Why Choosing What to Eat Feels Hard
"What should I eat?" seems simple, but repeated choices consume cognitive energy. This is tied to the paradox of choice and decision fatigue.
1. Too many options
More options can reduce satisfaction because we compare alternatives and fear missing a better one.
The stronger the need for a perfect choice, the stronger the regret afterward.
2. Decision fatigue
After work or study, your decision capacity is lower. That is why menu choice can feel unexpectedly exhausting at the end of the day.
3. Why random recommendation helps
Delegating the first step to a recommendation tool reduces friction and helps break repetitive food habits.
4. Keep it practical
Use one additional rule after recommendation: add protein, vegetables, or balance by portion size. This keeps convenience without losing nutrition quality.