
Have you ever found yourself eating a full bag of potato chips (or some other salty snack) while watching a TV program – and afterward, you’re not even sure how that happened? Or perhaps you’re trying to stick to a healthy, whole foods diet, but find yourself magnetized to consume vast quantities of candies or pastries when you are bored or stressed? Or maybe you realize that you rarely slow down to really taste the food you are eating?
If you have any of these types of experiences, you are not alone. Many of us struggle with mindless and distracted eating. We multi-task, eating while driving, watching TV, or working, rather than bringing our full presence. This contributes to a diminished capacity to fully savor the flavors and textures of food. It also disconnects us from our body’s hunger and fullness signals. Alongside this, emotional and comfort eating, cravings, and poor body image are common challenges for many of us. Mindful eating is increasingly recognized as a profound approach to cultivate a more conscious relationship with food, rooted in greater attunement to body sensations, the enjoyment of eating, and our body’s true needs.
The concept of mindful eating draws inspiration from the broader philosophy of mindfulness, practiced for centuries as part of religious and contemplative traditions. Jon Kabat-Zinn, originator of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) Program, introduced mindfulness into mainstream awareness, demonstrating its efficacy in aiding patients to alleviate chronic pain and enhance overall emotional and physical well-being.
For those of us seeking healthier living, mindfulness yields many benefits in the ability to embrace and sustain a flourishing plant-powered lifestyle, as well as achieve greater mind-body-spirit wellness. Cultivating mindfulness in all aspects of our lives helps us to engage in life more fully and intentionally.
In our fast-paced world, many of us operate on autopilot, reacting without fully engaging with the present moment. Mindfulness involves consciously attending to our moment-to-moment experience, fostering awareness of thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations. By enhancing our awareness of automatic reactions and patterns, mindfulness empowers us to make more deliberate and intentional choices. It rewires our brain, enabling us to respond to stress and triggers with greater composure, creativity, and adaptability, navigating life’s challenges with enhanced clarity, equanimity, and tranquility.
Research supports the transformative effects of mindfulness practice, revealing heightened self-awareness, increased positive emotions, and a sense of calm, alongside reductions in stress, anxiety, and addictive behaviors. Given these benefits, it’s not surprising that mindfulness can also provide benefits when applied to our food choices and eating patterns. Practitioners of mindful eating demonstrate a heightened sensitivity to hunger and fullness cues, a decrease in overeating and binge eating episodes, an amplification of eating enjoyment, and improved body satisfaction.
So, how can we incorporate more mindful eating habits? Read on for tips to cultivate mindful eating.
Ten tips for mindful eating
1. Develop a consistent mindfulness practice
You can strengthen mindful eating patterns by building regular mindfulness practice. Developing a consistent mindfulness practice rewires the brain, making it easier to be more aware and intentional in the activities of daily life, including eating. In addition, it enhances the ability to be present with feelings, emotions, and beliefs that drive unhealthy eating behaviors or patterns, so that there is greater empowerment to make healthier choices. Lani Muelrath, the author of The Mindful Vegan, notes that often our challenges around food, body and weight obsession, and comfort eating are not really about food, but rather about conflicts and emotions that we have not acknowledged or faced. Thus, an ongoing mindfulness practice that extends beyond the dinner table can support us in disentangling from entrenched habits and patterns.
This can be as simple as taking a few moments each day to sit quietly, focusing on the breath, noticing thoughts and feelings that come up, and gently returning the focus to the breath. Throughout this practice, you are encouraged to hold an attitude of kindness and acceptance toward yourself, and toward any thoughts, emotions, or distractions. Witness your thoughts as mental events that come and go, like clouds passing by in the sky. When distractions take your focus away from the breath, gently return to your breath, noticing what comes up for you without judgment. It doesn’t matter how much the mind wanders – this is natural. It’s about recognizing where the mind has wandered and returning back. (Note – I share some mindfulness resources at the end of this article.)
2. Recognize the ways you are already mindful
If you are a plant-based eater, or living a vegan lifestyle, you are already bringing an element of mindfulness to your eating – an awareness of the health, environmental, and ethical impacts of your food choices. This recognition is, in and of itself, a major shift for many of us. Whatever the reasons for adopting a plant-powered lifestyle, our guiding motivation brings a greater awareness to the consequences of our food choices. It also brings empowerment as we come to realize that we can choose each day to eat more compassionately, healthfully, and sustainably.
3. Create a mindful kitchen and home
The way you set up your kitchen and home can help to support your mindful eating practices. For example, only purchase the foods you want to include in your lifestyle. Stock your kitchen with whole plant foods, while eliminating the unhealthy foods you are no longer eating. If you have family members who are eating foods that are not part of your plan, it can be helpful to arrange for these to be stored separately where they are not in your view. Create mindful practices around food shopping and preparation. And consider other aspects of your home – how can you best set things up to support you in nurturing a mindful and healthy lifestyle?
4. Listen to your body
Learn to recognize your body’s unique signals that let you know when you are hungry and when you are full. When you feel the urge to eat, bring curiosity to notice your physical and emotional experience. Are there any physical indicators of hunger, such as your stomach growling or feeling lower energy? Or are you feeling the urge to eat for emotional reasons, such as stress, boredom, loneliness, or sadness? Bringing mindful awareness helps us to recognize emotional triggers versus our true physiological hunger cues. It invites us to care for our emotional needs, instituting appropriate self-care practices to attend to our emotions rather than self-medicating with food. If you aren’t truly hungry, what actions could you take to care for yourself? For example: take a few deep breaths, take a walk, journal, or call a friend?
5. Slow down
When you have meals or snacks, sit down to eat, chew each bite thoroughly, and set your fork down in between bites. Savor each bite, bringing all your senses to notice the flavors, smells, colors, and other sensory experiences.
6. Create a mindful dining experience
Plan your mealtimes and food choices. Eat at the dinner table, creating a pleasant dining environment. Rather than eating straight from the cupboard, refrigerator, or package, place your food on a plate or in a bowl. Make the meal aesthetically pleasing to the senses, with beautiful colors and delicious flavors. Creating a space and time for eating aligns us with cues to eat more deliberately, joyfully, and mindfully.
7. Attend to your food, rather than multi-tasking
Many of us eat while reading, driving, watching TV, or other activities. Being distracted when eating increases the likelihood of eating foods we didn’t plan to eat, or overeating. As mentioned earlier, perhaps you can think of a time when you ate while watching a program or movie, and wondered how you devoured that entire bag of chips or pint of plant-based ice cream. When you eat without distraction, you are more able to make healthy and conscious choices.
8. Stop eating when you are full
Your fullness cues become much easier to recognize if you eat slowly and mindfully. Your appestat is able to catch up and alert you that you are full when you pause and eat more slowly.
9. Be aware of thoughts, feelings, and impulses
Notice what comes up before, during, or after eating, bringing mindful, compassionate, non-judging awareness. You may notice certain emotions or thoughts that trigger the urge to eat, or judgments that come up while eating. Or you may notice a tendency to want to rush your meals and eat quickly. Gently observe your thoughts and impulses as mental events that come and go. With mindfulness practice, we become better at allowing our feelings and recognizing our true needs vs. false desires and sabotaging patterns.
10. Bring gratitude and appreciation
Before and during your meal, consider all that brought the food to your plate – the sun, rain, and other natural forces that allowed the plant to grow; the people who grew the food; those who harvested it; and all others involved in bringing this food to your plate. Appreciate how the beautiful and colorful plant foods nourish your body, mind, and spirit. And appreciate how your food choices contribute to what matters to you – whether that’s health, sustainability, and/or kindness to all sentient beings. Bringing awareness to our appreciation connects food and eating with more positive emotions and supports our overall well-being.
I invite you to integrate these practices into your daily life. Keep a log or journal of what you discover, noticing how this new awareness can empower more healthy and conscious food choices. Many discover that mindfulness pairs beautifully with a plant-powered lifestyle, helping us enhance our well-being and live a more values-aligned life.
Mindfulness Resources
Books
- Kabat-Zinn, Jon. Wherever You Go. There You Are and Mindfulness for Beginners
- Moran, Victoria. Age Like a Yogi and The Good Karma Diet: Eat Gently, Feel Amazing, Age in Slow Motion.
- Muelrath, Lani. The Mindful Vegan: A 30-Day Plan for Finding Health, Balance, Peace, and Happiness.
Articles
- Harvard School of Public Health, The Nutrition Source, “Mindful Eating,” https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/mindful-eating/
- Joseph B. Nelson, “Mindful Eating: The Art of Presence While You Eat,” Diabetes Spectrum 2017 Aug;30(3):171-174, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5556586/.
- Christopher Willard, “Six Ways to Practice Mindful Eating,” Mindful.org, December 9, 2022, https://www.mindful.org/6-ways-practice-mindful-eating/.
Mindfulness meditations
- Jon Kabat-Zinn
- Tara Brach, Ph.D.
- Angela Crawford’s meditation resource page

Angela Crawford, Ph.D. is a psychologist, vegan educator, and PCRM Food for Life instructor. She is author of The Vegan Transformation: A Journey to Heal Yourself and the World (Lantern, 2025), winner of the Outstanding Creator Awards and Vegan Choice Award.
The information shared in this article was drawn from Dr. Crawford’s Mindful Eating module created for the Vegan Transition Coach Certification program.
