Hi, Joanna! It’s difficult to cook and eat healthy for one, isn’t it? Then again, it’d be difficult to cook for a family with kids and be healthy too.
I live alone, and find myself making rather simple small meals for myself. I buy a container of salad greens and some veggies to add to it, but if I don’t have salad every day I’m wasting stuff when it goes limp in four days. So I’ve started keeping salad stuff at the office and having it every day. For dinner, I often take about half a bag of winter veggies (the cauliflower and broccoli florets and carrots in the bag at the supermarket) and put them on a small piece of foil and spray water then olive oil on them, sprinkle with seasonings, and roast in the small convection/toaster oven I have until they’re a bit carmelized. You can do a small chicken breast at the same time.
Some nights, dinner is a sliced tomato and some fresh mozzarella on top of a Wasa high fiber cracker, with some seasonings and maybe onion. Eggs, or egg substitute, make a nice easy meal any time.
I take it you’re not living in campus housing. No meal ticket? When I was at Penn State, my junior year I lost a lot of weight, and the nightly salad bar was a godsend.