Friday, May 10, 2013

Food, Glorious Food

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Side Wall Mural - Silver City Food Co-op
I try not to spend too much time in the valley of regret. And the older I get, the bigger and deeper that valley seems to grow. How I could have been a better parent, sister, daughter, friend, spouse. Or managed my finances. Or gotten out sooner from a soul stripping corporate career.
I bring this up because I attended the Silver City Food Co-op annual member meeting a few weeks ago. My friend Carm is a new board member and they couldn’t be better served. This co-op has been in place for 39 years and has more than 2000 members.  Not bad for a town of 10,000 and surrounding area of 29,000. The Co-op does an amazing job of stocking local, organic and bulk foods and other products. It’s my new happy place.
Welcome to my new happy place
The regret comes in that it took me decades to figure out the trueness of the statement “You are what you eat.”  Put differently, if you eat crappy food, prepare to feel crappy. When I read articles now, I could kick myself for the garbage I fed my daughter. Kraft Mac and Cheese. Hot dogs. Pancakes and fake syrup.  Any other wheat based product. Fruits and vegetables sprayed with god knows what pesticide. Damn, damn, damn. One recent article by Yoni Freedhoff brings up a painful point. The name of the article is: “We’d all die for our kids—so why are we still feeding them processed junk?” Here’s the link. It’s worth the read.
On top of this, one of the presentations at the Food Co-op annual meeting was about GMO’s and Monsanto. It was chilling. Just google GMO/Monsanto and you will be bombarded by articles. I will provide the link to another article here: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/25/us-roundup-health-study-idUSBRE93O13H20130425
This article struck a very special nerve, as it talks about links to Parkinson’s and other diseases as a result of pesticide and herbicide spraying of crops. My mother was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in her sixties. She was already compromised physically as a result of a life threatening case of polio in 1958. I discovered a few years after her death in 2007 that my folks had their lush green rolling lawn sprayed several times a year with pesticides and weed killers through a company like ChemLawn.  This went on for over 35+ years. I was helping organize some of my dad’s stuff, and canceled the service. After reading this article, I wonder if there is any link. I can’t prove a damn thing. And Monsanto, et al has a practice of crushing any opposition.
And let me pile some more shit on you. If you are what you eat, you are what you put on your skin. Think about it. If you can deliver estrogen or nicotine to your body with a skin patch, what else can you deliver? How about Axiron, a testosterone treatment that men apply to their armpits? Here’s a warning right from their website:
AXIRON can transfer from your body to others. This can happen if other people come into contact with the area where the AXIRON was applied. Signs of puberty that are not expected (for example, pubic hair) have happened in young children who were accidentally exposed to testosterone through skin to skin contact with men using topical testosterone products like AXIRON. Women and children should avoid contact with the unwashed or unclothed area where AXIRON has been applied. If a woman or child makes contact with the application area, the contact area on the woman or child should be washed well with soap and water right away.

I don’t have any answers. But I am trying to be more thoughtful about the food I eat and the products I use on my body. And I am trying to not be a doomsaying paranoid. I am just trying to say – be conscious.

Let me end on a hopeful happy note. My dog is dying. I've mentioned this before. No, I'm not happy about this. But through him and  his process, I've been blessed with an important insight. Indy is a great dog, and I am having a hard time getting him to eat anything. I bought a cheap roasting chicken at Albertsons to cook and feed to him because he loves chicken. I wasn’t planning to eat it myself, just feed it to him. Which I did. But I felt bad about it. Not so much that it was a factory chicken, overbred and cruelly raised, and it was good enough for my dog and not for me. I mean, that’s bad enough. But what I really felt bad about is that I spent my money supporting the wrong thing. I didn’t support the farmer/rancher/grower that was thoughtfully raising food in a sustainable and humane way. Because it’s not just about what I eat or what my dog eats, it’s about what I do to support the people who work so hard to feed us the right way. As I said in an earlier post – it costs a lot more (unfortunately) to do the right thing.  But I am going to do better at spending on the right thing.

New Meat Market on S. Bullard
Wait, now I really mean I’m ending on a happy note! Let me continue to sing the praises of Silver City. Along with the wonderful Food Co-op, a new meat market just opened with a fabulous array of grass-fed local and organic products. And the Farmers Market opens tomorrow morning just a block from my house. I can’t wait. And Carmon and I are going to share CSA boxes of fresh produce for this growing season.
Produce section at Co-op
Say NO to GMO


Bulk items at Co-op



If you’ve managed to read this whole post without your eyes glazing over and rolling to the back of your head, I have a little request. Please take a moment to think if you might want to consider making a little (or big) change about what you eat, what you feed your friends and family, and who you really want to support. That’s all. Now go have a wonderful day.

1 comment:

  1. Eileen, thank you for getting this information 'out there'! I share the same disgust that foods we grew up on, like Cheerios and Rice Crispies, are made with GMO ingredients. The "Right To Know" (GMO labeling) bill failed in California (Prop 37, fall 2012), after Monsanto gave more than 4 million to defeat it, but now a national law is being discussed. This may lead to a better result. FYI, Whole Foods has committed to labeling GMO foods, regardless of a national bill. If food companies know they need this labeling to sell at Whole Foods, our independent stores can reap the benefit. Whole Foods is the largest natural food chain (like it or not) and their stand will put pressure on food companies. Next up, to change the brainwash of smart scientists.

    PS Your dog Indy has lived a super life with you; he is well loved and knows it.

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