Tso Moriri, Ladakh

Tso Moriri, Ladakh

Monday, September 9, 2019

The Dying Art of Eating without Guilt


Quite honestly, I’m super tired of conversations revolving around what people are not eating. 

“17 days of no sugar” (as I’m on my second chocolate tart)

“I’ve given up gluten” (where's my toasted sour dough bread with loads of butter?)

“It’s my 1 year anniversary of turning vegan” (are we celebrating that now?)

“No carbs for me please” (no rice? what do I eat my curry with then?)

Imagine going for a meal with one of these people (I hope my vegetarian-turned-vegan-off-gluten friends aren’t reading this). I’ve learned the hard way to not get annoyed though, by pretending that I’m at the table by myself. In fact I’ve now made it a fun activity by ordering all the ‘wrong’ things when I’m with the people eating ‘right’. 

I have to say that, having grown up with parents with healthy habits (more dad than mom), such as eating early, consuming balanced, mostly vegetarian meals, lectures at the table when we kids would refuse to eat something that didn’t taste good but was good for us … you get the gist, I’ve been brainwashed into eating right most of the time. 

‘Most of the time’ is the key phrase here. There was the usual cheating with deep fried foods, desserts (Bengali sweets are healthy is what we believed) etc. Eating out was never healthy - you ate what you desired without a second thought. Ice-cream sundaes and Flury’s cakes were not frowned upon. Binge eating happened at the big festivals and birthdays. My parents lived fairly healthy and long lives until almost the end. 

The other day this girl, who’s a regular at the cafe and who is always careful about what she eats, said to me.

“I’ve been fantasising about your carrot pineapple cake for weeks now,” she said.

“So what’s stopping you from eating it?” I asked.

It was the calories, the sugar, the cream cheese frosting that looked so decadent.

I thought about it for a second, wanting to somehow convince her to eat it. 

“Well,” I started off saying. “I’m not going to push you to order it but if you do decide to, it’s very important that you eat it with a 100% pleasure and 0% guilt. Otherwise it just won’t taste good.”

She laughed and asked if I would sit with her while she ate it. It may sound like a strange request but I totally got it. Pretending however, to not have got it, I looked at her questioningly. 

“If you sit with me, it’ll be a constant reminder of what you just said about eating without guilt,” she said to me. 

“How about I join you with a slice of my own?” I asked, suddenly wanting cake.

Her eyes lit up. “That would be awesome!”

A second later she added, “I’m paying for your slice too.”

I laughed and asked her why she would do that.

“You’re eating that cake to help me enjoy my slice more. It’s only fair that it should be my treat. I absolutely insist.”

So we ordered an extremely generous slice of cake each and savoured each bite together.

“I’ll never forget this cake,” she said as she licked her spoon. “It’s been a while since I ate dessert without guilt.”

“Tastes a lot better, doesn’t it?” It was a rhetorical question of course. The pleasure on her face was telling me all. 

While writing this, I got really hungry and decided to treat myself to a bacon and cheese frittata. 

Yeah I know it’ll kill me. Just like living will. 











13 comments:

JME said...

Eating has become so complicated with all the self-inflicted choices that you mentioned and then there are all the crazy allergies that people have these days. I work at a school and there are at least 10 kids who will have a severe reaction if they even touch the oils of a peanut. When I was a kid, we were given a peanut butter and jelly sandwich if we had forgotten our lunch. Now, the lunch lady can only provide jelly sandwiches. The kids don't mind because they've never seen anything different.

That was an awesome thing you did for that girl! So empowering to be given the gift of living guilt-free. It doesn't have to stop there. I read a quote recently that I've been trying to find again, but can't. The message of it was to not live for anyone else and that by doing what makes you happy, you will attract the people who have the same values and will not judge you for being you. I believe that came true for the girl in your story.


Thank you for sharing this!

-Jenny

Unknown said...

Keeping a balance is very important.

Bhavana said...

Give me my rajma chawal soon!

Carol Rice said...

Great story. I hope you'll join me in a big slice of deliciousness when I visit your restaurant.

Normal People Worry Me said...

Jenny, I am so happy to hear from you! Your mother isn't very good at staying in touch so I hope you and I can do better.
Even if you didn't find the quote, what it says makes complete sense. I'm so glad you enjoyed my piece.
Let me know if you want to connect on Whatsapp or another app. Hugs

Sabita said...

I loved the post and it brought a smile on my face.
I also indulge myself sometimes with a “sinful” dessert and refuse to feel guilty about it!

Vinod said...

True Ratan. Guilty feelings have no rhythm. But when something brushes into the realms of forbidden, the taste gets enhanced multi-fold... :)

Tanuka said...

Fantastic! I could visualize those slices of cake while reading it!

Vinod said...

True Ratan. Guilty feeling have no rythm. But something brushes the realm of forbidden, the taste gets enhanced multifold... 😉

Ashoke said...

A beautiful piece of writing as usual.
You are so right the number of people who are off something or the other is amazing.
Thankfully we don't have too many of them in our friend circle.

Sujata said...

Too good!. Now I have to go to the cafe to eat the carrot pineapple cake!!!!

Sujata said...

Too good! Now I have to go to the cafe to have the carrot pinapple cake!!!

Poonamji said...

Good job!