
I do not often explore why I titled this blog, The Bio Joy Diet. I called it that because I fundamentally believe a person needs to tap into our own biological instincts, and use those instincts in a different way, if our intention is to have sustainable weight loss. So, I came up with a name for finding that biological foundation, and using it to make us happier, because being happier would help us tolerate less food. And we have to find something that makes us happier than food, because, by design, eating food makes us very happy. And successfully obtaining food makes us happy. Especially at the dawn of man, we had to love food enough to go out and get it, hunt it, gather it, which was hard and sometimes took all day! Which is why intermittent fasting is okay, because maybe that one big meal was a reward after a long hard day getting it, preparing it, and cooking it up!
I also know that biology will fight us tooth and nail to stay right where we are. And sometimes that is more weight than where we want to stay.
Homeostasis: a self-regulating process that allows organisms to survive and function in a constantly changing environment. But where we are at in weight, if that weight is more than we want to be, the problem becomes that our body doesn’t know why we want to eliminate our excess storage. All our bodies know is staying the same weight, whatever weight that may be, is better than not getting enough food. Our bodies ask us to focus inward on maintaining our survival.
The North American food environment is obesicentric, surrounding us with highly palatable, highly processed, and easily accessible foods in large portions, which even the most dedicated fitness program cannot outrun. And we have ended up heavier in weight (on average) because of it.
So, the only way to “outrun” this environment, when our instincts tell us instead to rest to preserve energy as much as possible, (that is survival too), is to find some “Bio Joy” in other ways. Go outward, outside ourselves, and use those instincts in new ways. Find purpose. Make our health our purpose. Rise above in the hierarchy of needs into the “esteem” category.
One way I go outward is to imagine that helping myself is just like I am helping others. An act of service. Of course, sometimes I do actually help others, not just imagine that helping myself is helping “others.” I travelled to pack my mom’s house when she moved. I travelled again to unpack her house when she finally bought one. I will help friends when asked. I will fill in working outside the home at a rural post office, (which although is technically getting paid to work, not “help,” but being available that one time with only 15 minutes notice to fill in for her because her car was stuck in her driveway in a snow storm, that felt a lot like an act of service, and I was happy to help).
I get a lot of joy out of helping others, when the opportunity arises.
Well, taking care of myself to bring myself back from the obesity I experienced most recently peaking in 2023, is helping “others,” in a manner of speaking. I show up better for my family in all ways when I have first taken care of myself. When that call came that she was stuck in her driveway, I was up, and dressed, with proper nutrition in me, and able to change my working from home into covering the counter at the rural post office instead, at a moment’s notice. If I had been eating chocolate in bed in my pajamas, procrastinating my own work from home responsibilities, then I may have struggled to help her out on short notice like that. Because how can I help anyone else, if I am not first helping myself?
I had to start treating myself as good as I would treat a friend. One common thread that I have personally found over the years is that women sometimes treat themselves badly. They take care of others, and actually punish themselves for their perceived failings. Especially when it comes to weight, because our bodies (our biology) fight us when we try to lose weight. And even when we do lose weight, our bodies fight us to put the weight back on. Biological fact=once fat cells are created, they never disappear. They can be emptied, but then they are more easily filled up again. A weight-reduced individual, (simply someone who used to weigh more), will always regain the exact same pounds faster than that very first time the weight was gained. Talk about adding insult to injury. Unless you experience gaining back weight “plus some,” it will only be the plus some that creates new fat cells. All the rest is rapid regain refilling the cells that were already there…just waiting to fill up again.
I have my fair share of fat cells that I have emptied out. But they are always waiting to fill up again, and it would not take long for that to happen.
So, all I can do is help my best friend today (myself), because she does not deserve to feel bad about herself today. She deserves to feel good, so she can show up for her family and her pets with the extra energy to give to them, because she took care of herself first.

















