When You Eat, Do You Think “Food” or “Nutrients”?
This may seem like a strange question initially, but if you really think about it, both the question and your answer can be extremely revealing.
Since becoming acquainted with Jeanie Marshall’s Ask Yourself Empowering Questions Video, I often consider what questions might be the most empowering for me to suggest that you ask yourself.
Perhaps you’ve come to this web site for answers. I certainly hope to provide you with some answers, or perhaps better yet, choices so that you can find the best answer for yourself. And today, I have some questions.
Do you Choose Food or Nutrients?
Some people who think "I’ve just got to have food" are likely to grab a pizza or candy bar or something else that’s readily available or advertised with an enticing jingle.
However, people who think, "I’ve just got to have nutrients" are more likely to think about getting such things as minerals, enzymes, amino acids, vitamins, pH balance, range of nutrition, or energy.
Many of the items readily available in stores, even so-called healthy stores, are so highly processed that they have few nutrients remaining. These products are so familiar and available that they have become the norm. It’s not that everyone eats them, but the demand is extremely high for items that are manufactured into a box so that they can sit on the shelf for years.
On the other hand, choosing fresh food that’s closest to its natural state is a choice for nutrients. An orange that you peel and eat is a whole food with enzymes and vitamins and taste; it will hydrate your system. An orange drink sweetened with high fructose corn syrup will pull nutrients from your system and dehydrate you, making you hungrier for more of the same or similar foods.
Do You Choose the Same Type of Food Today as Yesterday?
I remember reading several years ago that most people eat essentially the same 12 items regularly. That doesn’t mean that everyone eats the same 12 items, but that most people choose from a very narrow and similar selection each day.
Initially, the body usually finds unfamiliar items distasteful, then the items became familiar, and then they become the norm. Let’s take coffee, for example. The first sip of coffee is usually quite distasteful. It’s bitter. Some neutralize or sweeten the taste with dairy or sugar in some variation. Coffee shops have some very ingenious ways to disguise the taste of coffee.
Without doubt, drinking coffee is the norm in many parts of the world. Most people who have become accustomed to drinking coffee and then want to stop drinking coffee must make a conscious choice, often struggling for days or weeks with that choice. If you regularly drink coffee, it’s much easier to keep drinking it than to choose something else.
I’m using coffee as an example only because most people can relate to it. I could have chosen another example: donuts or chocolate or sugar or popcorn or carrots or smoothies. The key is that we all tend to gravitate to familiar foods and create a habit of eating them.
Are Your Favorite, Familiar Foods Giving You the Necessary Nutrients?
If you feel great physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually day after day, the answer may be yes. As time passes and your body has less tolerance for non-nutritious food, you can maintain or regain your health by being attention to your food choices. And more importantly, to choose foods that contain nutrients.
Years ago, the Movie Super Size Me (2004) was in the theaters. My husband and I had heard enough about it to know that we were not the intended audience. I’ve never eaten in a MacDonald’s and my husband has only a few times when avoiding it would have caused more problems than deciding to be with the guys. Later when the movie was on DVD, we decided to watch it.
It was a very difficult movie for us to watch. At the same time, I must say that it’s a very powerful presentation of how devastating it can be to eat foods that are devoid of nutrients, meal after meal, day after day. Yes, Morgan Spurlock’s experiment was an extreme. Or was it? For many, consuming foods without minerals or enzymes is the very reason for illness with age.
When You Eat Today, Will you Be looking for Food or Nutrients?
You make choices all day long about a variety of things. When eating or choosing not to eat something, you make a decision.
I honestly don’t know what the right choices are for you. I just encourage you to ask yourself this or a similar question that empowers you to make a choice that nourishes your body.















































I try to answer that question up front to some extent. When I shop I make an effort to choose nutritious foods with minimal processing, we belong to a community farm so that we get wonderful vegetables and some fruits in season, we try to eat locally grown food as much as possible (easier in the summer than winter) etc. So meals are a combination of enjoyable food and some fairly good nutrition.
Of course, it’s not the best. We are too enwebbed in social eating, too easily swayed by favorite tastes, and maybe too engrained in our own patterns to make the effort to change much, unless there is a “problem”.
I think your reminder that this is a question we need to keep bringing up for ourselves is a good one.
Hi Joy,
After reading your wonderful article, I went out to lunch. More than ever, I was aware of all the visual images about “food” yet most were for fast foods and the like. Of all the red signs, I saw only one green one (Whole Foods), and even that wonderful store has more than half its items as highly processed. But, at least, they do have enough “whole” foods to stand out in the crowd and to keep me returning.
I’m sometimes frustrated to be not part of the majority, but most of the time I am satisfied to make the choices that work for me and for my family. Sometimes I have to work a little harder to forage for my preferred food, but I manage.
Thanks so much for this blog. I check it daily. When you don’t have a new article, I re-read one or I follow one of your suggested links to somewhere else.
Allen
Becky,
It’s always such a delight to hear from you. Thanks for your thoughtful comments.
One of the main reasons I decided to start this blog is that I think raw food eating can be very delicious eating.
When I’m accustomed to nutrient-dense foods, the tastes of the nutrient-devoid foods are not as palatable to me. And when I’m accustomed to the nutrient-devoid foods, the the tastes of the nutrient-dense foods are not as palatable to me.
It does sound that you are very conscious of making good choices. And I encourage you to continue to do just what you are doing!
Joyfully,
Joy
Allen,
How wonderful that you were more aware of the visual signs that prompt you to make choices. Being in alignment with yourself is all the majority you need.
I hope you will add more comments over time. I value what you’ve said.
Joyfully,
Joy