Butter. Flour. Sugar.

Mixed together these ingredients create a drug-like elixir that is the base for a lot of yummy holiday baked goods.

They have also been the ingredients for the weight release disasters over the holidays not to mention feeling bloated and imbalanced.

Ever wake up with a holiday baked good hangover? Not pretty, right?

How do we bake our gingerbread and eat it too without it being a challenge for our weight or health?

If baking lights up your tree, but is a challenge for your waistline, this 90th Episode of Thin Thinking is all about thin thinking strategies about letting the dough rise without raising your weight as well.

BLACK FRIDAY 30% OFF ALL WEIGHT LOSS DOWNLOADS SPECIAL ENDING! 

In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

Tips and strategies you can do for a fun yet healthy holiday baking

The subconscious meaning behind holiday baking

A Thin Thinking strategy on how you can still enjoy your baked goods

Links Mentioned in this Episode

Holiday baking is one of the most beloved traditions of the season. The smell of cookies in the oven, the joy of sharing treats with friends, and the memories tied to family recipes can make the holidays feel magical.

But for many people trying to manage their weight, baking can feel like stepping into a minefield of temptation.

If you’ve ever started baking with good intentions and ended up eating dough, frosting, and cookies all day long, you’re not alone. As weight mastery expert Rita Black often reminds her listeners, weight struggle isn’t primarily about food — it’s about the mind.

According to Rita, about 80% of weight struggles are mental, which means the real key to navigating holiday baking isn’t stronger willpower — it’s smarter thinking.

The good news is you don’t have to skip baking or feel deprived during the holidays. With the right mindset and a few practical strategies, you can enjoy the experience while staying aligned with your health goals.

Let’s explore the thin-thinking strategies that help you enjoy holiday baking without raising your weight along with the dough.


Why Is Holiday Baking So Hard for Weight Loss?

Holiday baking is challenging because it combines three powerful triggers at once: nostalgia, smell, and sugar.

Many holiday foods are tied to memories from childhood. A certain cookie might remind you of your grandmother, a family tradition, or festive gatherings from years past. When those emotional memories combine with the smell of sugar, butter, and spices, it activates powerful reward pathways in the brain.

This is why baking can sometimes feel like stepping into a “food trance.” You start with one taste, then another, and before you know it, you’ve eaten far more than you planned.

For people who struggle with sugar or carb cravings, baking can even feel like a drug-like experience. Rita Black describes flour, sugar, and butter as a combination that can stimulate the brain’s reward system in a way similar to addictive substances.

Once the brain gets that sugar spike, it often wants more — which can lead to:

  • Mindless snacking while baking
  • Eating dough or frosting straight from the bowl
  • Continuing to snack on baked goods throughout the day

The real issue isn’t lack of discipline. The problem is entering the baking process without a plan.

When your mind is prepared ahead of time, you can enjoy baking while maintaining control. But when you start baking hungry, distracted, or emotionally triggered, your brain’s reward system tends to take over.

That’s why successful holiday baking begins before you even open the flour bag.


How Can You Prepare Your Mind Before Holiday Baking?

The most important strategy for holiday baking success is mental preparation.

If you go into baking with the vague idea that you’ll “just be good,” you’re setting yourself up for failure. The brain tends to interpret vague goals as permission to break them.

Instead, decide in advance how you plan to approach the experience.

Ask yourself a few simple questions:

  • Will I taste the dough or not?
  • How many cookies or treats will I allow myself?
  • When will I eat them?

This kind of decision-making helps your brain create boundaries before temptation appears.

Another powerful mindset shift is remembering why you’re baking in the first place.

Holiday baking isn’t actually about eating large quantities of food. It’s about connection, generosity, and sharing joy with others.

When you focus on the deeper purpose of baking — creating something meaningful for people you care about — the food itself becomes less of the central focus.

Many people also find it helpful to create a festive environment while baking:

  • Play holiday music
  • Bake with family or friends
  • Treat the process as a creative activity

When baking becomes about experience rather than consumption, it’s much easier to stay aligned with your goals.


What Should You Eat Before Baking to Avoid Overeating?

One of the most effective strategies for preventing baking-related overeating is surprisingly simple:

Never start baking on an empty stomach.

When you begin baking while hungry, the smell of sugar and flour can spike cravings immediately. Once your blood sugar rises and crashes, it becomes much harder to resist constant tasting.

Instead, eat a protein-rich snack before you start.

Protein stabilizes blood sugar levels and helps you feel satisfied, which reduces the urge to snack on dough or frosting.

Good options include:

  • Greek yogurt
  • Cheese
  • A protein shake
  • Nuts or seeds
  • A balanced meal with protein

If your baking session will last several hours, keep healthy snacks nearby so you’re not tempted to grab cookies or cake scraps.

This simple step dramatically reduces impulsive eating and helps you stay focused on the baking itself.


How Can You Bake Mindfully Without Constantly Snacking?

Mindful baking is about being present with the experience instead of automatically tasting everything.

If you notice yourself drifting into that “food trance” while baking, you might find it helpful to listen to Episode 83 Hacks to Beat Boredom while Losing Weight, where Rita explains how the brain naturally seeks stimulation—and how to stay mentally engaged instead of slipping into autopilot eating.

One surprising strategy involves using your sense of smell.

The sense of smell is actually the strongest trigger for emotional memories — even more powerful than taste.

That’s why the smell of gingerbread or cinnamon can instantly transport you back to childhood holidays.

Instead of trying to satisfy those memories through eating, try pausing and simply enjoying the aroma of what you’re baking.

Some people even take a moment to smell the baked goods and allow the memory or emotion to arise without feeling the need to eat them.

Other mindful baking techniques include:

1. Avoid licking utensils

Professional bakers often keep a bowl of hot water nearby to rinse spatulas or knives instead of tasting frosting repeatedly.

2. Wear gloves while decorating

This can reduce the habit of tasting icing or dough from your fingers.

3. Turn baking into a joyful activity

Dance in the kitchen, sing along to music, or involve family members in decorating cookies.

The more fun you have during the process, the less your brain focuses on eating.


What Is the Three-Bite Rule for Holiday Treats?

One of the most powerful portion strategies during the holidays is the three-bite rule.

The idea is simple: the first few bites of any food provide the most pleasure. After that, enjoyment drops dramatically.

According to Rita Black, our mouth’s sensory experience drops from about 90% to around 20% after the first three bites.

This means most of the enjoyment of a holiday treat happens almost immediately.

Instead of eating an entire cookie mindlessly, try this:

  • Sit down
  • Take three slow, intentional bites
  • Notice the taste and texture

After those bites, ask yourself if you actually want more or if the experience has already been satisfied.

Many people discover that three bites are enough to enjoy the memory and flavor without overeating.

This approach allows you to experience holiday foods without feeling deprived.


How Can You Manage Holiday Desserts After Baking?

What happens after baking can determine whether your holiday treats become a short-term enjoyment or a long-term temptation.

One of the most effective weight-management strategies is stimulus control.

Simply put:

If food isn’t in your environment, you’re far less likely to eat it.

Leaving trays of cookies on the counter makes it almost impossible not to think about them every time you walk through the kitchen.

Instead:

  • Package baked goods immediately
  • Give them away to neighbors, friends, or family
  • Freeze extras for later
  • Keep only a small portion accessible

This removes the constant mental negotiation of “Should I eat this or not?”

Another helpful mindset shift is realizing you don’t need to eat every holiday treat to experience the holidays.

Choose a few favorites that truly matter to you and enjoy those intentionally.

Skipping the rest doesn’t mean deprivation — it means selectivity and self-leadership.


Frequently Asked Questions

How do I avoid eating cookie dough while baking?

Eat a protein snack beforehand and decide in advance whether you’ll taste the dough. Having a clear plan prevents impulsive eating.

Why do I overeat when baking?

The combination of smell, nostalgia, and sugar activates the brain’s reward system, making it easy to snack mindlessly.

Can you enjoy holiday baking while losing weight?

Yes. Mindful eating, portion strategies, and planning ahead allow you to participate in holiday traditions without overeating.

What is the three-bite rule?

It’s a mindful eating strategy that suggests most food enjoyment occurs in the first three bites, making it easier to enjoy treats without consuming large portions.

Should I keep holiday desserts in the house?

It’s better to package them quickly and give them away or freeze them. Limiting visibility reduces temptation.

Are there healthier holiday baking options?

Yes. Many lower-carb, gluten-free, or reduced-sugar recipes allow you to enjoy traditional treats with fewer calories.


Conclusion

Holiday baking doesn’t have to derail your health goals.

With the right mindset and a few simple strategies, you can enjoy the experience while staying connected to your goals.

The key is remembering that baking is about connection, creativity, and generosity — not endless tasting.

By preparing your mind, eating beforehand, practicing mindful tasting, and managing your environment, you can move through the holiday season feeling energized rather than regretful.

And if you want additional help reducing sugar cravings during the holidays, you may want to explore a free weight-release hypnosis session designed to help shift your relationship with sugar and cravings.

Because lasting weight mastery doesn’t come from willpower alone — it comes from retraining your mind to work for you.

If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy these related Thin Thinking episodes:

Rita Black: Ahh! There is nothing more traditional for many of us as baking during the holidays, even if you don’t bake during the year. So many people use baking as a way to bond with others or just to bake the things that others love to receive. If baking is your jam, but also it is a challenge for your waistline, today’s Thin Thinking episode is all about thin thinking strategies about letting the dough raise without raising your weight as well. So grab that rolling pin and come on in.

Rita Black: Did you know that our struggle with weight doesn’t start with the food on your plate or get fixed in the gym? 80% of our weight struggle is mental. That’s right. The key to unlocking long-term weight release and management begins in your mind. Hi there, I’m Rita Black. I’m a clinical hypnotherapist weight loss expert, best selling author, and the creator of the Shift Weight Mastery Process. And not only have I helped thousands of people over the past 20 years achieve long-term weight mastery, I am also a former weight struggler, carb addict and binge eater. And after two decades of failed diets and fad weight loss programs, I lost 40 pounds with the help of hypnosis. Not only did I release all that weight, I have kept it off for 25 years. Enter the Thin Thinking Podcast where you too will learn how to remove the mental roadblocks that keep you struggling. I’ll give you the thin thinking tools, skills, and insights to help you develop the mindset you need, not only to achieve your ideal weight, but to stay there long term and live your best life.

Rita Black: Ho, ho ho. Everyone come on in. Hello and welcome to today’s show where we are gonna discuss baking. That’s right. Baking. I can’t tell you how many bakers we have here in the Thin Thinking Community. Do you bake? Well, if you bake, I have a question for you. Have you ever had a cookie gun? You may or may not. If you are from a German background, you may, or a Scandinavian background, I don’t know if other cultures have cookie guns, but a cookie gun is basically a contraption that you put dough in and you squeeze it out with like a trigger finger and the dough comes out in these nice shapes like little, you know, little stars, little Christmas trees, little bows and things like that, so and so. It’s called the cookie gun. And it’s perfect for delicate sugar cookies and German Christmas cookies.

Rita Black: My mom used to make all types of cookies and every year, this was my mom’s way of, you know, being the most popular lady in the neighborhood, is she would make literally, because she had these, my mom, when she died oh my gosh, she had, how many cookbooks did she make? Because she’s, my mom was so old school. So she made her own cookbooks. She would clip recipes out of all the papers and have them organized with index you know, like binders with the index, you know, pies, cookies, cakes, that kind of thing. And she had these big, thick binders and I inherited all of her cookbooks. I don’t really use them, but I have them sitting there. They remind me of my mother. And I’ve worked on getting rid of some of them because, you know, we’re working on elimination, not, you know adding but subtraction. But anyway, so my mom would open up these cookbooks and literally make 12 different cookies. And it was a big organized thing. Maybe your mom did this too, or your grandma did it, or maybe your dad did it. I don’t know. But it was like literally a production company at our house. The table was filled with different trays of cookies. And of course for me, a sugar carb addict, it was like being in a meth lab, you know, or a weed dispensary or, you know, a heroin shop. I don’t know. It was just like drug heaven. She made fudge, she made rumbles, she made all these cookies. So of all the cookies though, my favorite was this German, well, I don’t even know if it was German, but we used the cookie gun for it. And it was this, it was like a cream cheese orange cookie, and it was so delicate and light, so it felt like, oh, this isn’t that bad for you. And it was made a very simple ingredients, so it wasn’t that heavy.

Rita Black: But what happened is, it was a trigger food for me, so I couldn’t stop eating it. So I remember one year, I literally, my mom made the dough, she said, I’m gonna run out some errands, you know how to do this, make the cookies. So she left. And I was like, okay. So I started making, I made like a pan of the cookies and then I just put that gun in my mouth and I started shooting dough in my mouth, straight in my mouth. Dough. And I was like, dang, this is good. And I just kept going until that gun was empty and I was so, and then I was, and then all of a sudden I felt sick. I felt like, oh God, I ate so much. And then my mom came home and she’s like, why is there only one pan of the cookies? And I was so embarrassed and I had to tell her and she had to go make some more dough and she wouldn’t let me, you know, make, have the gun anymore. So anyway, but I just remember jamming that dough down my throat and you know, like literally my eyes rolling back in my head in some sort of heroin stupor. But that’s my memory of the cookie gun.

Rita Black: So today’s episode is my love letter to you all, a practice coaching session on how to avoid the easy and seductive pitfalls of holiday baking so that you can bake but in a mindful way, not like me in the cookie gun shot into my mouth, that allows you to stay healthy through the holidays so you can bake and have some of those goodies, but stay connected to yourself and stay on your track, whatever that track or goal is for the holidays.

Rita Black: So maybe something, if you haven’t done this yet, go and download my free Sugar Shift Outta Sugar Cravings Hypnosis Session, because I know that will help you over the holidays. That’s free and it’s in the show notes. So go check it out. Okay, let’s get our aprons on and get ready for the thin thinking bake off.

Rita Black: So what you wanna do really, and all my approaches all through how you use your mind effectively. Because when you’re mentally prepared for things, then they always go better, you know? If you don’t have a plan, the world has one for you and the holiday baking world, it is not a slimming plan. So you wanna be prepared before you head into your holiday baking.

Rita Black: First of all, what I do say is to eat before you know, get all the flour, sugar, and baking ingredients together and start putting stuff together. Because if you go into your holiday baking hungry, chances are you might start picking at the dough, spike your blood sugar that crashes, you feel hungry, you start eating more dough or start eating the frosting or just start and then it’s like, oh, screw it, well I ate some of that, then I might as well eat it all. And oh, screw that! I’ll just start my diet over January 1st. So don’t do that, but just start with eating some protein before you head into it. Protein’s amazing because it just really stabilizes your blood sugar insulin levels, you know, whether it’s eating just some yogurt or some a piece of cheese or if you’re vegan, making a nice vegan shake that you can just sip through your holiday baking, your holiday baking. Now also if you mentally prepare, you want to know how much, and what I mean by that is you want to know how much you are going to, oh, sorry, I’m gonna move that up there, you wanna know how much you are going to allow yourself to eat. I’m always one for not like sitting through the whole holiday baking and saying, I’m not going to eat anything. I just, I prepare ahead of time. I think, okay, I like eating dough. I mean, I know that’s a no-no, there’s eggs, eggs and some dough, but you, like, I always am like, well, screw it, I like eating dough, but I’m only gonna let myself, I’m going to be fed first. And then, you know, if I really like a little piece of gingerbread dough, I’m gonna allow myself to eat it, but I’m going to be aware of that ahead of time. Like I’m gonna have a boundary around that. So again, I don’t go into it thinking, well, I’m gonna be good and then start putting stuff in my mouth and then have it go off.

Rita Black: Because if our mind is prepared ahead of time, if we have a vision and a plan, chances are we are going to follow through on that much, much more. If we go into it thinking I’m going to be good, eat something and then go, well screw it, you know? It’s all out the window anyway. That’s what the mind likes to do. It will, it’s that all or nothing attitude. And we don’t want to go into this with an all or nothing attitude. Also, you want to kind of go into your holiday baking, my guess is that you’re probably going to be either holiday baking for other people or with other people, which is always super fun. So you wanna really think about your holiday baking, not just like, here I’m, you know, making a bunch of cookies or cakes or pies or all of the above. But that I really, what I’m doing is creating a, something with love, right?

Rita Black: And the true meaning of the holiday really isn’t in the eating the taste of the food, the smells. It’s the sincere purity of your intentions to create joy for other people. So it’s nice to play music and to just really get into the spirit of the holiday because I feel like sometimes it all gets focused on the food rather than what’s going on here with us in our hearts. And I think the more that we are focused on the true meaning of the holiday and that it’s about people coming together, or if you’re not coming together with people, the giving of, the giving spirit, the generosity of the holiday, then you are, you know, way better off. And you’re not just thinking about the food, but you’re thinking about what’s going on in here.

Rita Black: Also, you may think about making healthier holiday options for your friends and family. Chances are they may be trying to manage their weight too. And there’s awesome recipes. If you just google like lower calorie cakes or low carb cakes or cookies. There’s so many options out there now. I mean, and they’re all right there at your fingertips, you know. The last year I made a batch of low carb gingerbread that when was so popular with everybody, they were like, oh, thank, I’m going gluten free or I’m going keto. This is so great, you know? So think about it, you might be surprised at how many people appreciate a healthier, lighter holiday treat. And then again, one more thing that you can do before you head into this is often, I mean, if you were at my house in the seventies and, well, yeah, it was the seventies, maybe the early eighties, but my mom’s house holiday baking was a two day event, right? Like she was serious. She made like probably 15 different recipes and put them all together and gave them to the neighbors and to the relatives and I mean, it was a serious affair.

Rita Black: So if you’re gonna be baking more than an hour or two, make sure you have healthy snacks that you can reach for. So again, that you aren’t starting to just eat cookies or broken off pieces of cake instead of eating something nourishing and stabilizing so that you can, you know, you can stay within your healthy eating plan and stay maintaining or releasing weight through the holidays.

Rita Black: So now during the actual baking itself, I want you to understand, and maybe you already do, that the biggest portal into memory, because it, so much of the holidays is about memory and that idea of family and love and connectedness and so much of that portal isn’t actually through food, but through smell. So I want you to understand as you head into the holidays, that the most important thing isn’t your taste buds, but it’s your actually your nose. And that the more you understand like the smell of what’s baking in the oven and the smell of the goodies is actually filling you with those memories and emotions way more than the actual tasting of those things, then you can again start to, you know, create a distance between yourself. Because I think a lot of times what we do is we eat the memories. We think, oh my gosh, you know, I had this when I was a kid and it was so good. And a lot of times, ironically, those things don’t even taste that good anymore, you know? You eat a couple of bites and they’re like, that’s too sweet, but then we’re eating it and then off we go to the races. But if you focus on the smell, I had a client, she released 50 pounds and she said, you know, all I do is I take it and I smell it and I think about that memory and I don’t need to eat it. And it’s just, it fills me with joy. So if that is helpful for you, then take that to the bank and take that to your baking episode.

Rita Black: So when I was a kid and when I was struggling with my weight, I baked a lot. Like, and baking for me was like a drug-like experience, you know? Like flour, sugar and butter equaled heroin to me, you know? People have their meth kitchens. Well, my kitchen was, I felt like my kitchen was a drug den too because I could get high off of eating those things. So again, that’s why it’s so important to prepare so that when you are, if you end up putting flour, sugar in your mouth, that you are not putting on an empty stomach because it will go to your brain and create like a drug-like experience. And then, then you have a lot harder time managing, eating that day. And then obviously so much of a struggle with our weight over the holidays is because once we kind of get that high, then we’re chasing the high through the holidays, continuing to eat all that stuff all day long. And that part of the brain gets engaged and then it just wants more and more and more. And we’re helplessly going, why am I eating all this food? I’m not even tasting, I’m not really, I mean, of course you enjoy some of it, but a lot of it we don’t even experience. And then we gain weight and then we feel horrible at the beginning of the new year. And then we have to start one of those crazy New Year diets, which is another video, but let’s continue with this.

Rita Black: Something you might consider, And this was a tip I got from an old baking expert because she never ate. She was so serious about baking. She was like, oh, I don’t eat, I never eat any of the dough. She was just like, she was like, this is just like a pure art form for her. So it would be like a painter eating his paints. So she always had a hot water, a glass of hot water that she could, she would wear plastic gloves and she could dip her hand and, you know, wipe off or dip her knife if she was like frosting cookies. And instead of licking the knife, which is what I love to do, she would dip it in the hot water and then, and then she would have a towel and she would just wipe it off so that if she was going to paint, you know, like a frosted different color, like gingerbread cookies or something, she wasn’t, you know, it wasn’t getting messy and then looking hands and all of that kind of stuff.

Rita Black: So that is also something that, a trick that I learned from my old mentor. And while you are baking and making merry, please put on some amazing music and sing and dance while you’re doing it because that is the joy of the holiday, you know? That movie elf that everybody loves? Well, I just think about being an elf in the kitchen and kicking up my heels and dancing and or listening to the Netcracker suite and pretending I’m a ballerina. And that way, you’re, you’re having, you’re moving, you’re getting exercise and you are baking. And if and when you decide you’re going to eat your treat, like let’s say you bake a batch of cookies and you’ve planned like, I’m going to sit down and eat two, you know, a gingerbread cookie, don’t eat it standing up mindlessly, sit down, you know, enjoy every bite. Be conscious and mindful so it means something to you and that you really experience it versus like, well I didn’t even taste that one. Let me eat another one.

Rita Black: Now, afterwards, this is, this is very important because this is gonna make or break your baking experience into the future as far as what those baked goods are going to do. So here’s the thing. Like stimulus control is 60, 70% of weight management. If it’s not in your environment, chances are you are not going to eat it. So baking a bunch of cookies and baking a bunch of holiday goods and having them out on the counters and in the, you know, right in your eye line, you are going to have to have a relationship with those cookies because they’re going to call your name, you know? They’re gonna be like every time you walk by them, you have to have a conversation with yourself in your mind. Like, am I going to eat it? Am I not? And they might say, come over, we’re so cute, we just, you know, I’m a little gingerbread man and don’t you want to eat me? You know, like you, you’re always having to manage that. And what happens is we’re stressed over the holiday seasons. Our willpower is very low during the holiday season because we’re so stimulated. So chances are, if it’s out and about, you’re going to end, it’s going to end up in your mouth. So please pack things up, put it away. I mean, hopefully you’re baking stuff not just for you, but for other people and that you are going to wrap up and, you know, take the things and get them out of your house leaving just a few for you that you can, you know, eat.

Rita Black: And I am always one for, you know, choosing a couple of holiday treats that I’m gonna really enjoy and have. And then, because I don’t need to eat everything in the holiday season to know that it’s there, you know, like I don’t need the candy canes because I know what they taste like, you know? I don’t need, I’ll choose a couple of things, maybe eat some gingerbread, you know, maybe a couple of my like favorite holiday treats, but otherwise, and then have a couple of servings of them. But otherwise, I don’t need to eat my way through the holidays to know that I have had the holidays. In fact, I am happier, more connected to myself managing my weight and not feeling deprived at all, but feeling like I’m thriving because I’m not stuck in that coma of sugar car, you know, sugar, flour and butter. Which can really put you in a comatose state and make you feel bad and unhealthy and really, really bring your holidays down really. So don’t think deprived, think thrive.

Rita Black: And after you are done with your holiday baking, please rest and take care of yourself because when you’re rested, it is, you’re renewing your willpower. And my famous three bite rule, that’s something that I think you should know about, if you don’t, maybe you do, if you know me and know my stuff, but the idea is that after three bites, our mouth experience goes from 90% down to 20%. So most of these holiday baked goods, we only really need three bites of to really know, like, oh, I remember what grandma’s fruitcake tasted like, yeah, that’s good. I only need three bites, you know? Oh, I know what fudge tastes like. Okay, that’s good. I got that down. So, you know, eat those three bites, enjoy them, be mindful about them, but then maybe you don’t need them anymore. All right?

Rita Black: So I really feel like you are ready and prepared now to head out and to bake powerfully through the holiday season. All right, well I can smell those amazing treats in the oven already and I hope that today was helpful and that you’re ready to dive into holiday baking powerfully and healthfully and mindfully. And also, if you’re still with me right now, if you write a review, you can go get your free download in the show notes for that Sugar Shift Outta Sugar Cravings. But also if you write a review for our show, a review, just remember, reviews are great for us because they help us get discovered. By writing a good review will help other people discover us and join the world of Thin Thinking. If you write one, take a picture of it or send copy and paste and send it to me. There is a place in the show notes, or you can send it to me at rita shift weight mastery.com. And if you do that, I’m going ti send you a link to the shift store with a coupon code to get a free download. So whatever download you want from the shift store, it’s yours when you write that review and you send it in. So thank you so much for your support and like I said, we’ll send that coupon code and there are so many great downloads in there. So go write that review and get your download. Be ready for those holidays. Okay? So have an amazing week, happy baking.

Rita Black: And remember that the key and probably the only key to unlocking the door, the weight struggle is inside you. So keep listening and find it.

Rita Black: If you wanna dive deeper into the mindset of weight release, head on over to www shift weight mastery.com. That’s www shift weight mastery.com, where you’ll find numerous tools and resources to help you unlock your mind for permanent weight release tips, strategies, and more. And be sure to check the show notes to learn more about my book From Fat to Thin Thinking. Unlock Your Mind for Permanent Weight Loss.

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