You know those people who eat a diet that is actively shortening their lives and ruining their health right now? Why donāt they just take responsibility for themselves?
Letās take that question seriously.
Most of us live sedentary lives in bodies that are evolved for long hard work. Our instincts to get all the energy we can havenāt caught up with our culture of sitting around and food on demand. Our brains tell us to eat more than we need.
About half of the stuff for sale at your supermarket is really really bad for you. Do āthose peopleā know this? Not if they arenāt actively searching for good information. The richest, most powerful food companies on earth make ultra-processed food-like substances full of nutritionless calories. These substances are designed to trigger all the crave and more switches in our brains. They use their vast marketing budgets to associate those worthless products in our minds with beautiful, happy, fulfilled lives.
If āthose peopleā didnāt grow up eating home-cooked meals with their families around a dinner table a few times a week, they are a lot less likely to have built-in resistance to the lies of the food marketers. Family dinners during childhood are one of best predictors of healthy eating as an adult.
Letās say āthose peopleā wanted to buy healthful food. Can they? A lot of people, especially in low-income areas, only have easy access to convenience stores in which 90% of the stuff is trying to kill you. Imagine living in a place where you had to spend an hour on a bus to get to a decent supermarket. How would you get a weekās worth of groceries home for your family? Those areas are called āfood desertsā.
What about time? What if āthose peopleā are working a couple jobs to make ends meet and so are their partners, if they have partners. We know that in the 21st century one income is rarely enough to raise a family. Where do they find the time or energy to cook healthy food?
On top of all that, letās toss in TV and social media full of celebrity chefs and our cultureās fetishising of beautiful food. It constantly reinforces the idea that good cooking is for the rich and talented.
Finally, all that interconnected stuff is filtered through an individualās mental and emotional relationship with food. Thereās no guarantee itās a healthy filter.
So, why donāt āthose peopleā take personal responsibility? You donāt know how hard they are trying, but you do know that almost every food-related thing they come in contact with ā inside and out ā is working against them. How do you beat that system without a shedload of help?
I learned most of this stuff while doing my culinary arts degree. If you want to learn more about food systems, watch Food Inc. To learn more about what to eat, read Food Rules. Do you need kitchen confidence? FFOREST friend Katerina Pavlakis will help you.
Public Enemy recently turned He Got Game into She Got Game and itās excellent. Bonus: Blu DeTiger on bass.
Grow slowly
Jeff




Amen.