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I came acros this blog post that I thought was worth a question.

Dear Food Obsessed People…

I think that when you're eating to live a healthy life there is always a risk of forgeting this and ending up living to eat a healthy diet.

"There’s no need to create your own little food cult. It’s just food. Learn to cook. Eat real food. And go live your life. Enjoy food. Love food even. Don’t obsess about food."

Are you a food obsessed person?

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He's a hypocrite as he has his own "little food cult" complete with catchy name, the "Real Food Revolution." – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 23:36
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yeah, i upvote Futureboy and call busllshit as well. Food is a business run in increasingly unscrupulous manners (as are many other businesses these days in a culture that worships money). It's our business, in any moral or otherwise, case to get the best deal for our interests. In this case, our interests are long term well being, and the sustainability and AVAILABILITY of a certain quality of life. This has everything to do with choosing food carefully and wisely, as our "business partners" in food are increasingly out to screw us for their bottom line. – tartare Jun 8 2011 at 3:11
These notions of "food obsession" and "cults" lose their meaning to me when I can't even seem to explain my way of eating to someone who is obese without going in to vast and confusing detail that refers to the vast confusion of ingredients stuffed into potentially "benign" foods. – tartare Jun 8 2011 at 3:14

14 Answers

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I was obsessed with food pre-Paleo and am obsessed with food now that I follow a Paleo diet. I personally wish I were not obsessed with food in the way that I am (e.g. thinking about what I will have for dinner before I even eat breakfast that day). However, I am healthier post-Paleo, and my relationship with food, while still an obesssion, is better than it was.

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This is me. I've always been this way. I want to know what is coming next and when, always. – sherpamelissa Jun 11 2011 at 13:50
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Well, What If there were no grocery stores???...It may be all you would do. When we had a mini farm as the kids were growing up, we spent two to three hours a day just weeding.Then we watered. We spent all morning feeding chickens, feeding rabbits, breeding rabbits, collecting eggs,cleaning cages, cleaning the chicken coop. Moving the fence for the chickens. Tilling, spreading horse manuer, planting, hoeing, , digging, picking , plucking, snapping, washing and peeling tomatoes dunking them in boiling water,cutting,slicing, canning, boiling, drying, sterilizing jars..In the fall we went hunting every spare minute, hunting mushrooms, hunting deer, hunting pheasant and duck. We built a fire and beheaded chickens and dunked them and plucked them and gutted them and bagged them and froze them. We picked strawberries, blueberries,peaches apples.. we washed and froze anything we could get our hands on. I was a stay at home mom. I also home schooled. We studied animal husbandry, we studied weather, we studied propagation. We built a house and a barn, We built compost bins. We built rabbit hutches, we built chicken roosts and nest boxes. We found out that if you put a male rabbit in a female cage she will neuter him. You have to bring the female to the males cage. If they don't have baby rabbits in exactly 32 days, you have to give them a shot of pitocin.

I could have had a job and gone to the grocery store and let my children play video games all day.

My daughters in law praise the fact that their husbands can do anything. One son is a building contractor, who went to Indiana University.He owns his own business. One son is a State Farm agent. One son is still in College in New York after serving two tours in Iraq and earned a purple heart.We also have a free spirited daughter is working at a boys and girls club in St Croix and managing a coffee shop.

Do you think that is a little obsessive?? It is not if you want to eat all winter.

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that is flat out amazing. lotta work, but sounds like incredible experience...and if the outcomes laid out in some of the "financial collapse" questions ever do come about...INVALUABLE experience it will be. – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 23:48
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I never worry about any of my children surviving. Once a doctor friend of mine.OB-GYN called me one of the great unwashed because I had not gone to college. I told her that if anything horrific ever happened in this country, she would not be able to "help" anyone with out a pharmacy. My children know which herbs are safe for many different illnesses, where to find them and what they look like. They also know how to feed themselves in the wild. – organic one Jun 8 2011 at 0:01
Sounds awesome. Not all obsessions are bad :) – Matt Jun 8 2011 at 0:03
If she called one of the great unwashed, I wouldn't consider her a doctor "friend". I hate people like that. – Alex Jun 8 2011 at 1:48
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To answer the original question, "YES!"

I think that food "obsessed" is an understatement.

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Certainly you don't mean on this site.

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I looked out my window the other day and saw this skateboarder dude roll up to a food cart, order a burrito, eat it rapidly, roll a cigarette, light it and continue merrily along his way in traffic. I honestly really envied his complete disregard for health and realized that I can't just get hungry, grab some food that is nearby and continue living.

Dietary auto-pilot in America is simply too dangerous these days; you need a constant attention to what you're eating and its provenance. I cook nearly all of my meals and I generally plan most of them at least a day ahead of time, but as I've been figuring things out more and working them into a protocol, I find that obsession gives rise simply to habit. In a way I suppose I've constructed a new sort of auto-pilot for myself. I can stop it from consuming my thoughts, but with so much shopping, preparing and eating, I can't really stop it from consuming my time.

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I used to be that skater dude. I would eat anything and everything, smoke all day long, drink all day into the morning the next day. And I ended up a depressed overweight agoraphobic insomniac dummy. I'm 5'6" and I weighed 145, which may not seem like alot to some on this site, but having only weighed about 115 up til my mid-20's it was a poor outcome. – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 23:46
"dietary autopilot"....perfect definition – pistachio Jul 28 2011 at 22:57
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I really try not to be. I care a lot about what I eat, and believe strongly that what you eat determines your overall health to a very large degree, and the recommendations and products you find in the mainstream vary from being not-so-good to outright harmful.

However, I really try not to obsess about it. It is possible to fall into the world of diets, statistics, supplements, not to mention blogs (lol) etc. and it becomes a hobby, perhaps an all-consuming one. The point is to eat to live not to live to worry about one's food choices.

So I try to keep to simple rules, which is why the Paleo diet appeals to me. No grains, no sugar, no processed foods, exercise 3-4 times per week, and that is about it. Nothing could be easier and you are able to find something to eat almost everywhere you go, and your health will be very much improved.

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I am not obsessed about my food. I am obsessed about where my food comes from.

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Good answer!!!! – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 23:43
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can we file this article under "chicken isn't paleo"?

im obsessed with food, but not in the way the author is talking about. i spend most of the day thinking about it, shopping for it, reading about it, talking about it, and making it. also, eating it. i love food. i love paleo, too but mostly i love to play with my food. what i do NOT spend my day obsessing about is macro nutrient ratios, micronutrients, calories, grams, ounces, etc. i have a JOYFUL relationship with food. some non-paleo people might think im in-freaking-sane for cutting out the things that i do, but a lot of paleo folks think im nuts for eating the occasional cookie, eating dairy, drinking daily coffee, ordering the creme brulee. meh. im happy and healthy, and thats really all i care about.

now, im off to make my peony jelly and IM EVEN GOING TO TASTE IT.

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PEONY JELLY???!! i die. – g. Jun 7 2011 at 20:58
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HELL YES. mine are in full bloom right now. SO EXCITED. imperfecturbanfarm.com/2011/05/30/… – being Jun 7 2011 at 21:00
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I like your sentiment of "a joyful relationship with food". In my opinion it's how it should be. I am in the same camp as you, enjoying my food for what it is...choosing to eat paleo foods but not agonizing over all the numbers per se. And on occasional occasion where there is some dessert involved I would like to try, I do so without freaking out about it. Perhaps some folks thrive on the more obsessive type of relationship, just like some folks strive better on stress, but no thanks, not me. – Karin Jun 7 2011 at 21:05
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i think i love you, akd. – tartare Jun 8 2011 at 2:56
I know I love her, tartare! <3 – sherpamelissa Jun 11 2011 at 13:46
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I'm food obsessed in the other way he mentioned: I'm the guy who ALWAYS wants a cookie. I don't count anything, I'm waaaay too lazy.

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I tooootally agree with the blogger... EXCEPT - I've found that I have weird food sensitivities that can make me feel VERY BAD, and it's not yet fully clear what-all can cause a reaction; so giving in to a "just relaaaxx" attitude just ain't worth a coupla bites of somethingorother.

But I'm assuming he's talking about people who don't (yet?) have health concerns and stuff - who are just being obsessive about an idea or something. I do pretty much think that many/most people can get away with "just" eating Real Food.

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Um, so yeah, I'm pretty obsessed. – g. Jun 7 2011 at 20:47
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My girlfriend is coeliac, so I understand the nessesary obsession. After a while it becomes more automatic so it takes up a lot less thought. – Matt Jun 7 2011 at 23:12
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I'm a food blogger and am writing a cookbook, so yes - I'd say that puts me in the "obsessed" camp. Not necessarily a bad place to be when one is paleo, IMO.

Edited to add: Okay, so I didn't actually read the article till I posted this (my bad). Food obsessed? No. I just love it.

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Yes I'm obsessed, wanna fight about it? lol.

I want to start keeping track of numbers just so I can be more scientific for while. It's all part of being a self-experimenter. Nobody can count numbers their whole lives, but I want to get a snapshot of what I'm doing.

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I would also like to add that I'm a proud card-carrying orthorexic. – Carl_Stawicki Jun 7 2011 at 20:24
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We should make T-shirts! – Sara Jun 7 2011 at 20:38
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Not particularly but I do think that it is prudent and worth the effort to know how much polyunsaturated fat I'm consuming in a day. Fine line between chill and lazy.

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In a society that makes it difficult for me to eat the way I want, how can I NOT be obsessed?

I'm HIGHLY INTERESTED and MOTIVATED to seek out good food choices for myself and my loved ones. The good ol' Yewessay is a difficult place to do that. Not as difficult as some, but difficult nonetheless.

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BTW, his first example is ridiculous. His "no label" stance just comes off as snobby, juvenile and wishy-washy, like Kramer saying "I don't wear the ribbon..." – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 20:12
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Leave a comment if you're gonna downvote me, yeah? – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 20:28
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I think this is a good point. I often feel like there is poison lurking around every corner.. It's crazy how hard it is to find the simplest food. And eating out can be insanely problematic when you want to avoid fake food. – g. Jun 7 2011 at 20:46
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I know.. soybean oil is my bane. :[ – g. Jun 7 2011 at 20:53
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I'm constantly looking at labels, and just asking myself "Why why whyyyyyy did they have to put that in there?!?" It really sucks. – Futureboy Jun 7 2011 at 23:34
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