I never thought twice about it. Every morning, same routine—coffee, a quick breakfast, and a banana. It felt like one of those small, healthy habits you don’t question. Easy, simple, good for you. At least, that’s what I believed for years. But one casual conversation changed the way I looked at something I had been doing without a second thought.
It started when someone mentioned that as you get older, even the smallest routines can affect you differently. I brushed it off at first. A banana? Really? It sounded almost ridiculous. But the more we talked, the more I realized how little attention I had actually paid to what my body needed as time went on. I wasn’t doing anything extreme—just repeating the same habits without ever adjusting them.
That’s when I started paying closer attention. Not just to what I was eating, but how I felt afterward. Energy levels, focus, even the way my body reacted throughout the day. Nothing dramatic, nothing alarming—but subtle changes I had never connected before. It wasn’t about the banana being “bad.” It was about understanding that even something healthy isn’t always the same for everyone at every stage of life.
The idea stuck with me more than I expected. It made me realize how easy it is to assume that what worked before will always work the same way. But our bodies don’t stay the same—and neither should the way we treat them. Sometimes, it’s not about removing something entirely, but about being aware of how it fits into your routine now, not years ago.
In the end, I didn’t stop eating bananas. But I stopped doing it automatically. Because sometimes, the biggest change isn’t what you eat—it’s finally paying attention to why.