Today I kick off what we would call at work an “occasional series” with Habit Attack. Every once in a while, I’ll pinpoint a habit — most likely one I have conquered or plan to — and figure out a way to systematically disarm it. First topic is easy pickins: The work snack.
For me, getting over my compulsive urge to snack at work was a huge part of my campaign to lose weight when I started. At first I didn’t see my little grazing here and there as a big problem, but when I really began to take stock of what my hands were putting in my face almost subconsciously on a daily basis, I realized that ripping that habit out by the root was a huge step.
Stash bomb
The first wave of attack should be to empty your drawers of all the crap you keep stashed. Candy, chips, chocolate. Throw it away and feel that rush of conquest over a vice. Or if you can’t bear to see all that waste, put it out on your desk and let the office vultures clean it up. Don’t shed a tear for being an enabler, they were bound to get it somewhere.

Re-purpose that walk
So your walk to the vending machine is a boredom killer, a way to stretch your legs, right? Killing boredom and stretching your legs at work are totally Trau-sanctioned activities. In fact, I would encourage you to keep doing it. Just change your destination. Walk around the building maybe. Get 15 minutes of activity that doesn’t result in a snack that negates not only that activity, but probably a good chunk of any previous activity of the day.
Start a fund
Next, gather up all that spare change you keep in your coat pockets, purse, desk drawer — anywhere you can access it at work — and take it home. Make a jar on your counter that says “snacks” on the outside of it and begin depositing your pocket change there (if you don’t already have a change jar for some other purpose, of course). This accomplishes 2 goals: It gets all that vending machine loot out of reach for those down moments at work where you wanna stretch your legs and drop 75 cents on a Payday bar or a Fanta; and it creates a small account for you to save money for the final phase of our attack.
Restock
So you’ve cleared out your food and you’ve cleared out your money. You now have a clean slate at your desk. But the reality is, you get hungry at work, and getting fit isn’t about complete deprivation. It’s about smart choices. Candy bars, chips and sugary snacks can be replaced by things like nuts, trail mix and cheese. A little bit of fat in moderation between meals is good for your metabolism. Especially good fats, like the monounsaturated fats found in nuts. My snack of choice for work is raw, unsalted almonds. Roasting a nut leeches some of it’s nutritional value, and salty snacks are just unnecessary. An almond also contains some of the natural compound that makes you feel full, whereas many processed snacks aren’t nearly as satisfying per calorie.
But hey, some people don’t like nuts. I get that. Tomatoes make me gag, so I can’t judge! So maybe some nut-free trail mix, or just a mix that contains nuts you can handle. Peanuts? Maybe. But stay away from the trail mix with chocolate and lots of overly sweetened dried fruits. It looks healthy, but a lot of times those fruits are no better than a jawbreaker. Read labels. Go for less sugar, more natural.
If you live near a Trader Joe’s, they have a package series for their nuts and trail mix called “just a handful” that is basically a big bag filled with a bunch of small-serving bags of whatever it is. It’s a good way to budget your snack without thinking about it too much. I just keep a tub of raw almonds and go for a few every couple hours or so. That seems to work.
And maybe you have a little bit of a cheese craving every now and then? Popping a little mini wheel of low-fat BabyBel cheese or some small, pre-portioned package of cheese you can keep in your work fridge is harmless. Just maintain control! Don’t come blaming me if you make 5 snacks a day out of BabyBel cheese and gain 3 pounds a week!
What it boils down to when restocking is that aside from lettuce and celery, there isn’t much that has a negligible caloric impact. But that’s just a small part of the equation. Light snacking is good because it keeps your metabolism on a roll. Assuming you’ve had a good breakfast, a nice workout and a healthy lunch, your metabolism will pound right through whatever healthy snack you choose — burning up all the bad stuff and putting the good stuff where it belongs.
Maintaining a hot, burning metabolism between meals will be most beneficial by the time you hit dinner, and that snack might actually improve your body’s processing of your final meal of the day.
Challenge
Send me pictures of your stash before you trash it or leave it for the birds!
TRAU
P.S. Do you check the Twitter feed to the right? See last night I doubled my nightly run distance for this week! I feel great and can’t wait to do it again tonight.


Hecklin' bastids