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Six Healing Secrets of Food

by Deborah Kesten

Deborah Kesten

Because our current approach to nutrition isn't working well for so many of us, as a nutrition researcher, educator, and health journalist, it appalls me that so much of the literature in my field continues to focus exclusively on only one of the six secrets: what to eat. If the dice in Las Vegas casinos were fixed so that only the same side kept showing up every time you rolled them, everyone would scream "cheat!"

 
We are being cheated nutritionally. Food constitutes a six-part gift, but all we're hearing about is one thing. But this skewed perspective, focusing solely on the physiological aspects of food, has become the norm. I call our one-sided, limited view the Dark Ages of nutrition. We think that nutritional science is at its pinnacle, but in fact, most of us are still in the dark about what can most benefit us about food. This is because we're ignoring the most important elements of food and nutrition -- the healing secrets of food -- that have served humankind for centuries. They are:

1. Unite with others through food.

2. Be aware of your feelings before, during, and after eating.

3. Bring moment-to-moment nonjudgmental awareness to each aspect of the meal.

4. Appreciate food and its origins -- from the heart.

5. Create union with the Divine by "flavoring" food with love.

6. Eat fresh, whole foods in their natural state as often as possible.

All these elements count -- not just one or two in isolation.

From Secret to Celebration

As powerful as the healing secrets of food are, I am disappointed that experts -- from food writers to dietitians and religious leaders -- don't learn, practice, and teach what these secrets have to offer, emphasizing their valuable health-giving properties and benefits every opportunity they get.

I am disappointed that we consider only what can be measured in food, while we've forgotten that what is not so easily measured might be much more valuable to our health. I am disappointed that society as a whole isn't paying more attention to the healing secrets of food. Instead we choose to ignore a powerful truth: food has the ability to heal us in many ways -- if we take the time to tap into its powerful healing properties.

Where, I wonder, is the meaning, the invisible satisfaction in our food? The human connection? The pleasure? The delight? The soul satisfaction? Where are the missing "secret ingredients," what philosopher Huston Smith calls "forgotten truth" about food and its meaning in our lives? Author Ken Wilbur articulates this dilemma of objective scientific truth versus underlying meaning that cannot be measured objectively. In his book The Marriage of Sense and Soul, he writes, "Science is clearly one of the most profound methods that humans have yet devised for discovering truth, while religion remains the single greatest force for generating meaning."

Our ancient ancestors understood instinctively the significance of putting meaning into meals. Throughout the centuries, people of many religions and cultural traditions have infused food with meaning in ways that are still evident today. For instance, devout Christians begin meals with a prayer of thanks; Indians refer to bhoga, a collective term for any food ingredient being used as an offering to God; with compassion for food animals as a guideline, Jewish dietary laws specify prohibited and acceptable food; and a reverence for, and connection to, nature and food is an integral part of Native American Indian beliefs.

When the meaning in our meals is lost, what's left is a list of rules and regulations that are not meaningful and therefore not motivating or sustainable. This truth became evident as my mom and dad struggled to overcome their heart problems. I knew they understood the heart-healthy dietary information I'd given them, but in retrospect, I realize that the underlying message was, "You should be eating differently. You should stop eating familiar and comfortable foods. You should assess and analyze what you're eating." Should.

Surely what we should do or eat isn't a great motivator (nor is it emotionally appetizing). Indeed, the dictionary states that the word should implies obligation. Is this what food is really about? Is it something we're obligated to eat, to analyze, to weigh, to judge, to avoid, to crave, to overconsume, to underconsume, to control, to love, to hate, to fear, or to revere?

When we assess the vast nutritional resources of our culinary heritage and merge this wisdom with what modern nutritional science has to tell us, our relationship to food becomes integrative and therefore optimal. In lieu of being tossed around in a storm of nutrients and numbers, you become empowered to actualize an eating style that holds the potential not only to nourish your physical health but also to enhance your emotional, spiritual, and social well-being. Food becomes a celebration of life.

The Main Course

I'm calling for a renaissance -- a reflowering of the way we view food and nutrition. This new view asks that we pay attention to all the healing secrets -- and to demystifying, understanding, and practicing them every day. I'm especially thrilled to tell you about these long-lost healing secrets -- not only because of their timeless wisdom, but because they contain the answers we've been looking for -- but in all the wrong places.

Ultimately, their message is simple: the healing gifts of food are available to us each time we eat. As a matter of fact, every time you shop for, prepare, and eat food you have the opportunity to connect with the life-giving, life-containing mystery inherent in food. These activities are also opportunities to connect with loved ones, with the earth, with life itself. In this way, you can heal not only yourself but, ultimately, the planet.

 


 

 This article is excerpted from:

 

The Healing Secrets of Food
by Deborah Kesten.

Reprinted with permission of the publisher, New World Library, Novato, California. http://www.newworldlibrary.com

Info/Order this book.


 

Deborah Kesten About the Author

DEBORAH KESTEN, MPH is an award-winning author who has also been a research nutritionist, nutrition educator, and health journalist for more than 15 years. Her first book, Feeding the Body, Nourishing the Soul, received the prestigious Independent Publishers' Book Award in 1998. She has taught courses on integrative nutrition at California Pacific Medical Center's Institute for Health and Healing in San Francisco, lectured at San Francisco State University's Department of Holistic Health, and continues to lecture and conduct workshops internationally.


 

 

Comments (11) >> feed

Debi Cobb said: _

  Dear Deborah, I am now in remission from a year of Chemo & Radiation but the form of Cancer I HAD has left me in Horrific Pain...I had Rhabdomoya Sarcoma and Surgery and IMRT "a type" of radiation is also out..The Tumor is dead but it has wrapped around my spine and I'm SEARCHING for any help I can get..I'm 51 yrs old and have alot I want to do yet, Do you know ANYONE or ANYTHING that can help me with my pain?? Thx Always Debi...
September 19, 2007

Wesley Herrick said: _

  Debi,
I found a lot of good help thru www.laf.org Lance Armstrong's group.
Even after hope is long gone faith remains.
Keep breathing,
Wes
October 18, 2007

sikandar said: _

  respected maddam
with due respect and humble submission,i like to say that my name is sikandar hayat,and my age is 35 year, recently,i have started a publishing house at delhi but i have a problem,i cannot pay money against your permission.
but i shall be grateful to you forever more.
thank you
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
November 16, 2007

Gerald (Jerry) Landis said: _

  We live in a "one size fits all" environment. Really this is not completely true.

Each of us as God's creatures are unique and created just a little bit differently.

However we can be thankful that someday through careful searching we can find
answers and someday those of us who receive Him as Saviour will be with His Heaven.

We will than know answers to many unanswered questions during our journey here.

Blessings to all who might read this.
November 17, 2007

zeny said: _

  Thanks for nice information ..

zeny
December 27, 2007

melisa said: _

  smilies/grin.gif GOOD!
February 04, 2008

Sean said: _

  What a load of crap! Have you noticed that people are actually living longer and healthier lives? Largely due to a stable supply of food in developed nations and improved medical care.
August 12, 2008

Devender Singh Dadyal said: _

  Yes, I do agree with the six secrets listed in the article by you. One should follow them. I am a firm believer that tasty satvic food connects to one's innerself. The six most important factors about food will definately help one's to connect with the Divine Inner True Self. Thanks for your valuable contribution in this regard to bring the facts in light and one's knowledge. GOD BLESS YOU.

Regards
Devender Singh Dadyal
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

April 01, 2009

A. Coklyat said: _

  Dear All,

If I may quote, since this article is so important:

" Food constitutes a six-part gift, but all we're hearing about is one thing.... most of us are still in the dark about what can most benefit us about food. This is because we're ignoring the most important elements of food and nutrition -- the healing secrets of food -- that have served humankind for centuries. They are:

1. Unite with others through food.

2. Be aware of your feelings before, during, and after eating.

3. Bring moment-to-moment nonjudgmental awareness to each aspect of the meal.

4. Appreciate food and its origins -- from the heart.

5. Create union with the Divine by "flavoring" food with love.

6. Eat fresh, whole foods in their natural state as often as possible.

All these elements count -- not just one or two in isolation. "

I have heard bits and pieces of such a concept over the years. It was only here did they all come together so well. Thank you DEBORAH KESTEN for re-membering and sharing this. I put in a request at my library to buy your book!

All the best to All!

Sincerely,

A. Coklyat
April 25, 2009

SriGuru said: _

  Vedic Text(Hinduism): The Bhagavad Gita : Chapter 3. Karma-yoga; TEXT 13

on How food should be consumed and offered to the Supreme Bhagavān Hari.

Translation by multiple authors

yajna-sistasinah santo mucyante sarva-kilbisaih
bhunjate te tv agham papa ye pacanty atma-karanat

SYNONYMS
yajna-sista--food taken after performance of yajna; asinah--eaters; santah--the pious followers of Bhagavan Hari or Visnu; mucyante--get relief from; sarva--all kinds of; kilbisaih--from sins; bhunjate--enjoy; te--they; tu--but; agham-- sins; papah--sinners; ye--those; pacanti--prepare food; atma-karanat--for their own enjoyment.

TRANSLATION
The devotees of Bhagavān Hari or Visnu (God with infinite opulences; known and the unknown) are released from all kinds of sins because they eat food which is offered first for sacrifice. Others, who prepare food for personal sense enjoyment, verily eat only sin.
November 11, 2009

what said: _

  this was the worst read ive ever seen, those arent 6 secrets, thats 6 random sentences you just threw together that have no realistic meaning. Your whole article is useless, what healing are you even talking about.
here in one sentence I will beat your entire article --> Pineapple has bromelain which is a natural anti-inflammatory --> there now the readers can have something useful that is actually healing from food.
February 01, 2010
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