As
I sat down to write this, I received a phone call from my neighbor.
Her brother-in-law passed away last week from cancer and her
84 year-old mother-in-law just moved in. Ann wanted to brainstorm
ideas with me concerning her elderly charge. Shes
tired all the time. Im feeding her lots of fresh squeezed
veggie juices with garlic, and fruit smoothies with fresh cranberries,
salads and herbal teas, she said. She isnt
used to good food. She just wants sugar and salt added to everything,
she said in a tired exhale.
My
neighbor who called was for many years merely an acquaintance
because our children are friends. We really became friends about
a year ago when she was diagnosed with skin cancer. Anns
cancer was her wake-up call. The first thing she did was give
her house a deep cleaning. That might seem odd to some, but
when I saw her doing it, I realized Id probably do the
same thing. Purge and clean. Next, she went off for surgery.
Then she came home and cleaned up her diet. Her cancer is gone.
My
mother-in-law is asking for margarine, Ann said. I
banished margarine from our house when I got cancer. My husband
and boys are pressuring me to bring it back. Ann and I
chatted on about the role of nurturer and how difficult it is
to eat well when youre surrounded by people who dont.
We joked about fighting the people we love because
we want to love them with good food. I suggested she think of
it like the advice an airline attendant give out. Place
the oxygen mask over your face first, then attend to anyone
else needing assistance.
I
havent found easy answers. Keeping up with the latest
health and nutrition news is almost impossible. Just when I
think Ive got it figured out, todays news contradicts
yesterdays. (Remember when margarine was recommended instead
of butter?) At various times over the past twenty-five years,
Ive worn the label vegetarian. At some point I ate a vegan
diet (no meat or dairy). Ive lived on raw food only. Ive
read convincing stories about breatharians! Ive fasted.
Ive thrown out all my food except what I would need for
a macrobiotic diet. Ive cleansed my liver and kidneys
and purged parasites. Ive used super blue green algae
and grown my own wheat grass. (I even managed to get my kids
to drink it!) Ive purchased miracle supplements that made
perfect sense and a year later Ive thrown them out.
But,
I have gotten healthier. I consider myself extremely healthy
and people think of me as healthy. So what Ive learned
is this: all of it works! The desire to eat healthy and be healthy
will open more doors than you can imagine. Your desire itself
will be your cure and no one has your blueprint. What awaits
you is uniquely yours, just like your fingerprint. We all need
food for life but none of us are at the same place at the same
time. We grow and learn just like my staggered plantings of
lettuce. Ive learned to accept this. Being a food snob
has cut me off from other people. Thinking my diet was right
was the worst kind of religion.
So,
go easy. Eat for fun. Avoid rigidity and stay curious. Be there
to help when someone asks. Keep your eyes open for your next
mentor and be a patient example when you dispense the diet changes
that helped you.