A lot of New Year’s resolutions are built around food rules. No carbs. No sugar. No eating out.

At first, rules can feel helpful. But very quickly, they start to feel exhausting. Hunger increases, cravings get louder, and food becomes something to control instead of something that supports you.

These resolutions don’t fall apart because you lack willpower, but because food has been doing more than just feeding hunger.

Why Food Becomes More Than Food

Food is often used as comfort, relief, or reward. It’s accessible. It’s reliable. It works quickly. That doesn’t mean food is the problem. It means food is responding to something deeper.

Phil’s story in Chapter 10 shows how this happens. He often took on extra responsibilities at work and put everyone else first. By the end of the day, he felt empty. Not physically hungry, but emotionally depleted. Food became a reward and a distraction from that feeling.

new yearWhy Food Resolutions Fall Apart

Most New Year’s food resolutions focus on control, but if food has been filling a deeper gap, more rules won’t fix the root problem. They just add more pressure.

Chapter 10 asks a different question: What am I really longing for right now?

Because when fulfillment is missing, food will always try to make up for it.

What Do You Actually Want More of in 2026?

Instead of asking how to restrict food this year, try asking what you want more of in your life.

Maybe it’s:

  • More meaning or purpose
  • More connection and supportive relationships
  • More joy, creativity, or adventure
  • More rest, balance, or space for yourself

Food can’t provide those things long-term. But your health can support you in going after them.

This is the shift Chapter 10 points us toward. Let food be food again, not a stand-in for what’s missing.

When Food Isn’t the Answer, Awareness Is

Cravings won’t just disappear overnight, but you can start responding to them differently. The next time you feel pulled toward food when you’re not physically hungry, pause and ask:

  • What am I really needing right now?
  • What feels missing?
  • What would actually support me in this moment?

Sometimes the answer is food. But sometimes it’s rest, connection, movement, or meaning.

A New Way to Approach 2026

Preparing for success in 2026 isn’t about creating perfect food habits. It’s about building a life where food no longer has to fill emotional gaps.

When you reconnect with what gives your life purpose, food naturally takes up less space.

And that’s something worth carrying into the new year.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Noticing that food has been filling a deeper gap? Revisit Who Do You Want to Be in 2026? to explore what you truly want more of this year.

If food has been standing in for something else, what might that be? Take our free Top Inner Roadblocks to Weight Loss Success Quiz to find out.

Source:

Loughrey K. Happy Life at a Healthy Weight: Creating a Shame Free, Healthy Relationship with Food and

Life. Authentic Wellness Publishing Company, LLC; 2024.

Zhana Ivanova
University of Maryland – Nutrition and Food Sciences

Kay

Kay Loughrey, MPH, RDN, LDN Transformational Speaker, Breakthrough Coach, Nutritionist-Dietitian

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Kay Loughrey, MPH, RDN, LDN is a licensed Nutritionist-Dietitian   and a weight loss coach  with 30+ years of experience in helping people lose weight and develop healthier relationships with food. She coaches her clients nationwide providing weight loss planning, video check-ins, and more. Schedule your free consultation.