4 Ways to Include Jesus in Your Weight Loss Journey (When You’re a Mom and Your Life Is Not Your Own)
Let’s just say the quiet part out loud:
Weight loss is hard.
Weight loss as a mom? Next-level hard.
Because once you become a mom, your life is no longer… your life.
Your body feeds other humans.
Your schedule belongs to small people.
Your meals are interrupted.
Your sleep is theoretical.
And yes—some moms absolutely crush life.
They meal prep.
They work out at 5am.
They look glowing and organized and make the rest of us question everything.
Bless them.
And also… this blog is for the rest of us.
When Weight Loss Feels Impossible as a Mom
It’s difficult to lose weight when your days are built around service.
The family comes first.
The kids come first.
The needs never stop.
And somewhere between snack duty and laundry, your body quietly becomes something you manage last.
I remember when my kids were babies, scarfing food like a raccoon under pressure.
I truly believed, with my whole heart, that I might never eat again.
So I ate fast.
Standing up.
Over the sink.
With one eye on the baby monitor.
Later, when they were a little older, I ate whatever they didn’t eat.
Mac and cheese.
Dino nuggets.
The crusts of grilled cheese.
You know the drill.
I gained weight.
Then after my second daughter, I lost a lot of weight without really trying.
(Shout-out to hormones doing mysterious things.)
And then… COVID.
Isolation.
Stress.
Health issues.
And the weight came piling back on.
Women’s weight goes up and down.
Our bodies respond to seasons.
And motherhood is a very real season.
So how do we walk through weight loss without shame—and with Jesus?
Here are four ways.
1. Invite Jesus Into the Process (Not Just the Outcome)
We are very good at asking God to “help us lose the weight.”
We are less good at inviting Him into:
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what we eat
-
how we move
-
how we talk to ourselves
-
how much pressure we carry
“Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.”
— Matthew 6:33
Weight loss doesn’t come first.
Obedience does.
Trust does.
Listening does.
Ask Him:
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Lord, what foods help my body feel nourished right now?
-
What kind of movement would bless me—not punish me?
-
What am I carrying that You never asked me to?
Jesus is not a drill sergeant.
He is a shepherd.
2. Let Go of Comparison (Even the ‘Good’ Kind)
Comparison is a joy thief—and it’s especially cruel in motherhood.
There will always be a mom who:
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wakes up earlier than you
-
cooks better than you
-
works out harder than you
-
looks like she has her life together
And here’s the truth:
You are not called to her body, her routine, or her season.
“Let us run with endurance the race that is set before us.”
— Hebrews 12:1
Your race.
Not hers.
Weight loss that’s fueled by comparison burns hot and fast—and then burns out.
Weight loss rooted in obedience lasts.
3. Ask God to Heal Your Relationship With Food
Food is emotional for moms.
We eat fast.
We eat last.
We eat leftovers.
We eat stress.
We eat exhaustion.
And sometimes we eat like we’re bracing for impact.
“Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”
— 1 Corinthians 10:31
That doesn’t mean perfection.
It means awareness.
Invite Jesus into:
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your hunger
-
your fullness
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your cravings
-
your fears around food
Ask Him to slow you down.
To help you eat like provision is secure.
Because it is.
You will eat again.
You don’t have to hoard your calories like a toddler snack cup.
4. Practice Grace-Filled Consistency, Not All-or-Nothing
Moms are notorious for the “I’ll start Monday” mindset.
And when Monday goes sideways, we quit.
Jesus does not operate in all-or-nothing.
“His mercies are new every morning.”
— Lamentations 3:22–23
Not new every January.
Not new after a perfect week.
Every morning.
Some days you’ll move your body.
Some days you’ll just survive.
Both count.
Weight loss doesn’t require intensity.
It requires faithfulness.
Small choices.
Over time.
In grace.
A Final Word for Tired Moms
Your body is not failing you.
It’s responding to the life you’re living.
A life of service.
A life of love.
A life of pouring out.
Jesus sees that.
Include Him—not just in your goals, but in your days.
Ask Him what health looks like in this season.
Trust Him with the timing.
And be gentle with yourself along the way.
Because weight loss with Jesus isn’t about shrinking yourself.
It’s about becoming whole.
© 2026 Alissa Hill Kinnear. All rights reserved. Please do not copy, reproduce, or distribute any part of this blog without written permission. Sharing direct links is always welcome and appreciated!



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