All My Cravings
Recipe Index
Shop
About Us
Free eBook
Comfort Food
Breakfasts
Breads
Appetizers
off the recipe
slow cooker
Desserts
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

This site runs ads and generates income from affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.


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.

  • 27
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.
Learn More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




203 responses

  1. Janie
    February 14, 2026

    Thank you for sharing! I know the struggle. I’m 61 and found out I’m now diabetic. If I lose weight I might not be. My doctor said that if I can’t lose weight he will recommend one of the glp-1s. I didn’t want to go that route but maybe it is not a bad option after reading your experience. Until then the challenge is to make food that is healthier. It’s easy to cook tasty meals with butter and cheese…more challenging to make dinners that are veggie forward, delicious, and filling, and yet healthy.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you for sharing this. A diabetes diagnosis can feel heavy, especially when it suddenly makes everything feel urgent.

      I completely understand the hesitation around medication. It’s such a personal decision, and I truly believe it has to feel right for the individual, in partnership with their doctor.

      And you’re absolutely right, it’s easy to lean on butter and cheese. Making meals that are vegetable forward, satisfying, and still delicious takes a different kind of creativity. But it’s possible. Flavor doesn’t have to disappear when health becomes the focus. Wishing you steadiness as you navigate this. One step at a time, with good guidance and good food.

      Reply
  2. Art
    February 14, 2026

    Great website, fantastic recipes!

    Be well…

    http://www.dailyzen.com

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you!

      Reply
  3. calleigh
    February 14, 2026

    Dear Jo,
    It isn’t a person’s weight that I follow. i see the person , and you are a wonderful person. You have taught me so much about cooking.
    I have all kinds of food allergies and you have given me options, so what you say matters.
    Bless you Jo. I’m sure we are all proud of you. Be happy.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you. That truly touched me. It means so much to hear that the recipes have helped you navigate food allergies and still enjoy cooking. That’s always been my hope, to make food feel possible, not restrictive.

      And I really appreciate what you said about seeing the person. That’s exactly how I try to see others too. Thank you for your kindness and support. It means more than you know.

      Reply
  4. Jennifer
    February 14, 2026

    Thank you for such a beautiful message. How brave you are. I love your recipes and have often recommended them to friends and family. You have a wonderful gift. Definitely take care of yourself. I am 75 and still must talk myself into being mindful about food and exercise. I think it is a very human condition!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you so much for your kind words. It truly means a lot that the recipes have found their way into your kitchen and into the homes of your friends and family. The fact that you’re still mindful and still reflecting at 75 says a lot about your strength.

      Thank you for the encouragement. I’m learning to take better care of myself, one steady step at a time.

      Reply
  5. BB
    February 14, 2026

    Thank you for sharing. You are brave to put it all out there for all to read. I hope your health continues to improve.
    You had a lot of stressor all at once. Wishing you the Best on your journey!
    I love your website. Take care!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you so much. It did feel vulnerable to share, so I really appreciate your kindness. You’re right, it was a season with a lot happening at once. I think sometimes we power through until our bodies ask us to slow down and pay attention. I’m grateful for your support and for being part of this community. Truly.

      Reply
  6. Alice Crist
    February 14, 2026

    Thank you very much I’m glad you’re taking care of yourself. You and your recipes are Fantastic!!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you so much. That’s so kind of you to say. I truly appreciate you being here and cooking along with me all these years.

      Reply
  7. Laura
    February 14, 2026

    So very happy for you. I know that food noise, the internal bargaining. Food always upper most in my mind. Take good care of yourself. Wishing you all the best.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you so much. “Internal bargaining” is such a perfect way to describe it. That’s exactly what it felt like for me too.

      It’s comforting in a strange way to know we’re not alone in that experience. I appreciate your kindness and encouragement more than you know.

      Reply
  8. Christine
    February 14, 2026

    Joanna, I understand how life can catch up to us. I still have to ask myself a 9×13 or a simple pie plate for chicken pot pie. I’m 74 years old now, have a rare cancer (Bile Duct Cancer). I’m living the best life I can while I can. You will have a better future, I can tell. Take care of yourself, we don’t need daily recipes, we need YOU!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      I’m so sorry you’re walking through something so serious, and yet your message carries such strength and clarity. “Living the best life I can while I can” is a powerful way to put it.

      What you said truly touched me. I promise the recipes aren’t going anywhere, but I am learning to take care of myself too.

      Sending you steadiness and warmth as you continue to live fully, in your own way.

      Reply
    2. Calleigh
      February 14, 2026

      Christine,
      Wishing you well and praying for good days..

      Reply
  9. Marjorie Lee
    February 14, 2026

    This is beautifully written. Thank you for sharing.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      Thank you so much!

      Reply
  10. Gail
    February 14, 2026

    I too have had a weight battle all my life. You aren’t alone. It’s a constant battle. When i was single i could control it better because i do not like to cook. I just started gaining weight that i cannot lose since my 60’s. When my husband started wondering “what’s for dinner “? I hate that but for now live with it lol.

    Hang in there Jo because you are surrounded by family and food

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      February 14, 2026

      I smiled at the “what’s for dinner?” part, I think a lot of us know that question a little too well. It’s amazing how life seasons shift things, especially once we’re cooking for someone else and not just ourselves. And you’re right, it can feel like a constant battle. That’s part of why the mental shift surprised me so much. I didn’t realize how much of it was happening in my head.

      Thank you for the encouragement. I am very lucky to have family around me, and yes, always food. I’m just learning how to live with it a little differently.

      Reply
←Older Comments
1 2 3 4 5 … 10
Newer Comments→

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.

Learn more

you’ll love these

Popular Posts

  • Over-the-Top Triple Cheese Mac and Cheese

    Over-the-Top Triple Cheese Mac and Cheese

  • Caramelized Onion & Gruyère Mashed Potatoes

    Caramelized Onion & Gruyère Mashed Potatoes

  • Oatmeal Jam Bars

    Oatmeal Jam Bars

  • Cajun Alfredo Lasagna

    Cajun Alfredo Lasagna

Never miss a recipe!

Get our FREE recipe eBook + newsletter!


Appetizers

Dips & Spreads
Finger Foods
Game-Day
Party Bites

Breakfasts

Muffins
Pancakes
Savory Breakfast
Sweet Breakfast

Desserts

Cakes
Chocolate Lovers
Cookies & Bars
Pies & Tarts

Meals

30-Minute
Cozy Weekend
Easy Weeknight
Family-Friendly

Seasonal

Fall Comfort
Spring Treats
Summer Cravings
Winter Warmers

Sides

Comfort Salads
Pasta Salads
Potato & Rice
Vegetable Sides
about us
Free eBook
Privacy Policy

All My Cravings