Real Food. Real Conversations.

Real Food. Real Conversations.


Can You Change Your Story?

August 25, 2021

Is it possible to change your story? Can we erase all the experiences, especially the trauma, that have shaped who we are? Listen in and see!

How we think about food and our health starts with the experiences we had growing up. But some of those no longer serve us and who we are today. Emily Marquis talks about how we can make a change and use it to better our wellness.

Emily is a Clinical Health and Wellness Coach, board certified NBC-HWC. She is an RYT200 Yoga Instructor and Mindfulness Consultant. She works with individuals and groups in support of creating healthy habits for sustainable lifestyle change.

Drawing from her professional training and personal health challenges; she has experience in preventing, reducing, and managing chronic illness from stress to sleep to weight loss to work life balance.

With her combined coaching and corporate HR background, Emily works with organizations in creating cultures of wellness and is NAHU certified. Emily also works with clinics and fellow practitioners to create a village for clients to best support their well-being.

She is an Instructor at Emory University in their graduate Coaching certificate program. Emily lives in Colorado, USA with her family and loves the balance between a good TV show and an outdoor adventure.

Grab her FREE 7 Day Gratitude Challenge here!

And you can also grab her FREE health Quiz here!

Our Personal Stories

Stories can be a sentence, a whole experience and even an identity we attach to. These can affect how we live, the decisions we make.

We are an onion and make of layers that create the human we are today. We experience and tell ourselves things that can pave our future and decisions.

We have both narratives about ourselves and those for others. We even have stories about situations. These form biases that integrate into our every day life.

Sometimes we can pin point where our stories came from, but other times we don't know.

Making sure that the stories we created serve us and our goals is important. Even as parent we want to be an example for our own kid's narratives.

The Meaning of Changing Your Story

When our stories do not benefit us, we can change them. This means that we can make the stories that do not serve us weaker and eventually replace them with new stories that benefit us positively.

The pathways from our negative stories have been created since birth and the more we say things to ourselves they get deeper and stronger. Then they affect every part of our lives.

Neuroplasticity (the ability for the brain to form new connections) tells us that our brain is soft and flexible, which gives us the ability to change our thoughts and behaviors.

The Science Behind Our Personal Narratives

The brain has trillions of connections. When you have a narrative, there is a pathway for it. This is how your command center works.

Your repetitive thought have strong connections because the more you repeat something to yourself, the stronger it gets.

You can even make connections between things like a type of food and a physical symptom. Perhaps you had a bad experience once with something, and when you see it that memory comes back. Making that connection stronger every time.

The less you use the pathway, the weaker it gets. Therefore, by changing the thought you can focus on the pathway ...