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Master Naturalist, Bible teacher, author, wife, and mama of four! Join our adventures of discovering God while adventuring in creation.
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I can just see it. A small gathering of whole food mamas browsing through the bulk bins at the local health store discussing, politely but with a hint of superiority, their healthy eating practices and mantras. “Oh really? This flour has low gluten content?” One may ask. “Oh why yes, I like to use it, but only on the rare occasion I don’t have time to grind my own flour.” The other replies.
Dreads pipes up with her own two cents, “Have you tried sprouting your grains before grinding them? I find them much more easy to digest that way.” The others scrunch their faces in consideration of how to respond; how to one-up. “Oh,” another offers the last word, “I just avoid wheat all together.” She is surely the “wholiest” of us all. I glance into my cart, and covertly nudge a head of cabbage over to hide a bag of organic tortillas. They don’t look so whole anymore.
It’s a silly scenario perhaps, and a bit exaggerated, but sometimes we need a bit of Hyperbole to get a point across. I see the underlying message of this scenario played out all the time in the conversations we hold surrounding food. Food has become a very passionate and political topic.
My silly health food store scenario reminds me of a story found in the Bible, when Jesus’ disciples were discussing which of them was the greatest.
On the outside looking in, it seems outrageously pious, actually asking your friends if they think you are the greatest of your peer group. But there is an underlying truth here that I believe runs through our attitudes and conversations surrounding food. There is a hierarchy, a ranking system, determined by dedication, practices, self-control, and knowledge. And all the time the question hums above us, who is winning at this game?
But I look at how Jesus addressed His disciples in response to their haughty attitudes. He told them, “He must be last and a servant of all.”
I must become a servant of all. I must aim to serve my family, for this is the whole point of all of my efforts in our whole food Endeavor. A servant of all. Yes, I also want to spread knowledge, offer advice, and share what we have learned with others, but only ever with the heart of a servant; not superiority and never with a holier-than-thou attitude. The whole point is service.
In our food culture today we have created a tone of condemnation. We one-up each other by indirectly boasting our newest food explorations, our disciplines in avoiding certain foods, and by underhandedly tearing each other down by the way we talk about our personal dietary food choices. Too few build up these days. I want to build up.
Us whole food moms, us “foodies”, us “crunchies”, whatever we are–we are passionate about what we eat and what we feed our families. But we need to aim that passion at serving our families, not tearing down the food creeds of others. We all have our own personal research, understanding, preferences, tolerances and intolerances, schedules, and convictions to hold to. This is a personal issue, and we need to be so very careful about the tone we hold in communicating with others about the way we eat.
Feeding our families well is not a competition. It is a personal responsibility. It is a personal calling. And even though it is all good and helpful to trade knowledge, stories, and recipes, at the very core it is a personal issue built of personal decisions.
And so I challenge you to think before you speak regarding your diet and food. Pay attention to your tone and what words you use, and always be sensitive to the fact that each of us is on a personal journey, and every one of us is at a different stage of that journey.
Ask questions. Learn from others for the sake of learning, not sharing your own opinion. Pursue sound knowledge from reliable sources that you can incorporate into your own kitchen, with your main focus being to serve your own family.
Most importantly: Feed yourself well. Feed your family well. Feed your friends and neighbors well. Just understand and cook good, real, whole food, and feed it to others. That will be the most affective way to share your beliefs and passions about what you believe about food.
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Eryn, very well written! I’ve been guilty myself of making “food judgements” on others. Thanks for this reminder to think before speaking (a good practice in any matter). 🙂
Thanks Brenda! 😀
Thanks for these wise words Eryn!! I was actually just thinking about this concept the other day – how easy it is to become legalistic about food – and anything really! That darn legalism just won’t leave us alone! It’s not just a churchy/religiousy disease. I really resonate with your insightful distinction between healthy eating being a responsibility and not a competition. So once again, THANK YOU for your fabulous blog! I’m a huge fan. Your writing helps keep my pursuit of healthy meal planning for our unique household fresh and encouraged.
PS) Your new site looks great!
Ruth, thank you so much for your comment and encouragement! 🙂 It means a lot to me to hear how the Lord is using my writing and the blog. It keeps me going. Thanks!
Well written Eryn 🙂 This is such a huge issue and there are a lot of people who hurt others without realizing it, and unfortunately those who do it on purpose. Its crazy how fast people feel attacked over food and its sad that it has gotten this way.
It is a personal family decision and one you can only decide on after a long journey that leads your family to a specific place in the “food world”
Thanks Becky 🙂 Last year when I interviewed you for the Into a whole Food Kitchen series, you really set a great example for me. I admire your humility in the food world, and the simple joy you take in feeding your family well!