My two nutritarian friends came into town on Friday and we had quite the feast:
I made sweet potatoes topped with black beans and greens etc and a dollop of soy yogurt (a recipe from the Fuhrman site). We made salad from Holly's lettuce and pear, my red pepper and a yummy salad dressing from the Fuhrman site. Holly made delicious stuffed mushrooms. Suz brought curried squash on brown rice. I got full eating all this great food. After our feast, we went on a walk at Olbrich community gardens, and then went, where else, to the co-op. That was interesting as we shared many food tips about all our favorite foods, as well as the ones we have to avoid (the cowgirl cookies are sometimes a challenge for me). I got a lot of new ideas from our discussions as we strolled through the store.
Some quotable quotes were "I'm an unethical vegan" and "I'm a vegan on weekdays."
Today I heard a great quote: "The best way to bring someone over to your cause is to have more fun than them." For me, the biggest difficulty about eating healthy is sometimes thinking that I'm missing out on what everyone else is eating. It's all in how you look at it. I just need to think of it as I'm the lucky one, having the most fun eating the best food. Along those lines, last weekend I was out on a walk at a conservancy and a group was roasting marshmallows over a fire and making s'mores. Well, you know how those nostalgic feelings can make you wish you were joining them. Today I was meditating in front of my fireplace (wow, is that ever easy to meditate in front of a fire!) and I was thinking about our ancestors roasting winter squash in their fire. Then I realized, our difficulties in eating healthy usually arise from nostalgia for eating the things we used to eat and drink with our family and friends. Maybe we just need to go back further in time. The last 50 years are a blip on the history of our people. Go back further, and we are talking sweets only on very special occasions. So just let your nostalgia go a little further back in time and you can imagine roasting squash instead of marshmallows, and relishing a good fruit instead of ice cream.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(1614)
-
▼
October
(31)
- meetups and thoughts
- weekend cooking
- The Brain Controls Insulin Action
- Guest Commentary: Grappling with Health Care Workf...
- Harvard Food Law Society "Forum on Food Policy" TE...
- Blogs and meetups
- Checking in
- Losing Fat With Simple Food-- Two Reader Anecdotes
- More success stories
- The Runner-Up(s)
- And the winner is...
- October 21 Special Conference
- Guest Commentary: JSPH's Academic Programs are Thr...
- Pre-Thanksgiving Challenge!
- Diabetes Affects Kidney
- Bird Flu Infection
- day 42!
- MIstakes are good--haha, that typo was not intenti...
- Day 41, winding down!
- Is it Day 40?
- Guest Commentary: International Collaboration with...
- The Case for the Food Reward Hypothesis of Obesity...
- Day 36
- Day 35
- Day 34 of the Challenge
- some useful tips from PeerTrainer
- day something
- Day 32 of the Challenge, and Napoleon Hill
- The NEXT Challenge
- Back from vacation!
- The Case for the Food Reward Hypothesis of Obesity...
-
▼
October
(31)