The proximity effect in numbers
How small changes in distance and visibility affect what you eat at the office

By mid-afternoon, your prefrontal cortex is depleted and willpower has left the building. Research shows that proximity and visibility of food determine what you eat far more than any intention — workers ate 2.2 more pieces of candy per day just because it was visible, and snacking likelihood jumps over 50% when food is closer to where you sit. This guide explains the proximity effect, gives you a complete desk drawer snack list (shelf-stable, no meal prep), and lays out a 5-minute weekly restock protocol that makes good nutrition the default — not the exception.

| Item | Why it works | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Individual nut packets (almonds, walnuts, cashews) | Protein + monounsaturated fats + minimal glucose impact | 1-oz servings (roughly 23 almonds) are the right portion |
| Roasted chickpeas | Protein + fiber combo in one item | Lower fat than nuts, more filling per calorie |
| Single-serve almond butter packets | Protein + fat without the calorie density spike | Pairs with crackers or eaten solo |
| Seed crackers / whole-grain crackers | Fiber + complex carbs; extends other snacks | Look for ≥3g fiber per serving |
| Dark chocolate squares (70%+) | Small fat + flavonoid hit; reduces cravings for sweeter alternatives | 1–2 squares, not a bar |
| Beef jerky or turkey sticks | High protein, portable, shelf-stable | Watch sodium; aim for <400mg per serving |
| Individual nut and seed bars (RXBar, LARABAR) | Protein + fiber without added sugars | Read labels — many "protein bars" are candy bars |

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