Monthly Archives

August 2019

the internet is magic

The Internet is Magic, Vol I

August 23, 2019

The internet is magic and I love it so much. This series is all about highlighting the writing on the internet that inspired me in a positive way so that we can remember that the internet can be a magical, wonderful place when it uses its power for good. Have something you want me to feature? Drop me an email. 

internet is magic

I loved reading about Anita Vuong on We are Dore this morning. Vuong is a Death Doula, supporting people through the death process with grace, dignity and love. It’s a beautiful thing. I also love her work with ‘Guided by Flowers‘ where she repurposes flowers used for live events to brighten the lives of hospice patients. My favorite line:

“One man I gave flowers to couldn’t believe that they were for him. He opened up about how he really loved gardening, and though they weren’t tulips, he kept calling them tulips and said how much they reminded him of home. From then on, I make sure I always give flowers to men as well.”

This essay from Donald Hall via Cup of Jo this week was one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever read. Yes, I love hyperbole, but it was beautiful. I read it from my work desk during in a lull in my workday and I had to take big gulps of my water to keep myself from crying.

“After twenty years of our remarkable marriage, living and writing together in double solitude, Jane died of leukemia at forty-seven, on April 22, 1995.

Now it is April 22, 2016, and Jane has been dead for more than two decades. Earlier this year, at eighty-seven, I grieved for her in a way I had never grieved before. I was sick and thought I was dying. Every day of her dying, I stayed by her side—a year and a half. It was miserable that Jane should die so young, and it was redemptive that I could be with her every hour of every day. Last January I grieved again, this time that she would not sit beside me as I died.”

And, to wrap up, a feel-good makeover for a very deserving couple going through a difficult time on Emily Henderson Design. This is a great example of using the privilege of a platform for good. I just want to sleep all day in the big ol’ bed.

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damn delicious, deep thoughts

My Top 5 Desserts, Ranked

August 15, 2019

yummy pot de creme

Let’s play a fun game and list our Top 5 favorite desserts in rank order. Feel free to be as specific as possible.

  1. Creme brulee. The custard cousin of Pot de Creme. I came into writing this list decided that Pot de Creme was my number one, but in the exact moment I was about to hit publish, I remembered my beloved Creme Brulee and I had to bump Pot de Creme. Look, they’re both delicious but the sugar crust on a Creme Brulee just gets me. Like, how is it possible for something on this earth to be so perfect? My mom makes the best creme brulee on planet earth. Sometimes when I come home for a visit, she has a batch already made up in the fridge just waiting for us to brew a pot of decaf after dinner and bust out the blowtorch. Bless that woman and her culinary prowess.
  2. A silky smooth and luscious Chocolate Pot de Creme with freshly whipped cream on top. I had a delicious one at Angeline’s in Berkeley this weekend that prompted the writing of this post. I love it when a pot de creme is decadent but super light at the same time.
  3. My mom’s Pecan Pie. Hands down, my all-time favorite pie. She makes it with light caro syrup and homemade shortening pie crust and it is out-of-this-world good. Have you ever put whipped cream on your pecan pie? It takes it to the next level.
  4. Lemon Bars. Oh gosh, lemon bars are SO good. Anytime I am offered a lemon bar, I will eat it. It could be from a box, store bought, homemade, you name it. I am a sucker for a lemon bar. A good lemon bar? I’m DONE.
  5. Pound cake and strawberries. I love to macerate height-of-perfection Summer strawberries overnight and then pour them over pound cake with, you guessed it, fresh whipped cream. I’m sensing a trend here with the whipped cream. I don’t mind if the cake is store bought, but it has to be a pound cake. I never could get behind shortcakes or angel food cake. Pound cake for life!

Okay, thank you for indulging me here. Let me hear yours??? I’m open to revising my list.

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deep thoughts, intuitive eating, weight

My Body and Food Healing Journey, Part II: My First Diet

August 11, 2019

pexels-photo-2015097

Hello there! This post is part of a series of essays where I am attempting to retrace the pivotal moments that have defined the relationship I have with food and with my body as I continue on my journey of healing, self-love and acceptance. Learn more about the project here

I am writing this post early in the morning. I woke early to meditate, drink coffee and write. I want to give this series the very best of my brain power, so I am rising early and writing when I am fresh. After about an hour this morning, my stomach started to rumble so I made myself my first tomato sandwich of the summer. One of my absolute most favorite things to eat, ever. Toasted sourdough bread, a generous smear of mayo, sliced heirloom tomatoes, salt and pepper. Perfection. I started with one big piece of toasted sourdough and, wow, it was so delicious. After I ate it, I checked in with myself. My body wanted more, so I toasted another slice. The second slice wasn’t quite as good as the first. I felt my stomach getting full. I set my plate to the side with a bit of sandwich left, satisfied. So satisfied.

That is food freedom for me. That is listening to my body’s intuitive wisdom.

Getting to a place where I can eat anything I want at any time I want is nothing short of life changing. It is the ultimate eff you to our world of diet culture where every bite is regulated, everything we want to put into our bodies is second-guessed as to whether or not it is ‘good’ or ‘bad’.  At first, it was hard to know how to listen to my body because I had been cutting off its signals for a long time. I started ignoring my body’s cues for food super young. It’s funny, because I realize in doing this project that I have no idea of my age when I experienced my most pivotal moments with food, but if I had to guess I would estimate that I went on my first diet when I was ten or eleven. I started therapy to deal with my food issues around age 28, so I was stuck in the diet cycle for about 17 years. 17 years on a hamster wheel of either actively restricting my caloric intake via dieting, ‘binging’ which in my case was just a biological attempt at refeeding myself after severely limiting my caloric intake or ‘eating normally’ for a little while as I gathered enough willpower to start another diet. Nearly two decades in this shame spiral, but it had to start somewhere and this is the story of its genesis.

My First Diet

My mom and stepdad hosted a bbq in our backyard. There were maybe 15 people there. It was a beautiful Summer evening in Arizona, when the blistering heat of the day breaks and cool sweeps over the desert. My mom cooked hamburgers. I love hamburgers, especially my mom’s. She just knows how to put together a great burger. At the time, she had taken to stirring the powder from a french onion dip packet into the meat. It made the most flavorful patties and she went out of her way to assemble all the best accoutrements to accompany our burgers, including the freshest lettuce and the softest buns. I love my mom’s burgers, but I didn’t have one that day because I had woken up in the morning determined to get skinny by eating ‘good’ foods. Instead, I ate half a can of fruit cocktail and a tortilla. Somehow in my twisted child’s mind, that was healthier than a hamburger. I probably learned about it via Cosmo or something, but I acutely remember sitting on a picnic bench with my oldest sister and the pastor of my church eating some fruit cocktail and a microwaved tortilla while longing for a good juicy burger. That’s the feeling I remember: wanting to eat what my body wanted to eat, joining in on the full revelry of the beauty of food that a bbq seems to inspire, but sitting uncomfortably and forcing myself to eat something I didn’t want to eat.

I had no idea, really, what to eat to be skinny but at my young age, I already understood that to be ‘good’ and on a diet, I had to deny myself of the things that I wanted to eat. I had to disengage with my enjoyment of food and with my body’s intuitive wisdom and listen to some external source for what to put into my body.

Diet culture hasn’t changed one bit since my childhood. It’s still based on punishment, deprivation and  someone else telling you how to eat best for yourself. Call it intermittent fasting, plant based, ketogenic, paleo, whole 30, SOS free, clean eating, it’s all the same.

It’s based on disconnection from your own self and it’s so, so toxic and untenable.

That first diet kicked off 17 years of yo-yo eating for me. Sometimes I was ‘good’ and sometimes I was ‘bad’. Everytime I ate was excruciating because I didn’t listen to my own body. That’s the thing that sucks about having issues with food, every four hours or so, you’re faced with your own demons. You know you need some sort of sustenance, but choosing that right sustenance becomes nearly impossible because the goal post for ‘good’ is constantly changing and it usually doesn’t feel ‘good’ to your own body. Keeping track of what’s okay to eat, in what amounts, to keep your body in check with an external standard of beauty that’s probably in direct contradiction to your own genetics is a set-up for unhappiness and feeling like a failure.

When my sister and pastor saw me eating the fruit cocktail and tortilla, they laughed at me and told me I was better off eating a burger because according to their own definition of ‘good’, the burger was probably better than my chosen meal. I remember the way I felt when they laughed at me because I was so confused about it. I was trying to get skinny so that I could be perfect and yet, my chosen path to perfection was causing me to have the disapproval of others. I felt like I was wrong and bad in that moment and that is exactly why diet culture sucks. It’s an impossible situation where you feel bad even when you’re being ‘good’ and you feel ‘good’ even when you’re feeling bad.

There’s lots of research about why diets don’t work, but that research has it all wrong in my opinion. They prove that diets don’t work because they show that people inevitably gain back the weight and then some after a diet. It’s true, but that’s not the real reason for me. They don’t work because they are a mind game of epic proportions. They literally play with your brain chemistry to the point that you don’t know whether up is up or down is down. They make every time you get hungry pure torture. They make living in your own body and mind misery.

That is no way to live, but I lived that way for years. I breaks my heart to think that so many people are still living in the impossible dieting cycle. It doesn’t work, yet they feel like they are the ones who are broken. So many women have their own fruit cocktail and tortilla story, the genesis of the moment where the deprivation began. The beautiful thing for me is to realize that in the same way that the diet cycle has a beginning, it can also have an end. I’m writing the end of that story as we speak and I hope that anyone who is still on that journey can find joy in realizing that they have they key to unshackle their own chains and choose their own life of food freedom. It’s a beautiful thing.

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