• @[email protected]
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    742 months ago

    I procrastinate on cooking and then complain that I’m hungry and there’s no time to make food. I think my brain is broken.

    • @[email protected]
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      512 months ago

      your brain is fully aware that you can just have two handful of nuts and be good for a couple of hours. Just because your brain also believes that you gotta have a proper meal doesn’t matter

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        I’ll see your handfuls of nuts, and raise you a couple spoonfuls of peanut butter.

        It’s a) relatively cheap b) delicious c) easily edible on the fly with a spoon, time constraints be damned. It serves the purpose quite well, and even throws a bit of sugar in there too.

        Not exactly a balanced diet, but it does accomplish the goal reasonably effectively and frequently is already in the house.

        Also good when not medically quite at 100% - when not at my best, I do everything I can to follow dr. orders, ofc, but sometimes it’s more efficient to throw a tiny bit of sugar at one’s brain in a (relatively) healthier way, than to keep fighting it during recovery.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea
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          92 months ago

          I try to alternate:

          • peanut butter
          • banana
          • nuts
          • cheese

          I’m basically a gatherer.

          • @Corkyskog
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            42 months ago

            I saw someone make “mashed potatoes” out of Pringles… seriously wondered why. But they did.

        • Buglefingers
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          42 months ago

          Procrastinate long enough and you’ll still be eating them though. Why? Because you haven’t been shopping and it’s wayyy easier than cooking -my brain

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        This is true and also works the other way around. There is no food but i’m too lazy to go on a grocery run. Suddenly more food spawns in my house for 3 more days.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      Not missing a meal (or a few even) won’t kill you, try getting to a starving state and then see if your brain lets you park your ass on the couch.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 months ago

        The executive functions are a tiebreak system, in many ways. It balances the various possible options, both benefits and costs, short term and long.

        Procrastination is when this system can’t overcome various situational inertias. I tend to think of it akin to a teacher in a classroom. The kids are perfectly capable of raiding a kitchen, when sufficiently hungry. It’s also impossible to keep them focused on maths, when a dozen labrador puppies are released into the classroom. Within its limits however, it’s supposed to turn disparate drives into coherent action.

        I have adhd. The teacher is exhausted from a 3 day bender, and someone swiched their coffee to decaf. Avoiding situations that cause a procrastination lockup are a fact of life.