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Stop Eating When You Are 80% Full (The Japanese Secret) Link video: • Stop Eating When You Are 80% Full (The Jap... The Heavy Silence (The Validation) You know the feeling of reaching 110% capacity. It settles in quietly, then arrives all at once—a heavy, expanding pressure and a thick mental fog that makes returning to work feel impossible. If you are a high-functioning professional, this dissonance is painful. You manage complex systems all day, yet you feel powerless in front of a plate of food. Let’s be clear: this isn't a failure of character. You aren't "weak." You are simply running on empty, and your body is trying to compensate in the only way it knows how. The Biological Lag (The Neuroscience) The problem isn't your appetite; it's the velocity of your life. We eat at the speed of anxiety, bypassing the body's subtle "stop" signals. The mechanism of satiety involves a chemical negotiation between your stomach’s stretch receptors and your brainstem via the vagus nerve. The critical flaw? This data takes up to 20 minutes to upload. When you eat under stress (high cortisol), this signal is suppressed further. You aren't overeating because you want to; you are overshooting the mark because you are eating against a clock you cannot see. The "Hara Hachi Bu" Protocol (The Solution) To regain your energy, we must shift the goal from "Maximum Capacity" to "Optimal Performance." We adopt the Okinawan philosophy of Hara Hachi Bu: eating until you are 80% full. The Protocol: 1. Visual Reset: Serve 20% less to engineer the environment. 2. Rhythm of the Pause: Put the fork down halfway through to let the signal catch up. 3. The 20-Minute Buffer: Engage in one step of movement before going back for seconds. You have permission to stop before the heavy feeling arrives.