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Home » I Didn’t Know There Was Noise

I Didn’t Know There Was Noise

Author:

Joanna Cismaru

Last Updated: 2/22/26
203 Comments

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pic of joanna cismaru in her kitchen.

For most of my adult life, food was a background conversation in my head. What’s next, what’s allowed, what I should not have eaten. I didn’t realize how loud it was until one day it went quiet.

pic of joanna cismaru in her kitchen.

Remo asked what we were eating that day, and for the first time in decades, I didn’t already have an answer. Normally, by the time anyone asks that question, I’ve already run through three options in my head. What we have in the fridge. What I should make. What I shouldn’t make. What would be “better.” What would be “easier.” What I’d regret later.

For most of my adult life, I’ve carried extra weight. I’ve also carried the constant mental math that came with it. Calories, portions, trade-offs, starting over on Monday. I thought that was normal. I thought everyone lived with that kind of background chatter. I didn’t know there was a name for it. I didn’t know it wasn’t just discipline or the lack of it. I didn’t know it was noise.

And then one day, it was gone.

Not dramatically. Not all at once. Just… quiet. The kind of quiet you don’t notice until someone asks a simple question and you realize there’s no answer waiting. I wasn’t fighting myself. I wasn’t planning ahead. I wasn’t negotiating. I just hadn’t thought about food at all. Which sounds almost ridiculous considering what I do for a living. I spend my days staring at food. Testing it. Photographing it. Writing about it. Editing videos of it. My work revolves around ingredients and instructions and what we’re eating next.

But this was different.

This wasn’t about recipes or creativity or work. It wasn’t about planning dinner for the blog or testing something new. It was the absence of the constant personal negotiation. The internal voice tallying, adjusting, calculating. I could develop a recipe and not immediately translate it into what I should or shouldn’t eat. I could test something without running the mental math in the background. I could close the kitchen for the day and not keep the conversation going in my head.

What exactly is food noise anyway?

If you’ve never lived with it, food noise is hard to explain. It’s not hunger. It’s not even craving. It’s the constant awareness of what’s available and the low-level negotiation that follows. Before, if there was a piece of cake in the fridge or cookies on the counter, it wasn’t just dessert. It was a conversation. When can I have one. Should I have one. If I have one now, what does that mean later. Maybe just half. Maybe I’ll wait. Maybe I won’t.

Now? We have chocolate chip cookies and oatmeal cookies sitting on the counter. I baked them because I still love to bake. I had half of one to taste test and that was enough. When I walk past them, I don’t hear anything. Sometimes I actually pause and notice it, that I just walked by cookies without grabbing one. And it still amazes me. Not because I’m trying harder. Not because I suddenly developed iron willpower. But because the constant internal pull simply isn’t there.

I thought this was normal

For decades, I thought this was just how everyone lived. I assumed everyone had that low hum running in the background. The constant checking in. The small negotiations. The mental math. I thought this was what being “responsible” around food looked like.

I never once considered that it might not be universal.

When I tried to explain it to Remo, he looked at me like I was describing something foreign. I told him about the constant back-and-forth in my head. The planning. The trade-offs. The quiet countdown to when I could have something. He had no idea what I was talking about.

He just… doesn’t have it.

That might have surprised me more than the silence itself.

I thought it was discipline. Or lack of it. I thought some people were just better at managing the voice. Stronger. More controlled. I didn’t realize that some people weren’t having the conversation at all.

That realization hit me slowly. Not in a dramatic way. Just in the quiet space that followed when the noise disappeared. When I walked past cookies without planning my return trip. When Remo asked what we were eating and my brain wasn’t five steps ahead.

I started to understand that what I had lived with for most of my adult life wasn’t a personality trait. It wasn’t weakness. It wasn’t a flaw. It was something biological. Something that had a volume control I didn’t know existed.

And that’s the part that’s hard to put into words.

Because when you’ve spent decades believing the constant internal debate is simply who you are, it becomes part of your identity. The “food person.” The one who loves to cook but always feels a little conflicted. The one who is good most of the time but thinks about it all of the time.

I didn’t know that thinking about it all the time wasn’t required.

When I Finally Had To Pay Attention

We had just moved to the acreage, which should have felt exciting. Instead, it felt overwhelming. The build had been stressful. Selling our old house was stressful. Managing the transition while still running my business was stressful. I told myself I was handling it. I wasn’t.

Somewhere in the middle of all of that, I stopped taking care of myself. I gained weight. I wasn’t sleeping well. I brushed it off as a busy season. I’ve had plenty of those.

Then we moved in, and my body started pushing back.

I developed severe allergies in the new house. I didn’t feel well most days. Then a rash showed up that sent me to urgent care. They couldn’t figure out what was wrong, but my blood pressure was through the roof.

That was the moment things felt less abstract.

When I finally went to my doctor, he didn’t sugarcoat it. He told me I was at the age where heart attacks happen. Especially at my weight.

I’ve never been the person who runs to the doctor for every little thing. In fact, I’ve avoided going more times than I should admit. The irony is not lost on me that now I go every month. My health is monitored closely. We track everything. Nothing about this is casual.

That matters to me.

I knew about Ozempic. I had heard the chatter. But I had never heard of Mounjaro. When he suggested it, I didn’t hesitate. At that point, I wasn’t thinking about aesthetics. I was thinking about staying healthy. I was thinking about not ignoring the warning signs anymore.

I was desperate.

This isn’t me telling anyone what to do. It’s not medical advice, and it’s not a blanket solution. It’s simply my experience. I know medications like this aren’t for everyone, and I respect that. I can only speak to what changed for me. I know these medications come with opinions. I’m not here to debate them. I’m just here to tell the truth about what happened in my own head.

The Shift I Didn’t Expect

When I started Mounjaro, I wasn’t looking for a mental breakthrough. I wasn’t waiting for some dramatic transformation. I was thinking about my blood pressure. My health. The very real lecture from my doctor about heart attacks at my age and at my weight.

I was trying to be responsible.

The first few weeks weren’t cinematic. There was no obvious moment where everything changed. I didn’t wake up one morning feeling like a different person. If anything, I was just paying closer attention to how my body felt.

The quiet came later.

It slipped in gently. So gently that I didn’t recognize it at first.

One afternoon, when Remo asked what we were eating, I opened my mouth to answer and realized I hadn’t been thinking about it at all. No pre-planned options. No internal debate. No mental tally of what would be “better” or “worse.” Just a blank space where the conversation used to be.

It wasn’t that I didn’t care. I still love food. I still love cooking. I still love baking. My career is built around it. That hasn’t changed.

What changed was the urgency.

The constant pull. The background hum. The low-level negotiation that had followed me for most of my adult life simply wasn’t there.

And that absence felt bigger than anything I had expected.

Bigger Than Weight

What surprised me most is that this isn’t about weight in the way I thought it would be.

Yes, my body is changing. Yes, my health markers are improving. But what feels monumental to me is the mental space. The energy I didn’t realize I was spending every single day thinking about what I had eaten, what I would eat, what I should eat.

I thought that was responsibility. I thought that was discipline. I thought that was just part of loving food and living in a body that didn’t always cooperate.

At almost 54, I’m used to believing I understand myself. I didn’t realize how much of what I thought was personality was actually noise.

Sometimes I think about my 20s. Not about being thinner. Just about being quieter. About what it might have felt like to walk past a plate of cookies and not feel the pull. About how much energy I might have redirected into something else.

I can’t rewrite those years.

But I can choose how I move forward.

And for the first time in decades, the conversation in my head is calm. Not because I’m trying harder. Not because I finally figured it out.

But because the noise is gone.

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Joanna Cismaru Avatar
Joanna Cismaru
I’m Joanna Cismaru, the cook, writer, and professional taste tester behind AllMyCravings. I traded software code for cinnamon rolls years ago and never looked back. These days, I’m sharing the recipes I actually make in my own kitchen. The cozy, crave worthy, everyday kind that doesn’t need a culinary degree or twelve trips to a specialty store. If it’s easy, flavorful, and makes you want seconds, you’ll find it here.
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203 responses

  1. Barb
    April 16, 2026

    Wow thanks for sharing all this.

    Reply
  2. Cathy B
    April 16, 2026

    Wow! I am so VERY happy for you! You certainly DESERVE the “quiet” AND good health. My very best wishes for your new “path”. Keep up your excellent & exceptional work as a creative artist‼️❤️

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      April 16, 2026

      That means so much, thank you ❤️ I didn’t even realize how much I needed the quiet until I found it, and I’m really grateful for this new chapter.

      Reply
  3. Galina
    March 6, 2026

    Thank you so much for sharing this. I follow a lot of food bloggers but have never added anything in their comments. I feel you have summarized my entire existence and I thought I would share that with you. I hope this new journey brings you peace and quiets that noise.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      March 6, 2026

      Thank you so much for sharing that with me. ❤️ It means a lot to know it resonated with you, and I’m hoping this journey brings a little more quiet for both of us.

      Reply
  4. Linda F
    March 1, 2026

    This article will help a lot of people like you, who didn’t know the noise wasn’t “normal”. I wish you well.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      March 1, 2026

      Thank you so much!!

      Reply
  5. Noel
    February 18, 2026

    Great post. Thank you for sharing. Definitely a discussion that we all need to have.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 18, 2026

      My pleasure!

      Reply
  6. Phyllis Smith
    February 18, 2026

    I just read parts of your “About Us.” I have had a deep love in my heart for Romania for years and years! It’s a God thing, because I didn’t know much about Romania. Then in 2007 Edward and I took a mission trip to Cornesti to a home that cares for women who want to keep their babies and don’t have anywhere safe to do so. It’s called River of Life. They have grown and expanded since our trip in ’07. They’ve been building a home in Ukraine for children who have been orphaned by the war with Russia. You should look them up if you would like to. My love for Romania and its people is greater than ever since having spent a couple of weeks there at Christmas. xx

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 19, 2026

      Romania has such a special place in my heart, so hearing about your time in Cornesti and the work at River of Life means so much. Thank you for sharing that with me, truly.

      Reply
  7. Phyllis Smith
    February 18, 2026

    I’m happy to have read your story. I’ve dealt with the noise since my teens, or maybe younger because my dad would sometimes say, “Get your fat ass away from the table. You’ve eaten enough!” I was a bit overweight, but not as much as I became in my adult years. I was always thinking about food, too. I won’t tell you my entire life story. I need to get downstairs and fix dinner for myself and my little foodie dog. She has food allergies and I try to eat healthier most of the time. So we’ll be having grilled salmon fillets, boiled baby potatoes, and steamed broccoli.

    I moved from America, where I was born and raised, to the northwest of England, near Liverpool in 2002. I’d separated from my husband of 24 years and fallen in love with a wonderful Englishman. Ours was a very long distance relationship. I used to say that we fell in love before he knew I was fat and I knew he was bald. I loved British food, and before I knew it I weighed 260 lbs. My diabetes and hypertension were out of control. My work as a nurse (American trained amongst British nurses. I wasn’t well received) was very stressful. I carried on with our happy marriage, gave up nursing, and went onto a disability benefit. I was praying for a miracle for my diabetes and obesity when I was referred to a diabetic specialist at the hospital and they started me on an injection called Byetta. Like Mounjaro and it was a GLP-1. It was 2012. I started losing weight gradually year after year. I went onto a different med called Victoza, another injection that I used for several years until it was taken from our pharmacy shelves due to “production issues.” The problem was that they couldn’t produce enough for the diabetics at the pharmacy (diabetic meds are free on the NHS) and the paying customers at weight loss clinics. I was without the GLP-1 for perhaps a year. They tried me on an oral med that I’d taken in the ’90’s, but my weight was creeping up gradually and my HgbA1C was climbing. My beloved husband, who was 12 years my senior, passed away in 2021 following lung cancer surgery, and I didn’t care about food as I grieved his loss and had to deal with all of the admin required following a death. I chose to stay in the UK for a few reasons, including free healthcare. I love it here. So after a few months on the oral med that didn’t work, I was desperate! They offered to let me try oral semaglutide, the same drug as Ozempic. The first month, at the starting dose, I felt unwell like I had done when I started the Byetta. The 2nd month the dose was more than doubled and I was sick. I lost several pounds! And I started the 3rd month, hoping it would get better. It didn’t. I had heard of Mounjaro, but was scared of it at first because of a news story where a nurse died because of taking Mounjaro. But I decided to go ahead with it when it was offered in place of the semaglutide. I’ve been on the Mounjaro for a few months now, and I get a bit iffy if I overeat, but haven’t been truly unwell. I still think about food, but not like I used to! My disabilities keep me from cooking and baking like I used to (though I do sometimes break down and make your one-pan salmon and rice dish. Yummy!) I’m not really sure how my weight is, compared to before starting the Mounjaro. I’m sticking around 160 lbs, which at 5’7″ is pretty close to my ideal. Not bad for a disabled retiree, age 67. I got my miracle. I’ve lost 100 lbs since 2012 and dropped 4 or 5 clothing sizes. I’m excited to be able to shop for clothes in regular stores, not just”fat lady stores.” My main concern now, regarding the Mounjaro, is what to do if/when I start losing too much weight!

    Thanks for sharing your story. I hope it encourages folks who are still arguing or negotiating with the”noise.” And I think you’re amazing and beautiful no matter what your weight is! And you produce wonderful recipes! I’ve been a fan for months! God bless you.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 19, 2026

      Oh my goodness… thank you for trusting me with all of that. ❤️ You’ve walked through grief, health battles, big life changes, and you’re still standing at 67 with 100 lbs gone and your sense of humor intact. That’s strength.

      I’m so happy you found something that finally helped quiet the noise and gave you back control. And truly, staying around 160 at 5’7″ after everything you’ve been through? That’s incredible. I’m cheering you on from across the ocean. 💛

      Reply
  8. Brenda M
    February 17, 2026

    Thank you for sharing! I too live with the noise, I am 74 and still feed 6 to 8 adults every night. For me the noise is still very loud and I also used an injectable to help with weight loss for health issues…no guilt here. It reallly did help. Also thank you very much for your recipes they make my life very much easier and I really appreciate you!
    Again thanks for sharing you and your life!
    Brenda M

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 18, 2026

      Brenda, feeding 6 to 8 adults every night at 74? You are a rockstar. ❤️ I’m so glad you found something that helped quiet the noise, and thank you for your kindness, it truly means more than you know.

      Reply
  9. trista delgado
    February 17, 2026

    Thank you so much for saying this! I totally understand “the noise”!!! You have encouraged me SO much!!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 17, 2026

      That makes my heart so happy to read. ❤️ Knowing it resonated with you means everything, we’re definitely not alone in this.

      Reply
  10. Bonita P Hart
    February 16, 2026

    I just started Mounjaro in December and experienced the exact same revelation! I didn’t realize until then, that food “noise” constantly gnawed at me 24/7. Now, I experience peace for the first time in my life. Im so grateful! I have been keeping a diary of my meals and snacks, but, just to remind me that what I eat is still important. Now, the weight is coming off, but I know I have gained confidence that Im in control…not the “noise”.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 17, 2026

      It’s wild, isn’t it? That realization that it was there all along. I’m so happy you’re feeling that peace and sense of control, that’s huge. ❤️ And I love that you’re journaling too, it’s such a grounding way to stay intentional without the noise running the show.

      Reply
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Meet Jo

We’re Joanna and Remo, a wife and husband duo obsessed with good food, simple ingredients, and turning everyday cravings into recipes you’ll actually want to make.

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