The subject of food is a wondrous topic for debate
and discussion, since food is relevant to all of us. People eat food for many
different reasons: nutritional, emotional and even social. Within these
motivations is a goldmine of information for raising our consciousness about
food. Is food my friend or my enemy? What is driving me to eat? What is my soul
hungry for? What do I truly need? Ultimately, what we eat is a personal choice
for each of us.
Our food choices and motivations for eating can have
a positive or negative effect on our health, especially over time. There is an
old saying, "eat to live, don't live to eat." This adage warns us
that eating can take over the focus of our lives, rather than choosing to enjoy
food as a form of nourishment to fuel our energy. When a person becomes
obsessed or compulsive in their thinking about what foods they eat, then
unacceptable foods may be perceived as "the enemy." Mental judgments
about foods can create so much stress in the body/mind complex that they ignite
fear in the system, which may compromise the body's immune functioning. Food
then becomes a foe rather than a friend. This belief that certain foods are
shameful or forbidden can be handled in a more positive way. Consider my friend
Leela, who eats for nutritional reasons.
Leela was diagnosed with breast cancer a few years
back. She had to have surgery and follow up physical therapy. As soon as she
received the cancer diagnosis, she started researching how to improve and
change her diet to be more life sustaining rather than eating a cancer-inducing
diet. She took responsibility for her future by eating consciously. This new
regimen encouraged health and wellness by eating living food. By eliminating
sugars, fats, GMOs, meats, dairy and processed foods, and eating fresh organic
vegetables grown locally, she came alive again. She eats organic food now and
takes a myriad of herbs and supplements, drinks life enhancing green drinks,
and carries filtered water with her. I have been at a couple of social
functions with Leela, and observe her when she cannot get the foods she prefers
and instead, has to eat non-organic food. When this happens, I observe her
blessing the food and asking for her body to be rejuvenated from it. She allows
the light of consciousness to guide her to eat mindfully, rather than worrying
that pesticides from non-organic carrots are going to kill her. She laughs and
says, "The fear of food is more harmful than the food choice itself, so
let's just enjoy it!"
Read more on... Food,
Friend or Foe?
Author: Liah Howard

No comments:
Post a Comment