- Permission to recover imperfectly - Jessica's reframe that recovery isn't about never having thoughts about food; it's about keeping the struggle at the thought level instead of letting it drive your behavior, plus where to start when you're ready for support (books, resources, and finding eating disorder-informed care).
Jessica's story reminds us that you cannot fix burnout by pushing harder when shame is stealing your energy; sustainable business growth starts with compassionate, practical tools that help you nourish yourself and reclaim the capacity you need to show up.
🎧 Want to learn more about today’s guest?
Visit CraftedToThrive.com for guest details, key takeaways, and extra links mentioned in this episode.
CYAP is my voice-first business system designed for women entrepreneurs, creatives, and women with chronic illness who want sustainable growth and burnout support while keeping life and wellness first.
It helps you use your voice and story to build a business with systems and strategies that run smoothly, so your work supports your life, not the other way around.
⭐ Enjoyed this conversation? Leave a review and share it with another CEO woman or creative entrepreneur growing a health-first, sustainable business.
📱 Stay connected: Follow me on Instagram.
Links referenced in this episode:
Gifts And Ways To Connect With Your Host Nikita:
Subscribe to the Chronically Profitable: The Flare-Proof Path to $100K, A free exclusive weekly email series designed for creatives and women with chronic illnesses. You'll learn how to make a liveable income with your hobbies, professional skills, and innate talents by building a successful online coaching business with simple strategies that work for you, even on flare days and feel better living with chronic illness.
00:00 - Untitled
00:44 - Introduction to Food Shame and Its Impact on Energy
03:21 - Rethinking Eating Disorders
08:28 - The Journey to Valuing Our Work
14:37 - Navigating the Balance Between Service and Sustainability
21:47 - Invisible Issues with Eating
26:51 - Understanding Individual Nutrition Needs
35:13 - Understanding Shame and Regret in Eating Habits
37:33 - Understanding Eating Disorders: A Holistic Perspective
44:19 - Embracing Our Imperfections
48:44 - Navigating Personal Struggles and Food Relationships
52:21 - Navigating the Complexities of Chronic Illness and Food Relationships
If you've been feeling drained, unfocused or feeling stuck in a cycle of doing what you feel like is everything right, but still feeling like you're running on empty, today's episode is going to share a unique perspective of why that might be.
Speaker AWe're talking about food shame and the quiet guilt and comparison and body shaming that sometimes crep up in our business and how it can leak into affecting your energy and also lead to burnout.
Speaker ASo listen out for how to spot food shame, energy leaks and what to do in the moment when they show up and simple mindset shifts that help you nourish yourself in ways that actually fuel your growth in your business.
Speaker ASo in this episode I really wanted to have someone to come who could give us some support around this topic and her name is Jessica Setnik.
Speaker AShe's a registered dietitian and eating disordered specialist.
Speaker ABecause she helps people replace food shame with practical and compassionate tools, we're showing you how to spot these shame based patterns and simple ways to nourish yourself that actually give you energy back and has and how this directly connects to your ability to sustainably grow your business while navigating burnout, healing or Managing Chronic illness.
Speaker ANow, even though this topic is pretty heavy in some ways, it is gentle, honest and full of moments that are going you rethink and reset with your body and how we think about our bodies and how we treat our bodies and how that reflects on how we show up and build something meaningful in our business.
Speaker AAll right, so stay tuned.
Speaker BWelcome to Business with Chronic Illness, the.
Speaker AGlobally ranked podcast for women living with.
Speaker BChronic illness who want to start and grow a business online.
Speaker BI'm your host Nikita Williams and I went from living a normal life to all of a sudden being in constant pain with no answers to being diagn with multiple chronic illnesses and trying to make a livable income.
Speaker BI faced the challenge of adapting traditional business advice to fit my unique circumstances with chronic illness.
Speaker BFeeling frustrated and more burned out than I already was while managing my chronic illness to becoming an award winning coach with a flexible, sustainable online coaching business, I found the surprisingly simple steps to starting growing a profitable business without compromising my health or my peace.
Speaker BSince then, I've helped dozens of women just like you learn how how to do the same.
Speaker BIf you're ready to create a thriving business that aligns with your lifestyle and well being, you're in the right place.
Speaker BTogether, we're shifting the narrative of what's possible for women with chronic illness and.
Speaker AHow we make a living.
Speaker BThis is Business with chronic illness.
Speaker BI am so excited to have Jessica on the show and talking about a pretty deep conversation.
Speaker BI almost want to, like, preface this with trigger warning kind of potentially for folks who might be listening.
Speaker BWe talk a lot about life and business, and obviously we talk about different.
Speaker BDifferent people's journey, but we don't.
Speaker BWe haven't talked about eating disorders often in this show.
Speaker BIt comes up kind of like as a whisper.
Speaker BAnd, you know, our show is all about bringing the whispers forward so we can bring some light and remove some of the shame and the stigma away from it.
Speaker BBecause if you're a business owner, you don't.
Speaker BYou're not excluded from this.
Speaker BAnd if you're a person living with chronic illness, you're also not excluded from this.
Speaker BAnd this can be chronic for some people.
Speaker BSo I'm excited to have Jessica just come in, and she has such an expertise in this area and her personal journey.
Speaker BSo welcome.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CI'm happy to be here.
Speaker CHappy to see you.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo I'd love for us jump right on in and have you share a bit about, you know, when we talk about disordered eating.
Speaker BWhen we first talked, I was like, oh, there is so many places we can go with this conversation.
Speaker BAnd I think the theme that came up really importantly is that disordered eating isn't just an eating disorder like there are.
Speaker BIt's the way we view how we eat.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd I'd love for you to kind of start from that higher level.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker BOf.
Speaker BOf where.
Speaker BWhere we can.
Speaker BWhere does that look like for you?
Speaker BAs an expert in the space, as someone supporting the community?
Speaker CI love the idea of really broadening our mindset about what we think about eating disorders.
Speaker CAnd that's why I actually prefer to use the words dysfunctional eating or dysfunctional eating behavior or disruptive eating, because to me, when you say eating disorders, we all get an avatar or image in our mind of what that is.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd I don't even have to repeat it because I know everyone knows what I'm talking about.
Speaker CAnd really, only a small percentage of people with eating problems fit whatever that description is that we have in our mind of sort of the standard.
Speaker CAnd it's very outdated.
Speaker CIt's very biased.
Speaker CIt's very passe.
Speaker CIt comes from the way the eating disorder field was sort of conceptualized early on.
Speaker CAnd the truth is, anyone who eats can have an eating disorder.
Speaker CSo we need to really broaden that idea.
Speaker CAnd it's been obvious to me ever since I've been in the field in other Words.
Speaker CI didn't have to overcome the idea that eating disorders only affected a certain group of people.
Speaker CI had it the opposite.
Speaker CI sort of faced that in the world.
Speaker CLike, wait, I don't understand.
Speaker CIt's so obvious to me that anyone who eats can have eating problems.
Speaker CWhy do I have to convince my professional organization of that?
Speaker CWhy do I have to convince a doctor of that?
Speaker CIt just seems so obvious to me.
Speaker CAnd so just facing that sort of bumping up against society's idea of what an eating disorder is made me realize I need to change the narrative.
Speaker CSo I'm going to actually change the words.
Speaker CAnd so it's really just anyone who is having a problem with their eating, anyone who's eating is taking them away from their goals rather than moving them toward their goals, whatever those goals may be.
Speaker CWhether it's to be well nourished in the face of chronic illness, whether it's to actually recover from a situation, whether it is simply to feed a family.
Speaker CWell.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAny of those things can be made more difficult by sort of the emotional aspects of eating.
Speaker CAnd if we just think about eating as fuel, then we're missing out on a big part of things that can disrupt our eating.
Speaker CSo I really appreciate your way of thinking of this, of trying to open minds about the fact that we're not trying to say, to label people or put people in boxes.
Speaker CWe're just trying to say, hey, everybody who eats can have difficulty eating, and it doesn't have to rise to some level of some diagnostic criteria or something like that in order for someone to want to change.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BThat is so powerful.
Speaker BJust that angle of being like.
Speaker BI can relate to trying to change the narrative of what something looks like from textbook versus a broader space of being like, yeah, well, there's all of these other things to take in consideration that, yes, the textbooks, I believe, are very important, are very helpful in the diagnostic area.
Speaker BBut often I feel like we miss.
Speaker BI don't want to say breadcrumbs, but the breadcrumbs that lead to the bigger labels.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BAre happening.
Speaker CYes, yes, 1,000%.
Speaker CAnd to me, it's sort of that.
Speaker CThat idea of, like the starfish, you know, the person throwing the starfish back into the ocean, and the.
Speaker CThe person comes along and says, you can't possibly save them all.
Speaker CAnd the person says, well, but it mattered to that one.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIt's kind of like that.
Speaker CIt's like, I feel like so many of the, let's say, criteria or assessment tests or whatever, they're really Trying to look at a big population.
Speaker CHow many people in a population meet these criteria?
Speaker CWhen any one individual might only have one of those criteria, but that's still important to them, they're still having that problem.
Speaker BYeah, no, I totally agree.
Speaker BTotally agree.
Speaker BSo how has this journey of this, this really big conversation, this really big place started for you?
Speaker BIs it a.
Speaker BAnd I know we talk about this in the, in the bio, but can you share a little bit about what has been your experience that led from.
Speaker BOkay, not only am I wanting to talk about this and change this narrative, but also let me translate this into like a space where I'm supporting people, I'm supporting myself, even financially, having a business, talking about this.
Speaker BHow has that journey been for you?
Speaker CSo it's very challenging.
Speaker CAnd I think that probably a lot of people listening have this experience.
Speaker CI don't think I'm unique.
Speaker CBut to be in a profession that is 90 something percent female, it's definitely looked at as sort of a social work kind of profession.
Speaker CI'm trained as a dietitian.
Speaker CWe're not trained to ask for money.
Speaker CWe're not trained to be assertive.
Speaker CWe're not trained to see the value, the dollar value of what we provide.
Speaker CAnd we are very caregiving individuals.
Speaker CAnd so having a business was really challenging for me.
Speaker CI originally worked in a hospital and was just sort of disgusted is the best word I can think of for how people were treated.
Speaker CAnd I mean patients and I mean employees, and felt like I could do this better on my own.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo I started my own private practice.
Speaker CAnd the first year, my accountant said to me, are you prepared to make a donation of $20,000?
Speaker CAnd I said, absolutely not.
Speaker CWhat are we even talking about?
Speaker CAnd he said, well, that's what you've.
Speaker CYou have $20,000 of bills that people owe you and they haven't paid you simply because you haven't asked them to.
Speaker CAnd that was.
Speaker CWow, that was brutal, right?
Speaker CTo hear that.
Speaker CThat.
Speaker CBecause I didn't have the skills to.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd where was I going to get those skills?
Speaker CI mean, you're not born with that, right?
Speaker CAnd in the hospital, you don't ask a person to pay you for your services, right?
Speaker CYou get paid by a third party.
Speaker CAnd so it was really something I had to go to therapy about to make it into a business and recognize that there was value.
Speaker CAnd my therapist kind of helped me recognize that.
Speaker CI was, I was saying, but like Mother Teresa, Mother Teresa does good works for free.
Speaker CAnd here I am trying to charge people and she Said, first of all, Mother Teresa has a whole institution, a religious order that is supporting her.
Speaker COkay, Mother Teresa still has someone paying her bills, right?
Speaker CShe still has bills and someone pays.
Speaker CBut on a bigger overview, she said, there's.
Speaker CYou're comparing yourself to Mother Teresa.
Speaker CMother Teresa does good works for free.
Speaker CYou do good works for money.
Speaker CYou're forgetting that there's people who do nothing all day.
Speaker CThere's people who do bad works for free.
Speaker CThere's people who do bad things for money.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CAnd somehow you come out on the wrong end of this spectrum.
Speaker CAnd it was really quite amazing to realize what I was doing to myself, what I was saying to myself in thinking, how can I charge people for my services when that's how everybody pays their mortgage?
Speaker CThat's how everybody puts food on the table.
Speaker CAnd yet somehow I felt like I had to do it out of goodness, which, I mean, I think I am a good person.
Speaker CI want to help the world with my work, but I also have to make a living doing that.
Speaker CI mean, that was really tough times to get through that whole mental hurdle.
Speaker BThat's a whole.
Speaker BThat's a whole other episode.
Speaker BJessica.
Speaker BI mean, I think I'm curious, too, to think of, like, do you feel like that that came.
Speaker BI know as so many women we talk to on the show are all.
Speaker BMany of us are in that service giving, nurture field.
Speaker BI don't think I have had anyone who really isn't in that space on the show.
Speaker BEven if they are selling a product, even if they're in a tech, there is a reason why they're doing something, and it is truly for the help of others, like helping other people in some way or giving something that they wish they had that didn't exist.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI wonder for you, where has.
Speaker BWhere do you feel like that thought process of, oh, I should be like, you know, not that I should be Mother Teresa, but I should give these services away for free.
Speaker BWhere do you think that narrative came from?
Speaker BWhere do you think that belief came from?
Speaker CWell, I think part of it is.
Speaker CComes from a really good, positive place.
Speaker CI happen to be Jewish, and one of the sort of principles of Judaism is called tikkun olam.
Speaker CRepairing the world.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CWanting to make the world a better place, partnering with God to make the world a better place.
Speaker CThose kind of ideas are very much ingrained in being raised Jewish.
Speaker CAnd so I think those are, you know, that's very wholesome.
Speaker CLet's say that what you do with your day can impact the world for better or for worse.
Speaker CAnd Wanting it to be better.
Speaker CBut I also feel like I have a very entrepreneurial spirit in my family.
Speaker CBut I. I now know my dad died when I was 12, and I found some of his papers from him having his own business.
Speaker CAnd it seems that he had this.
Speaker CI don't want to say that it was not good, but this sort of idea that doing good things for customers is part of the way that you drum up business.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo in other words, if you.
Speaker CHe was a watchmaker, if you change someone's watch battery for free, they'll come back to you when they have a more expensive job.
Speaker CAnd what you don't maybe realize is that.
Speaker CThat you have to do this strategically.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CYou can't just be giving away your services for free.
Speaker CSo the way I would say I sort of have spun that into a positive is if the people who can afford to pay me, pay me, then I can choose to see however many people I choose who can't afford to pay me.
Speaker CBut what my accountant was trying to say was get the people who can afford to pay you to pay you.
Speaker CDon't just not ask people to pay you for your services.
Speaker CSo I think it came from a good place, but it wasn't necessarily deployed in a very financially sane manner.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI think it was sane.
Speaker BI think it's very sane to be a giving, but I also like.
Speaker BAnd to be wanting to help other people, but maybe sustainable.
Speaker BI was gonna say not fight, like, not sustainable for you, the person doing it, because, you know, that's a huge piece of this, like, the sustainability of growing a business as a person who's also dealing with their own personal health challenges.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker BIt's a.
Speaker BIt's a teeter totter.
Speaker BLike, it really is of, like, okay, yeah, I can.
Speaker BI know for myself personally, I. I have this conversation all the time with, like, one of my good friends who.
Speaker BLots of good friends who live with chronic illness running businesses where we're talking often.
Speaker BAnd like, there's that fine line of, you understand what it means for something to be out of your reach because of so many different reasons, not just financially, just in general resources.
Speaker BAnd then to have a business where you're trying to offer resources for some people where it might be out of their reach.
Speaker BThere is that.
Speaker BYou know, there's that fine line of finding where your values meet.
Speaker BI got to pay my bills, right.
Speaker BAnd so I think there's.
Speaker BThere's power of having these conversations.
Speaker BI always tell people there's not a right or wrong answer to this.
Speaker BIt looks different for everybody if someone's listening right now who's listening to the show.
Speaker BAnd I know we have a lot of entrepreneurs and we have a lot of people who have been in the business for a while who are just starting mix thinking.
Speaker BBut what does it look like for Jessica?
Speaker BWhat does that fine line look like for Jessica?
Speaker BBecause maybe that might give me a gauge of where my fine line might be.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CSo I'll say it this way.
Speaker CThe best job I ever had when I even as being an entrepreneur, I've sometimes taken, you know, contract positions, that kind of thing.
Speaker CThe best position I ever had was one where I didn't have to charge to present because I was getting paid by my organization, right.
Speaker CSo I was getting a salary and so I didn't have to choose.
Speaker CLike, I can speak to this third grade Girl Scout troop and they can't afford to pay me, but that's okay because I'm getting paid by my right.
Speaker CSo it was so freeing to me to not have to get involved in those negotiations and things like that.
Speaker CIt's harder when you have to think of it in terms of what am I giving up.
Speaker CAnd yeah, if I have nothing I need to do on that day and I can speak to that third grade Girl Scout troop, I want to do that.
Speaker CBut I can't do that on a day when, let's say there's another job that does pay money.
Speaker CIf that's the only time to do that, I have to choose the thing that pays money.
Speaker CAnd that's.
Speaker CIt's challenging sometimes.
Speaker CLuckily, I would say I'm able to balance that most of the time.
Speaker CAnother example is an organization.
Speaker CSomeone heard me speak recently about child feeding and eating disorders and asked me to come speak to her community organization of people who go out into the community and help people with their nutrition.
Speaker CAnd so we were talking budget and they can't afford my fee.
Speaker CBut because I work for myself, I can say what is in your budget?
Speaker CAnd I can decide, you know, what it's in state, it's a driving distance away, it's not a flight.
Speaker CI can go there for that lower amount that they have in their fee.
Speaker CAnd that's okay with me.
Speaker CSo I guess the line for me is I have standards of what I will do for less money or for free versus what I want.
Speaker CAnd if you're going to make money off what I'm offering, then that's not fair for me to do that for free and then you make money off of me.
Speaker CBut if you're a community organization with grant funding and you have a fixed amount and you're willing to give me that fixed amount.
Speaker CIt just happens to be less than my fee.
Speaker CI may choose, because I believe in what your organization is doing, to take that lower fee because it helps me fulfill my mission.
Speaker CBut at the same time, I'm not necessarily saying I'll do it for free because there is a value and a cost associated with it.
Speaker CSo it's a.
Speaker CIt's a line, but it flexes back and forth.
Speaker CIt's not like a set line.
Speaker CI get to be the one to decide which organizations I flex for and which I don't.
Speaker BYeah, I love that.
Speaker BAnd that's the.
Speaker BI think that's the power of being an entrepreneur is having that ability to find your flex in your flow.
Speaker BI guess you will.
Speaker BAnd deciding what works for.
Speaker BFor you.
Speaker BThanks for sharing that.
Speaker BI think, like I said, I just love having other perspectives on how you might decide to find that line of taking care of yourself and charging.
Speaker BAnd what does that look like in alignment with your value system?
Speaker CI'm curious, and I actually have a side hustle, I guess you could call it, as a speaker coach.
Speaker CAnd that's one of the main things that we talk about, is how to make your decisions of which organizations you will lower your rate or you will speak for free.
Speaker CWhat are the.
Speaker CWhat is the value that you may be getting out of that as opposed to letting someone take advantage of you or someone who says, well, I can't believe you charge that much.
Speaker CI mean, I could find someone to do it for free.
Speaker CWell, as Mel Robbins would say, let them.
Speaker CLet them.
Speaker CSomeone to do it for free.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThey're going to treat you like that.
Speaker CThat's totally different from, we really value what you do.
Speaker CI'm sorry, we just don't have a budget this year.
Speaker CTell us what we can offer you that could help you.
Speaker CIs there anything we could do that might not be financial?
Speaker CWell, you know, what if an organization has a professional photographer, professional videographer, and they can provide a recording of my presentation, that has a lot of value to me, even if they don't have money, let's say.
Speaker CSo it's that kind of sort of willingness to have a discussion with someone and negotiate.
Speaker CThat's why I feel like, you know, black and white, yes or no is not usually the ideal for most decisions in business.
Speaker CI mean, yes, there's some things that are definite.
Speaker CNo, like someone brushes up against you or something like, yuck, no.
Speaker CBut, you know, I'm I guess in.
Speaker CIn the more broad sense of like, is this the right opportunity for me?
Speaker CI need a lot more information before I can say a definite yes or no.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSuch a good point.
Speaker BSuch a good point.
Speaker BAnd I think that shifts in ebbs.
Speaker BThe more you get into business, the longer you've been in business, that looks different.
Speaker BAnd some things ick you right away.
Speaker BAnd you're like, no.
Speaker BAnd I think if you're first starting, things ick you and you think you have to do the thing because you're like in that beginner phase.
Speaker BAnd I always tell folks, like, that's not true.
Speaker BYou don't have to.
Speaker BAnd actually, I really encourage them not to do the thing that feels icky at the beginning because that's just almost like creating this pathway in your brain and this pathway in your business of that foundation that can lead to this feeling of this invisible.
Speaker BI call it like the invisible impossible place that you're not really going to reach because you are taking.
Speaker BYou're like, you're doing actions that are completely out of alignment of what you really want and what you really are trying to do.
Speaker BSo I appreciate you sharing that.
Speaker BAnd speaking of invisible, I was just thinking kind of bring our conversation back around to eating and eating well, or eating not so well, right?
Speaker CWell, and eating issues are completely invisible.
Speaker CI mean, we have sort of been brainwashed to think that we can look at someone and determine that they have an eating problem based on what they look like.
Speaker CAnd it's completely false.
Speaker CJust could not be more false.
Speaker CYou cannot look at someone and know what they are eating.
Speaker CAnd I mean, doctors think they can.
Speaker CThere's probably dietitians out there who think they can.
Speaker CBut once you've been a dietitian for any amount of time, you realize, wow, some of the things that we hear are just.
Speaker CYou couldn't even have imagined them in your weirdest nightmare.
Speaker CSo it's very surprising sometimes when you find out someone is eating totally differently from what you might have made up in your head.
Speaker BMic drop, like, I mean, that's the, that's the thing right there.
Speaker BWe make a lot of assumptions, even for ourselves.
Speaker BI think if we bring it into our own selves, what we consider good, bad for us is always based on what we are seeing.
Speaker BOther people, quote, unquote, say is good to eat, good to do, habits to do.
Speaker BI'll share a little quick story and I'll ask you your thoughts because I think our audience will appreciate this.
Speaker BYou know, I have friends who've all gone, especially in The.
Speaker BAnd I say friends, they're like in their 20s.
Speaker BI'm almost 40, so there's a big age difference.
Speaker BBut my 20 friends who are like, on the juice, you know, juice cleanse and on this thing, and, you know, juice is the best way.
Speaker BAnd then later on in life, they realize, well, there's some things about juicing that I didn't think about.
Speaker BAnd, you know, you find yourself as whatever space you're in.
Speaker BI know for me, living with chronic illness, what I put in my body is always something I'm thinking about because of how it might affect me.
Speaker BAnd for a long time, just the idea of a juice would, like, cringe me to death because of the pain it would cause my digestive system.
Speaker BAnd they say, you know, so many people I've talked to is like, juicing is the best way for your digestive system to heal.
Speaker BAnd from a visual, outside look, you know, it looks like that's how it's supposed to be, because that's what all the healthy people say they.
Speaker BThat they are experiencing.
Speaker BAnd again, to your point, the invisibleness that our bodies are all made different.
Speaker BAnd so the idea that every kind of trend is or not trend or way of eating is healthy for your body, I feel like is a missed no more.
Speaker BBut it's something we hear all of the time.
Speaker CI feel like so much of what we, let's say, learned as dietitians contradicted itself.
Speaker CBecause on the one hand, we're learning to be a nutritionist.
Speaker CWe're learning to look at each individual person and come up with very individual recommendations for them.
Speaker CAnd then on the other hand, we're sort of told, this is the science.
Speaker CThis is how things work.
Speaker CBut it's not that way for everyone.
Speaker CAnd it's so ironic to me that, you know, people, let's say influencers, that's just a good example that they could say, this is what worked for me, so this is what everyone else should do.
Speaker CThat's absurd.
Speaker CThat's like saying, this is my shoe size, so you should wear this shoe size too.
Speaker CLike, what?
Speaker CThat doesn't make any sense.
Speaker CAnd yet when it comes to nutrition, somehow we.
Speaker CWe hear that.
Speaker CAnd what is so important to remember is that that is a marketing message, right?
Speaker CWe don't think of it as this is a marketing message.
Speaker CSomeone is trying to sell me a product or a diet or a plan or something.
Speaker CAnd if we.
Speaker CIf we fall for it, I don't think the fault is ours.
Speaker CI blame the people who are preying on someone with a chronic illness or with a dilemma that just want to feel better.
Speaker CAnd so I blame them.
Speaker CI blame the person who makes it sound like, this is what fixed me.
Speaker CSo therefore, it's what's going to fix you.
Speaker CI. I think that is a. I think that is people doing bad works for money.
Speaker CAnd they may actually think that they're helping people, and they may believe that, but they need to really look within and say, if I am actually helping people do things that are hurting them, then I'm not actually helping them.
Speaker CAnd you can sit behind your computer screen and you can say, well, they didn't have to do it.
Speaker CThat's fine.
Speaker CBut that is your marketing message.
Speaker CThat is how you make your money is by preying on people who are really desperate for a solution.
Speaker CAnd that just makes me very frustrated.
Speaker BJessica's body language is, like, about to come get you.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BLike, if you're just listening to this, I feel like Jessica says she coming for you.
Speaker BWho y' all do it?
Speaker BLike, that's what I feel like.
Speaker BJust came out.
Speaker BAnd Jessica, just in case y' all wanted to know if you're not watching the video, but I feel you.
Speaker BI feel you.
Speaker BI feel you.
Speaker BI think if we are talking about food and nutrition and we want to be more open and inclusive, because I can't even say for myself personally that I haven't.
Speaker BLike, I'm a huge essential oils fan because it has lit.
Speaker BIt literally did so many wonderful things for me, managing my life with chronic illness.
Speaker BBut I know that it's not for every client.
Speaker BLike, it's not for everybody.
Speaker BLike, there are people that it's not for.
Speaker BSo I have learned over the years from my excitement, oh, this worked for me.
Speaker BAnd translating, like, well, actually, this worked for me.
Speaker BAnd it may not work for you, but if you want some things, you might want to consider, like, more of an open and way of talking about this.
Speaker BAnd I think when we think about nutrition, because there's so many, like, diets, I think I was reading, like, there's, like, over 100 diets and all these different kind of things.
Speaker BYeah, right.
Speaker BHow can we be more inclusive and understanding of the different types of bodies or the people walking around trying to figure out the best way to be healthy that we can't see?
Speaker BBut we're offering advice, you know, we're offering thoughts because we did the juice cleanse, and it worked for us, but maybe it's not going to work for your friend.
Speaker CSo I would say there's nothing wrong with sharing your experience.
Speaker CIt's more the bullying type of thing or the you're wrong if you don't do it this way.
Speaker CAnd a lot of the reason that diets and pills and different things succeed is because people are evangelists for it.
Speaker CWhen they first get going and they feel so much better or so much different.
Speaker CAnd by the time the effects either wear off or maybe it was a placebo effect and it was just exciting to have a new project, or maybe they gain all the weight back or their symptoms recur or whatever it is by that time nobody is an evangelist for it anymore, right?
Speaker CNobody is talking about it anymore.
Speaker CAnd so people don't share, like, oh, by the way, that juice cleanse, it gave me diarrhea for eight days.
Speaker CLike, you know what I mean?
Speaker CLike people only share it when it's in the positive side.
Speaker CSo that's how things keep going.
Speaker CAnd so I think being honest with ourselves would be good and I think being more of a, let's say a non judgmental listener would be better for everybody rather than feeling like people are to blame for their own situation.
Speaker CI feel like that is so incomprehensible to me that people have a hard time looking at the systemic inequities or social determinants of health.
Speaker CLike, how can people just deny that that exists?
Speaker CAnd it's like, okay, just because you didn't encounter this problem doesn't mean other people don't encounter it.
Speaker CI mean, so when we're talking about chronic illness, I just constantly come back to my own sleep disorder and how when I have my own practice, I started seeing patients at 10:30 in the morning because that was the best for me because I have a really hard time in the morning and you know, when I had a job and had to be there at 8 o' clock and you know, I either was or I wasn't.
Speaker CBut if I'm going to be seeing patients in my own private practice, I'm not scheduling someone for a time that I'm not 100% sure I'm going to be at my best.
Speaker CAnd so I would get to work at 10 o' clock in the morning and if someone was going to judge that, be my guest.
Speaker CLike, I just, I know what's best for me and I feel like that's where it becomes very easy for other people to make these kind of judgments.
Speaker CAnd we do it to ourselves too.
Speaker CBut if we could all just recognize that everyone is mostly doing their best, trying, then I think it would be a lot easier for us to find the path that works for us, because we wouldn't be getting so much pressure from outside people.
Speaker CAnd I mean, that was a long answer to your question.
Speaker CBut I feel like this judgmental idea of like, I am a human, so therefore I know what it must be like for every other human to exist, and if I make this choice, then everyone else could be making this choice.
Speaker CIt's just such a misunderstanding of the diversity of human experience.
Speaker BSo true.
Speaker BAnd I think to bring it kind of circle back around, it's what actually makes our all lived different experiences invisible.
Speaker BBecause if we don't acknowledge that there's all that nuance and difference and our bodies are different, then our experiences are all just one label.
Speaker BLike it's just that label we, we experience.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd it's easy.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker CAnd I want to be very specific here and call out one specific situation in the world, which is weight.
Speaker CIt is so accepted in the world to judge people based on their weight.
Speaker CTo assume that if someone is bigger than you think they should be, that it must be because they're doing something wrong, they're eating wrong, they're not exercising enough.
Speaker CThose kind of things like that is completely bs.
Speaker CAnd it's like I said, you know, when you're a dietitian and you sit and you hear what people are really eating and what people are really doing, you realize there are so many other factors involved.
Speaker CIt is not just about eat less and exercise more.
Speaker CI mean, that is such a falsehood.
Speaker CAnd I feel like if we could take one thing out of society, it would be the idea that your body size is a direct function of what you eat.
Speaker CThat take doesn't take into account hormones, it doesn't take into account neurochemicals, it doesn't take into account chronic illness.
Speaker CThere's a million things that doesn't take into account.
Speaker CAnd that's why you cannot look at someone and know what they're eating.
Speaker CAnd it's, it causes so much harm when medical providers look at someone and say, in their mind, this person's too big, therefore they eat too much.
Speaker CSo what comes out of their mouth is you need to eat less and you have no idea.
Speaker CThat person could be eating almost nothing.
Speaker CBecause we just make up in our head, if they were eating the right amount, their body would be the finger quotes, right size.
Speaker CAnd it's not how it works at all.
Speaker BI personally, I can agree with you, Jessica.
Speaker BI have personally experienced that myself.
Speaker BThere was a time in my journey where I was like eating one meal sort of a day and drinking water barely, because I was in so much pain.
Speaker BAnd every time a doctor would tell me that I needed to stop eating as much, I would be like, I'm not eating.
Speaker BLike, like, I'm not eating because it hurts.
Speaker BSo I don't know what's, you cannot.
Speaker CTell what are you talking about?
Speaker CLike, you know, listening to me.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo I, I, I definitely think I agree with you.
Speaker BI think in general we, the, I mean, bmi, all these things we hear from doctors, it's all very skewed.
Speaker BIt's all off.
Speaker BIf someone's listening to this and they are having themselves a relationship with food that they want to improve, they want to have a better relationship with food in general.
Speaker BWhat are some things, one, what are some thoughts that might be like, hey, maybe, maybe I do have a thing with food, or maybe I don't.
Speaker BLike, what are some things for them to think about and what are some signs that would alert them to be like, this is maybe an area I need to focus a little bit on.
Speaker CDifferently, I would say two things, regret and shame.
Speaker CIf you feel ashamed of what you eat, if you're eating differently when you're with people versus alone, that is a clue that something is amiss because we should not be carrying so much shame about what we eat.
Speaker CAnd so the things you eat in the middle of the night, if you wouldn't eat that in broad daylight on a park bench, there's something going on there.
Speaker CThe other thing is regret.
Speaker CIf you feel like, why did I eat that?
Speaker COr why didn't I eat that?
Speaker CIf you're walking around kind of overthinking, rethinking your food choices, then something is going on there.
Speaker CIt's, it's much more of a thought process.
Speaker CNote, I did not say if your weight is going up, if your weight is going down.
Speaker CI mean, those can be signs, but they can also be signs of something totally different.
Speaker CThe way you feel about your eating, to me is the most significant thing that sort of points to, maybe I want to talk to someone about this, or maybe I want to read a book about this.
Speaker CBecause the skills you're bringing to the table, which is information you receive from the people who, who raised you and the, your heritage, your ancestry, all impacts the way you eat.
Speaker CSo instead of sort of buying the lie that everything I eat is my own fault, we need to really open our minds and think, if I'm not feeling good about what I eat, then, like, if I'm eating things that I know are going to make me feel bad, or if I'm Scared to eat, like you were describing.
Speaker CThat's the issue.
Speaker CNot the weight issue, not the calorie issue.
Speaker CIt's the fact that you're a human being who is basically made out of the molecules of food that you've eaten previously, and yet you're afraid to eat the same molecules that are going to help you heal.
Speaker CThat's the problem, not the weight.
Speaker CNot at all.
Speaker BSuch a shame.
Speaker BAnd regret.
Speaker BI mean, that's.
Speaker BUnfortunately, I feel like those two things are, like, in every aspect of your life that you think you're having issues with outside of food.
Speaker BLike, that's a.
Speaker BThat's a core thing to think about, to consider.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CWell, and.
Speaker CAnd honestly, I mean, shame.
Speaker CI'm gonna get really, like, off track here for a minute, but that is a tool of the patriarchy, right.
Speaker CLike, making you feel like something is your fault.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThat's.
Speaker CThat's something that holds people down.
Speaker CLook what you made me do.
Speaker CI mean, even a lot of organized religion and.
Speaker CAnd I told you I'm Jewish.
Speaker CThere's plenty of shame in Judaism, so.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIt's just some of these things are survival instincts, I think, but they're the things that are sort of hurting us from the inside.
Speaker CAnd I. I feel like shame has no place in eating.
Speaker CRegret, I'm fine with regret.
Speaker CIf you regret what you ate, that's fine.
Speaker CIf you don't like it or it hurt, you don't eat it again.
Speaker CBut if you do eat it again, that's when there's something else going on.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CWe think of it as, like, this totally conscious control.
Speaker CI eat, I make my own food choices.
Speaker CI choose what I buy, I choose what I eat.
Speaker CBut it's not so cut and dry.
Speaker CThere's a whole iceberg of emotions driving what we eat and past experiences and past traumatic experiences and past food insecurity and past chronic stress and current chronic stress.
Speaker CAnd that affects our hormones and chemicals.
Speaker CI mean, stress saps out your good brain chemistry.
Speaker CAnd the things that fix your brain chemistry are, you know, sex, drugs, alcohol, food.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo sometimes we're using food as medication, and it's not necessarily a conscious choice.
Speaker CIt's something you're doing in order to really help yourself feel better.
Speaker CAnd not eating counts, too.
Speaker CThat changes your brain chemistry, too.
Speaker CSo these are all things that we do with good reason.
Speaker CSo in other words, if you are the owner of your own company and.
Speaker COr the CEO of your family or whatever the case may be, and you are succeeding in life, and yet you find yourself doing something with your Eating that sort of perplexes you.
Speaker CIt's not because you're stupid.
Speaker CIt's not because you're incompetent.
Speaker CIt's because there's something bound up in that that is not conscious.
Speaker BAnd I know you do a lot of, like, you do a lot of workshops and trainings and conversations on this as a, as a collective, like, within a space of people who have the label.
Speaker BI have this type of eating disorder.
Speaker BI have this type of eating disorder.
Speaker BAnd you brought, you bring around the fact of, like, okay, can we remove, can we get out of the label first?
Speaker BAnd like, look at the whole picture.
Speaker BAnd if someone's listening to this, who has the labels, They've gone to the doctor, they have the labels and they're hearing this conversation and they're listening.
Speaker BWhat is a message for them that you want them to walk away with that maybe they haven't heard quite yet because they haven't been in those rooms where you're speaking and sharing about this holistic point of view.
Speaker CThis is going to sound so not like a good thing, but it is a good thing.
Speaker CA lot of times people have this idea that when you have been labeled with an eating disorder, that your goal is that you're supposed to leave it behind.
Speaker CYou're supposed to get cured from it.
Speaker CAnd I think there probably are some people who have that kind of an eating disorder, and that's okay.
Speaker CI don't want to take that away from them.
Speaker CBut for others who think that just doesn't fit me, like, it never seems to completely go away, my message is, that's okay.
Speaker CYour goal is to keep it at the thought level.
Speaker CYour goal is not to never have a thought about, maybe I don't want to eat that, or maybe I feel regret that I ate that.
Speaker CThose thoughts are normal.
Speaker CIt's what you then do next that is sort of, to me, the, the significant piece, right?
Speaker CIf I feel like I regret something and then I feel like I really want to go throw it up and I, I think, oh, you know what?
Speaker CThat's not a healthy choice.
Speaker CI'm going to take a walk instead, or I'm going to call a friend or I'm going to lay down.
Speaker CIt's the choice that you make that I feel like is.
Speaker CIs what's important, not the fact that you were tempted or for me, sometimes my body dysmorphia interferes and I hate every clothes in my, in my closet, right?
Speaker CAnd so if I just don't go do something social because I can't Find something that I want to wear that I feel like is letting it win.
Speaker CBut if I just put something on and I think, I don't know if I feel good in this, but I just need to get out of the house.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CMaybe it's like a bathing suit skirt with a T shirt on over it.
Speaker CWhatever.
Speaker CIt got me out of the house.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo it's that kind of thing.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's not feeling like if you struggle that you're failing.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's that struggle is real struggle and try to keep pressing onward.
Speaker CAnd even if you have a lapse, like, don't let it convince you that you're not moving forward.
Speaker CI think that was maybe not as concise as I could have said it, but the idea is I feel like there are people that will cheerlead you and say, like, you're going to get better, you're going to beat this.
Speaker CAnd in some ways, I think eating disorders are so complex that it's not something you're ever going to beat.
Speaker CIn other words, it might be in your rearview mirror, you know, in the sense that it's not an everyday dilemma, but under stress they can flare up.
Speaker CSo don't be so mean to yourself if you know you're having some really good days and then you have kind of a baddish day or whatever you would define as a bad day.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CSo you struggle.
Speaker CThat's real life.
Speaker CAnd try not to be so hard on yourself and sort of think of it as like the zero tolerance policy.
Speaker CThat's just not how chronic illness works.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, we could take that advice for every, you know, chronic illness really is that there isn't.
Speaker BI think a lot of us, I know when we first get diagnosed or something, dealing with something I know for me personally in my mindset is like, oh, I needed to find, fix it, I need to eradicate it.
Speaker BI need to get over it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd then the 20 plus years I've been dealing with it, it's like, oh, no, we, we just gonna be friends over here.
Speaker BI'm gonna see you, I'm gonna acknowledge that you happening, and we gonna keep our going our merry own way.
Speaker BWe're gonna have some bad days, we're gonna have some ups and downs.
Speaker BAnd that's what I hear that you're saying is like, instead of trying to feel like you're fixing yourself, it's just like becoming more aware of yourself and giving yourself that permission to lean into.
Speaker BYou know, I'm growing, I'm learning about this.
Speaker BAnd I'm trying to feel better, but it doesn't mean I'm, like, going to be perfect.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker CWhich is, you know, again, talking about that black and white mindset, not race, black and white.
Speaker CI'm talking about, like, the colors, right.
Speaker CLike black or white.
Speaker CBut that mindset, like the idea of, like, if I am not the perfect eater, then somehow I am a failure.
Speaker CThere is no perfect eating.
Speaker CThere's just choices that you make, and then they lead to more choices.
Speaker CAnd sometimes you may even eat something that maybe contained something that you didn't realize it contained.
Speaker CAnd you just think, I should have known, I should have asked, I should have.
Speaker CWhatever.
Speaker CAnd it's like, oh, my gosh, there is so much out there in the world if you are sort of doing the part that you can do.
Speaker CI mean, that's all we should expect of people.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIs not perfection.
Speaker CBut I feel like we are our own toughest critics a lot of the time.
Speaker BSuch a good point.
Speaker BThat applies in every angle of your life.
Speaker BLike what you eat, what you wear, what people you hang around with, what business decisions you make, what marketing thing you decide you're going to do with sales offer you're going to make.
Speaker BIt is you're going to have a plan and you're going to have a strategy and you're going to do your best.
Speaker BAnd sometimes there are going to be things, variables that you had no clue was coming into that room or calling into that part of the decision.
Speaker CI always say that because I also have anxiety and the things that I worry about are never the things that are going to happen.
Speaker CLike, I never.
Speaker CI never had the idea that we're going to have like a global pandemic that's going to shut down the speaking engagements for two years.
Speaker CLike, I worried about much more mundane things.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThat have never come true.
Speaker CSo, yeah.
Speaker BYeah, that's such a funny point.
Speaker BIt's legit real.
Speaker BLike, yeah, we are thinking about all these things, and I'm.
Speaker BNo, worse things have happened, but not those little tiny things.
Speaker BAnd sometimes they aren't tiny to us.
Speaker BThey are not tiny to us.
Speaker BThe things that we dream up or we think up and, you know, but they are.
Speaker BThey are real to us.
Speaker BI think that's the part of just realizing that we're growing through that too.
Speaker BThrough the anxiety, through the shifts and change and that we are human.
Speaker BI think this is the part that I feel like so many of us when we go to try to do something, when we're healing.
Speaker BAs much as I love the word healing, I feel, to your point, marketing has made it seem like it's a one and done thing.
Speaker BLike, you are healed.
Speaker BLike, you know, in the Bible, Jesus healed people and so you're healed.
Speaker BLike, that's the definition.
Speaker BBut I always tell people, like, yet they died again, because that was for a moment of time.
Speaker BIt wasn't for ever.
Speaker BSo, like, in the context, that was more of a context conversation.
Speaker BSo I think people don't realize that especially right now, as imperfect and just human we are, we are all on this journey of healing.
Speaker BAnd it doesn't mean that it's like a one and done station.
Speaker BLike, you go to the gas station and you just forever gassed up or always have electric.
Speaker BLike, we're moving through it, right?
Speaker CLike, so I have this thought I have to share.
Speaker CIt's my toxic trait, which is saying, like, it's not that bad, right?
Speaker CSo I am getting over a broken ankle.
Speaker CI have this sleep disorder, I have anxiety, I get migraines.
Speaker CLike, I could go on this whole long list.
Speaker CAnd all my brain says is, but you don't have cancer, so you really have nothing to complain about.
Speaker CAnd it's like, oh, my God.
Speaker CBy that logic, then no one in the world has anything to complain about except the one person who has the most terrible thing, right?
Speaker CAnd it's like, yes, There is a part of me that feels like, okay, I'm walking in a boot.
Speaker CMy ankle is healing.
Speaker CLike, yes.
Speaker CIt's not like the end of whatever my life, you know, la, la, la.
Speaker CBut like, is it okay for me just to be like, wow, life is easier when I don't have a broken ankle.
Speaker CLike, can I just let myself complain a little bit, get a little bit of sympathy and move on instead of just saying I have to be like Little Mary Sunshine all the time because other people have it work.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's okay to have a really bad day.
Speaker BIt's okay to say something sucks.
Speaker BIt's okay to say, this right here is the worst day of my life, even though I know there are worse things happening in the world.
Speaker BLike, it is okay.
Speaker CLike, this is the thing I have to deal with today.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BAnd I think it's.
Speaker BI think it comes.
Speaker BI think social media makes this ex.
Speaker BThis conversation we're having here about it's okay to have whatever day you're having challenging.
Speaker BAt the time of us recording this on June 23, there is a lot of crap happening in the world right now.
Speaker COh, my God, yes.
Speaker BSo much stuff.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd we can all start feeling like, well, we should be this, this, this, because all of these things.
Speaker BAnd it's just like we can't all be experiencing and feeling the same thing and having to dismiss what's happening in our own world, in our own body, just because the world has the world things going on.
Speaker BThere's always world things going on.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd I think it's important to be okay with acknowledging what's happening in the world and still be okay with acknowledging that my little battle over here in my little corner of the world is my battle.
Speaker BAnd it is difficult.
Speaker BAnd it's okay for me to say that, and it's okay for me to have that as part of my life.
Speaker BAnd it doesn't make me a bad person.
Speaker CNo, I think I have to hear that over and over and over again.
Speaker CAnd I think it's just a defense mechanism.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CMinimizing what's going on with me, you know, is as a way to not feel how much it hurts to be me sometimes.
Speaker BSuch a good point.
Speaker BSuch a good point.
Speaker BNot feeling, which might mean we're eating.
Speaker BMight mean we're not eating.
Speaker CChemical.
Speaker CI mean, no one thinks of food as a mood altering chemical, but it absolutely is.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BThere's so many things about food in.
Speaker BIn general, I think, who you're around, what you do, what you're actually working, like how you work.
Speaker CWhat about just the food that's available in your area?
Speaker CI mean, how do you think food gets to you?
Speaker CUnless you grow all your own food, you are at the mercy of the people who do grow the food.
Speaker CAnd God bless them for doing it, because I know that is not an easy way to make a living.
Speaker BLook, I'm trying to keep basil alive, and it's a problem.
Speaker CI'm trying to grow cherry tomatoes and there's a bunny that eats them before I get to them.
Speaker CAnd I'm not going to do anything to hurt the bunny.
Speaker CThe bunny can have my tomatoes.
Speaker CIt's okay.
Speaker CSo I bite my tomatoes at the store, even though I have tomato plants right out here.
Speaker CI'm feeding a bunny.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo what is a message you want someone to walk away with?
Speaker BWe've talked a lot about it.
Speaker BWe talked a lot.
Speaker BI can't say this.
Speaker BWe talked about a lot of different things in this conversation.
Speaker BWe talked about how growing a business and making those decisions about taking care of others and taking care of yourself, what that could look like.
Speaker BWe talked about how you don't need to have a label to have something going on with food.
Speaker BYour relationship with food could be positive or negative.
Speaker BIt doesn't matter if you do have a label.
Speaker BYou're not trying to fix you.
Speaker BYou're trying to embrace you.
Speaker CYes, I love that.
Speaker BRight, Right.
Speaker BAnd so if someone's listening to this now, that's like, okay, Jessica, Nikita, what do I do if I do think I literally do have a bigger problem than I'm ready to admit to?
Speaker BAnd who and where do I go for support?
Speaker CSo I would say a book is actually maybe one of the best places to go when you're not quite ready to talk to a person yet is to.
Speaker CAnd the ones I can recommend.
Speaker CIntuitive Eating is a great book.
Speaker CNourish is a great book.
Speaker CMaybe I could give you some book ideas and you could put them in the show notes.
Speaker BI'll put them in the show notes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBecause I feel like what a book does is it gives you sort of a vocabulary, it opens the book, your understanding of an issue.
Speaker CNot.
Speaker CNot every nutrition book is going to be so great.
Speaker CThere's plenty that I would not suggest anything that has diet in the title, do not.
Speaker CThat's not going to help yourself.
Speaker CBut some of the books that really are more about the thought process of eating and how you got here.
Speaker CI have a workbook called Healing your inner Eater, and I can give the we'll use podcast for a discount code, and that would bring the cost down for anyone listening.
Speaker CAnd that's something where you can start to look at kind of your own eating thoughts and behaviors.
Speaker CThe goal being once you sort of either are doing a workbook or are reading a book and you're starting to sort of take notes or just put sticky notes or notes in your phone or whatever of the things where you're like, yes, that, that, that describes me.
Speaker CThat will give you better words when you go to see a professional.
Speaker CSo in other words, let's just relive that example of when you went to the doctor and they were like, you need to eat less.
Speaker CIf you had had the words to say, look, I was reading this book, and it says if you're eating less than blank calories a day, you are not eating enough.
Speaker CAccording to this book, I am not eating enough.
Speaker CYou see what I'm saying?
Speaker CIt's sort of.
Speaker CIt gives you some oomph behind your words that can help convey what you're trying to get across to your medical professional.
Speaker CAnd that's where you, you, if you need to get your medical professional to recommend you to a counselor, recommend you to a dietitian you don't always need that, but you're trying to come up with the way to describe what your experience is.
Speaker CYou know what it is, it's in your mind.
Speaker CBut you want to try to find a way to communicate it to someone else so that they can help you sort through it.
Speaker CAnd that's where the shame comes into play is if you feel ashamed of what you're doing, then there's no way you can talk about it with someone else who can give you a different perspective.
Speaker BYeah, such a powerful thing.
Speaker BI think the point too you're saying is that in order a way to overcome shame is to educate yourself around what you might be feeling, bring awareness to like, you're not alone.
Speaker BYou're not like, this isn't right.
Speaker CThey wrote a whole book about it.
Speaker CHow can you be the only person that's experiencing that?
Speaker CYeah, right.
Speaker BSo powerful.
Speaker BWe'll have those resources for you guys in the show notes for sure.
Speaker BBut thank you.
Speaker BThis was a really fascinating conversation.
Speaker BI personally feel like me and food have always had a complicated relationship multiply mostly since just living with chronic illness.
Speaker BI grew up myself personally being like allergic to certain things.
Speaker BAnd so there's a lot of nuance with that.
Speaker BAnd as I grow, the more I become more aware and read books and listen to podcasts and things like that has helped me a lot around becoming better with my relationship with food and when I eat and how I eat.
Speaker BSo I encourage everyone to do that and that's why I'm excited that we have this episode on the show.
Speaker BBut where can we find you and what's exciting for you that's coming up.
Speaker CSo my, my sort of umbrella website is jessica setnik.com and there's free resources there and usually somewhere there's a list of upcoming events if someone wants to maybe come to a workshop with me.
Speaker CI'm thinking about doing an online version of Healing your inner eater.
Speaker CIt's not planned yet, I don't have a date.
Speaker CBut if you go to healing your inner eater.com there's a place I believe where you can sign up.
Speaker CI know there definitely is1@JessiaSetnik.com There's a pop up and you can sign up to get updates on whenever the next events are happening.
Speaker CSo I'd be happy to stay connected with someone through my email newsletter.
Speaker CAnd then you can always just reach out to me individually sometimes if you're looking for someone in your area, let's say you wanted to meet with a eating disorder informed dietitian it's hard to find the right person if you aren't connected, right.
Speaker CIf you're not hooked in.
Speaker CSo I wouldn't mind anyone emailing me.
Speaker CIt's just Jessicaesica setnik.com and I.
Speaker CWe haven't even talked about this here, but I run a nonprofit organization of eating disorder dietitians.
Speaker CAnd our goal is to make sure that everyone who wants to get help has access.
Speaker CWe fight with insurance companies to get them to cover eating disorder care, all kinds of advocacy efforts.
Speaker CBut one of the things that we do every single day is connect people with someone who takes their insurance and who is, you know, licensed in their state.
Speaker CAnd so I'm happy to try to help connect someone who needs it.
Speaker BThat is powerful and so helpful.
Speaker BI mean, as one who has to call a lot of doctors and finding having someone who knows somebody or in an area or has a relationship potentially is very helpful.
Speaker BSo I'm glad.
Speaker BWell, definitely send me that link as well.
Speaker BSo we have that in the show notes.
Speaker BAnd I have one, one last question.
Speaker COkay, I'm ready.
Speaker BAs a business owner, what is something that you thought was true when you started that you no longer believe is true?
Speaker CEvery time I ask, really?
Speaker CThis is really hard for me.
Speaker CReally hard for me.
Speaker CThe amount of hours that you work is not directly related to the results you get.
Speaker CLike, I really believed growing up that like, you show up at work on time and you, you know, you stay late and you, you know, blah, blah, blah, and then you're going to get the promotions and the recognition.
Speaker CAnd I found that that was not true in the working world.
Speaker CAnd then as a private practice owner, sometimes something happens and I get an email and it's like, oh, I heard you speak five years ago and I want you to come speak and I want to give you $10,000.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, what?
Speaker CBut I didn't do anything to earn that.
Speaker CYou know what I mean?
Speaker CI didn't invest like 20 hours to emailing strangers on LinkedIn.
Speaker CLike, you know, it's like, it's so much more, it's so much bigger than that.
Speaker CLike doing a good job, where you go being kind to people.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker CDoing, you know, some things for free.
Speaker CThere's just so many inputs that, that lead to outputs and it's not just like time spent equals success.
Speaker BSo true.
Speaker BI co sign that for sure.
Speaker BWell, thank you so much, Jessica, for sharing your story, sharing your thoughts, opinions.
Speaker BYou guys have to watch the video.
Speaker COn this because all day.
Speaker BYeah, I think we could too.
Speaker BI would love for you guys, I need y' all to watch the video because Jessica, she spicy.
Speaker CYou have a very expressive face.
Speaker CI have been told that before.
Speaker BI. I mean, you're with.
Speaker BYou're with your people.
Speaker AOh.
Speaker BWell, thank you so much for being here and we can't wait to get this out to the world.
Speaker CThanks, Nikita.
Speaker CThanks for everything you do.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BThat's a wrap for this episode of Business with chronic Illness.
Speaker BIf you would like to start and grow an online coaching business with me, head to the show notes to click a link to book a sales call and learn how to make money with chronic illness.
Speaker BYou can also check out our website at www.CraftedToThrive.com for this episode's show notes and join our email list to get exclusive content where I coach you on how to chronically grow a profitable business while living with chronic illness.
Speaker BUntil next time, remember, yes, you are crafted to thrive.