There's a pattern almost everyone working on their relationship with food hits eventually. You start to feel better, the noise quiets, the fighting stops, and then something snaps.
The story you tell yourself is that you destroyed your own progress. Again. In this episode, Rick names what's actually happening in that moment, why it has nothing to do with self-sabotage, and the one shift that changes how you experience it forever.
Important points covered
Why eating worse right after feeling better is one of the most predictable — and least explained — stages of real identity change, and how leaving it unnamed turns it into evidence against you.
The Self-Sabotage Myth: why the story "something in me can't tolerate feeling good" is the wrong explanation for a real pattern, and why wrong explanations always point to wrong solutions.
How the Identity Thermostat works — and why it fights back hardest not at the beginning of the process, but at the exact moment the new set point starts to take hold.
Why the snap-back after progress isn't failure. It's the thermostat's last stand before the set point permanently changes — and what looks like regression is often proof that the change was real.
The one shift: how renaming the snap-back in the moment moves the experience out of the moral file and into the data file — from judge to scientist.
Why the diet industry needed you to misread this moment, and what it costs you every time you do.
If this episode landed for you, Escape the Willpower Trap is the next step. We go deep on how the Identity Thermostat actually works — how to recognize the snap-back in real time, how to respond instead of react, and what it looks like to finally stop fighting it.