The present one eats with attention, noticing hunger, taste, and satiety as they happen. Research by Robinson shows eating attentively reduces intake through better memory encoding of meals. Presence reveals what automatic eating hides: food often stops being enjoyable before the plate is empty, hunger departs before fullness arrives. You can’t notice fullness if you’re not paying attention.
This companion covers the absence of presence, what presence reveals, practicing it, and the paradox. (3 min read)