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Food Fright
by camille
When I travel on airplanes I often indulge in one of my favorite guilty plea-
sures: trashy magazines. Nothing makes the time fly like most- embarrassing-
first- date stories and completely impractical fashion advice. And of course,
always, the diet dos and don’ts. Which ten foods you should eat to melt fat
have more energy. On a recent trip I came across an article warning
about the Danger Foods for Dieters: the hazards of hidden calories and
craving triggers, revealed in a tone I’d thought was reserved for shows like
Unsolved Mysteries. Would I even be able to sleep that night for fear of an
800-calorie smoothie (disguised as a healthy fruit drink) jumping out from
under my bed and pouring itself down my esophagus? Yikes!!
Can we really be this afraid of the stuff that sustains human life? Of
where our food comes from, and what it might do to us? We can, we are.
TV dinners and neon blue Jell- O are unsolved mysteries. As far removed
as most of us are from the processes of growing and preparing our food, it
makes a certain kind of sense to see food as the enemy. It’s very natural to
fear the unknown.
The first step toward valuing and trusting food is probably eating food
that has some integrity. People who hold their traditions of food prepara-
tion and presentation in high regard don’t tend to bargain- shop for cheap
calories. Associating food with emotional comfort can lead to a life of scary
habits and pitfalls, if the training ground is candy bars for good report cards
and suckers for bravery during a booster shot. But there are other ways to
go. Some of my happiest family memories involve making and eating elabo-
rate meals for special occasions. Food turns events into celebrations. It’s
not just about the food, but the experience of creating and then consuming
it. People need families and communities for this kind of experience. Kids
need parents, or some kind of guide, to lead them toward the food routines
our bodies need. Becoming familiar with the process of food production