Sleep Magic: Sleep Hypnosis & Meditation for Sleep Podcast

Mindful Cooking: Get Healthy In Your Sleep | Sleep Hypnosis With Visualization

60 min
Nov 5, 20256 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Jessica Porter guides listeners through a sleep hypnosis meditation centered on mindful cooking and plant-based nutrition. The episode combines relaxation techniques with an immersive visualization of preparing a tofu and millet quiche, exploring the medicinal and healing properties of whole foods while emphasizing that food choices are personal and non-judgmental.

Insights
  • Whole foods carry ancestral knowledge and healing properties that modern bodies instinctively recognize, creating deeper nourishment than processed alternatives
  • Mindfulness practices can be integrated into everyday activities like cooking to deepen relaxation and body awareness during sleep preparation
  • Non-judgmental food education is more effective than prescriptive nutrition advice for encouraging dietary improvements
  • Visualization combined with sensory detail (taste, smell, texture) enhances the effectiveness of guided meditation for behavioral change
  • Traditional foods with centuries of use contain compounds that support specific bodily functions (digestion, immunity, hormonal balance)
Trends
Integration of culinary education with wellness and sleep optimization contentGrowing consumer interest in food's medicinal properties and traditional healing practicesMindfulness-based approaches to nutrition and eating behavior changeDemand for non-judgmental, inclusive wellness content that respects individual dietary choicesUse of immersive visualization and sensory storytelling in guided meditation and sleep contentRising popularity of ancient grains and plant-based proteins in mainstream wellness discoursePersonalized wellness narratives that connect individual health to ancestral and environmental contexts
Topics
Sleep hypnosis and guided meditation techniquesPlant-based nutrition and whole food cookingMedicinal properties of foods (garlic, mushrooms, tofu, millet, rosemary)Mindful eating and food awarenessTraditional and ancient food practicesRelaxation and stress reduction through visualizationNon-judgmental nutrition educationSeasonal eating and autumn wellnessBody awareness and somatic relaxationCulinary storytelling and sensory meditationImmune support through natural foodsDigestive health and grain-based nutritionHormonal balance through dietFood history and cultural food traditionsIntegration of cooking and wellness practices
Companies
AXA Health Insurance
Sponsor providing health insurance coverage with emphasis on pre-existing condition support and customer care
GoDaddy
Sponsor offering AI-powered business tools including logo design, website creation, and social media management
People
Jessica Porter
Host of Sleep Magic podcast who guides the sleep hypnosis meditation and shares personal nutrition journey
Leonardo da Vinci
Historical figure referenced for documented consumption of millet as a staple food ingredient
Quotes
"Food, real food that comes from the earth has power. And when we eat foods that are natural, we get power from them."
Jessica Porter~5:30
"Your relationship to food is yours and it's an intensely personal thing."
Jessica Porter~7:00
"You have more power over your mind than you know. And it begins with guiding it."
Jessica Porter~12:00
"Your body knows these foods. Your ancestors knew these foods, going back hundreds and even thousands of years."
Jessica Porter~28:00
"The food itself is slowing you down, bringing you home to your body. Back to this moment."
Jessica Porter~50:00
Full Transcript
Hi, I'm Jessica Porter and welcome back to Sleep Magic, a podcast where I help you find the magic of your own mind so you can sleep better and live better. Thank you everyone for being here. It's so nice to be here myself. I just want to say we got a couple of shout outs I want to give tonight to Julie Rose who says, the Sleep Magic podcast is amazing. I recommend it to everyone I know. Thank you. We need that. We want to keep growing. We want to keep spreading this vibe. We all need to function more from our own subconscious minds. That's where we're loving and calm and creative and we need more of that. I also want to give a shout out to someone named Parsey in Iran who recently broke up with a girlfriend of a long time and it's been a tricky experience to go their separate ways because there's still a lot of love and Sleep Magic is really helping him make this transition. Thank you Parsey. I'm sending you all my best and I just want to remind everyone that relaxation helps with everything. As you bring this into your sleep, I encourage you to bring it into your life and see what happens. If you want to tell us how this is working for you, you can reach out to us at Sleepiest or on the podcast platforms or the socials or at my website. Before we get started, let's hear a quick word from our sponsors who make this free content possible. It's hard to concentrate when you're worried about your health. It can feel like there's a wall between you and the rest of the world, like you can't be fully present. Hello AXA Health. How can I help? At AXA Health Insurance, we build our teams with people who care. So when you need us, we're here to support you. For cover that cares, search AXA Health Insurance. Pre-existing conditions are not covered. So you want to start a business. You might think you need a team of people and fancy text kills, but you don't. You just need GoDaddy Arrow. I'm Walton Goggins and as an actor, I'm an expert in looking like I know what I'm doing. GoDaddy Arrow uses AI to create everything you need to grow a business. It'll make you a unique logo. It'll create a custom website. It'll write social posts for you and even set you up with a social media calendar. Get started at godaddy.com slash arrow. That's godaddy.com slash A-I-R-O. Okay. Great. Tonight. Mindful cooking. Get healthy in your sleep. That's a big, it's a big promise. We're going to be making tofu quiche. Many of you might know that a big chapter of my life was focused on learning about cooking and eating super healthy food. That was a very big and exciting time for me, especially considering I grew up eating total junk food. It was a big switch and it was a dramatic thing. During that time, I learned a lot. Some of the things I learned are basically cliches that we've all heard like, you are what you eat and food is medicine. But I think my biggest takeaway is that food, real food that comes from the earth has power. And when we eat foods that are natural, we get power from them. It sounds super simple. And yet I think we forget it all the time. I mean, even I forget it all the time. So this episode is to remind all of us that what we put in our bodies matters. But one more thing before we go on, I just want you to know I'm not here to judge how anyone eats. I've never been into that because not only is it an obnoxious stance to take, it doesn't get anyone to change for me to judge or for anyone to judge. Your relationship to food is yours and it's an intensely personal thing. So all we're doing tonight is exploring a new recipe that includes a variety of plants and you'll learn about their qualities, their medicinal powers. And I'll give you a sense of how they'll make you feel. So no matter how you currently eat, we can all add more plants to the mix. There's no arguing there. So I hope you enjoy this episode, whether you taste it in reality at one point or just imagine it tonight. All right. So get yourself into a safe and comfortable position and let's begin. Allow your eyes to close easily and gently. As you bring your awareness down into your right hand, just feel the palm of your hand against whatever it's touching. Maybe it's a palm down on the mattress or against a blanket or touching a part of your own body or up toward the air. No matter. Allow your mind to sink down into the palm of your hand. But for a moment, focusing your mind, aiming it, directing it, guiding it. You have more power over your mind than you know. And it begins with guiding it. Very good. Now bring your awareness to your breathing and allow your awareness to hang out on the wave of your breath. It's a softer, gentler place than the palm of the hand. It's more subtle to allow your awareness to rest on the breath. Well done. Now bring your awareness up into your eyelids and imagine now that your eyelids are feeling heavy, sleepy and relaxed. And as you imagine this heaviness in your eyelids, pretend that you're an actor and you're actually sleepy and relaxed. Imagining is very powerful. So as you imagine, allow it to happen. Good. Now your eyelids are feeling heavy, heavy and relaxed. Excellent. And now we make the suggestion that your eyelids are in fact so relaxed. They will not open. Of course, this is a ridiculous suggestion. Your eyes could open if you wanted to open them. But we're pretending that you can't. So as you pretend that your eyes are so heavy they won't open, wiggle your eyebrows and allow your eyelids to stay closed. By doing this, you're actively engaging with your imagination. And now you imagine that not only are your eyelids feeling heavy and relaxed, your whole face is feeling heavy and relaxed. The muscles of your cheeks releasing and relaxing the muscles of your jaw letting go. Your forehead feeling soft and relaxed. Good. As your face lets go, you find that your belly is letting go. Good. As your face is becoming more and more relaxed, you notice that your whole pelvic area is relaxing and softening and letting go. As your breath deepens, now you allow your head to move back, sinking into the pillow. Feel like getting heavy. Allow the heaviness to transfer to the back of your head and down into your shoulder. In any tension you may have carried on your shoulders today, any responsibilities or burdens, allow them to fall into the bed, through the bed, down into the earth. You can pick those burdens up tomorrow if you want them. But right now you're free. Free and relaxed and your arms are feeling soft and relaxed. As they sink and melt to the bed, your hands feeling warm and sort of floppy. Good. And you imagine now that a very special invisible mist of relaxation is moving down through your neck, down into your chest, inside of you. We're so used to relaxing our bodies piece by piece, but what about the inner world? Deep inside your chest, a warm swirling relaxation, softening, relaxing your heart, softening and relaxing your lungs spiraling inside of you, moving down, down, down deep into your belly, spiraling inside of you, deep in your belly. Good. And you may notice that there are sounds going on around you. Perhaps there are noises from outside or noises from within your environment. Just notice them. Notice them. And now allow them to take you deeper and deeper. Those sounds are simply vibrations. And as you allow the vibrations to move inside of you and pass right through you, they are taking you deeper and even deeper. And now you may feel more relaxed than you have in a very, very long time. As your legs are feeling heavy against the bed, your legs are done for the day. They're on vacation as you go deeper and deeper. And even deeper. Good. Imagine you were standing in a kitchen of an old farmhouse nestled in the Berkshire Mountains of Western Massachusetts. Several million years ago, the Berkshire Mountains were as high and as jagged as a Himalayas. But now they're low, soft, worn down by time and the elements are like grand, elegant, rolling hills. You look outside the kitchen window. It is the height of autumn and the trees are a flame with color. It is the height of autumn and the trees are and oaks and birches, their leaves exploding with the turn of the season. They flicker like candle flames. The air smells of cold earth. As a cool autumn breeze moves through the forest, you watch the red and yellow leaves float to the ground. Inside the rustic kitchen is warm. It contains the scent of wood smoke and pine and contains the calm, hum of the late afternoon. You set your basket on a worn wooden counter and you take out the ingredients one by one. Millet, fresh shiitake mushrooms, a block of tofu, onions, garlic, fresh rosemary, olive oil, tahini, vinegar, sea salt, and soy sauce. Each ingredient has a lineage, a story, and powerful healing properties. You begin with the millet. You pour it into a bowl where it gathers into a small mound of tiny golden spheres. You may have heard of millet as an ingredient in bird seed, but this tiny yellow grain predates rice and wheat. First harvested almost 12,000 years ago in Asia, there are more than 20 types of millet, and it has been a staple grain in both India and China ever since. You select a tiny round grain from the bowl and place it in the palm of your hand. It's the size of a seed, only two millimeters in diameter. You roll it between your fingertips. It's hard and strong and powerful. Millet was later cultivated by the ancient Romans and was popular throughout Europe well into the Renaissance. Historians discovered that Leonardo da Vinci loved millet when they found it on one of his shopping lists. You pour the tiny grains into a fine sieve and rinse them in cold water. The little spheres shimmer in the light. Millet is known for its grounding effect. It is gentle on digestion and strengthens the spleen and stomach. It stabilizes blood sugar and offers a quiet, calm energy. You ignite the gas beneath a well-worn saucepan. The blue flame licks the bottom and you pour in a swirl of olive oil, just enough to shimmer. You add a handful of chopped garlic. It sizzles and smells sharp, bright, and alive. Garlic is naturally anti-viral and antibacterial. You take a nice big whiff. It opens your lungs, cleans your blood, and wakes up your appetite. As you go deeper and deeper into relaxation. Cooking itself makes you feel good, but cooking with natural foods gives you a deeper energy because your body knows these foods. Your ancestors knew these foods, going back hundreds and even thousands of years. You add diced onion and it sizzles in the pan. You stir over the heat until the edges brown a little and the dices begin to soften. And as you watch them soften, you are softening. As you go deeper and deeper. You add a pinch of salt and as the onion softens, its sweetness is emerging. This onion contains compounds that cleanse and purify. That help your body release what it no longer needs. Just as you are releasing what you no longer need. And your sweetness is emerging. You throw in some chopped rosemary and it fills the kitchen with its piney perfume. In ancient Europe, rosemary was burned in temples to purify the air. It brightens the mind. Finally, you add the millet and the grains sizzle gently, soaking up the perfume of garlic. And onion and rosemary. You stir with a wooden spoon, tracing a spiral in the pan. Watching as the steam rises from the wet millet. As you watch the spiral. Going deeper. And deeper. You add your spring water now and raise the flame to high. And as this mixture comes to a boil, you feel energy rising inside of you. You add another pinch of salt. Cover the pot and lower the flame. As the millet settles into a soft simmer. You lean in close and smell it's nutty scent. Already you feel grounded. Connected to nature. Or connected to yourself. As you turn your attention to the filling. You unwrap the block of tofu. It feels cold and heavy. Its surfaces are soft and pale. This block of tofu has traveled through time as an ancient accident. 2000 years ago, a chef in China made the mistake of mixing soy milk with a coagulant called nigari. The nigari caused the soy milk to curdle like a soft cheese. And tofu was born. You crumble it into a food processor. It feels cold in your hands. Tofu is so cooling that it can be placed on the forehead in the case of a fever. It's used in poultices to draw out heat from the body. It will cool down a burn or a blister. Brought by Chinese Buddhist monks to Japan in the 8th century. Tofu became a very popular food throughout much of Asia. But it only ended up in Western kitchens when vegetarian hippies began eating it in the 60s. Little did we know what a gift that was. For tofu is good for the heart and the bones and balancing hormones. You drizzle tahini over the tofu in the food processor in a spoonful of olive oil. You measure out some umeboshi vinegar. It is a vivid pink brine, both salty and sour, made from pickling Japanese plums with shiso leaves. Umeboshi cleanses the liver, alkalizes the blood, and restores strength. You add just a few drops to the tofu mixture to awaken the taste buds and livening the whole dish. You turn on the food processor and watch the mixture spiral inside of it. As you go deeper and deeper, you feel the hum of the motor. As the mixture transforms into something creamy, almost silky. And when you stop the food processor and lift the lid, the scent of sesame and the tang of umeboshi rise together, rich, earthy, mysterious. You place the filling aside and heat another sauté pan over a flame. You heat more olive oil and sauté, more onions and garlic and rosemary, repeating the ritual, layering the scent. The sound of sizzling fills the room. And then you add a big handful of sliced shiitake mushrooms. They are dark and soft, almost rubbery. And as the mushrooms join the onions, they curl and soften even more, giving off a deep, forest aroma. You season them with soy sauce, the liquid hissing and caramelizing the mushrooms just slightly at the edges. Shiitake mushrooms have been cultivated for over a thousand years. They contain natural compounds that support the body's defenses. And in traditional medicine, they're said to strengthen the life force or chi. You fold the mushroom mixture into the tofu cream, stirring until the textures merge. Your gentle kitchen timer goes off because the millet is ready now. You turn off the stove and remove the lid, steam rising in your face. It smells nutty and fragrant. You spoon the millet into a baking dish, pressing it gently down to form a rustic golden crust. Now you spread the tofu mushroom filling on top of the millet, smoothing it at the back of a spoon. The colors are beautiful. Pale cream and brown flecked with green rosemary. And they echo the hills outside the window. You drizzle one last spoonful of soy sauce over the surface to help it brown. And then you slide the dish into the oven. And now you rest. The air in the house is becoming warmer. A scent of rosemary and roasted millet fills the room. You look through the window and watch as the afternoon light fades. You hear a crow call from a maple tree in the distance. As the quiche is baking, quietly, steadily, the millet is setting. And the tofu is gathering a golden crust. You pour yourself a cup of tea and go outside. You sit in a rocking chair and watch the leaves fall. And as they fall, you are going deeper and deeper. As you align with something very old, very intuitive. The letting go of autumn. And as the leaves float down. Bright red. Perfect orange. Vibrant yellow. You are letting go. Going deeper and deeper. You return to the house and pull the dish from the oven. The top is golden and the edges are crisp. It surfaces glistening faintly. And you set it on a potholder to cool. And as it rests, the aroma deepens. It smells of roasted grains, herbs. And the faint sourness of umeboshi. There's a round wooden dining room table in the middle of the room. And you set it with old family placemats and mix and match silverware. You light three candles in the middle of the table and set the quiche in front of them. On the side, you place a big plate of steamed grains. Your friends arrive. It's getting dark outside and colder now, but you are all here together in the warm, cozy farmhouse. And you have such warm, nourishing food bringing you together in this dark season. You cut a slice of the quiche. The millet crust holds firm. You pass pieces around until everyone has one. And now you sit down to yours. Steam is rising from the filling. Your fork moves down through the tofu, creamy and tender. And you take your first bite. The flavors are simple and deep and satisfying. Warm and comforting. These are ancient foods. Your body is responding. The millet is grounding you. The tofu sustaining you. The garlic is cleansing you. Rosemary is opening you. The mushrooms are strengthening you. And the olive oil is soothing you. And your friends are loving you. And you feel fully alive. You choose slowly with gratitude. The food itself is slowing you down, bringing you home to your body. Back to this moment. And you feel the warmth of the food spreading through your chest. Down your arms, deep into your belly. As you go deeper and deeper. As the leaves drift down through the cool autumn air. You feel warm. And full. As you drift. And float. And dream. You