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I watched the Top Chef reunion show this week.  I love Top Chef, mostly because the show is about food and cooking.  One pinch too much of salt could ruin the whole competition.  This season was especially exciting and fun to watch because there were so many great friendships and personalities on the show.

On the reunion show there was some talk about a scandal between the Top Chef Head Judge, Tom Colicchio, and one of the chef contestants, Elia, who was sent home on the first episode.  Apparently she had visited Craft, Tom Colicchio’s restaurant in Las Vegas and was told by the kitchen that the meat was corn fed. That just appalled her and she reacted by speaking out against Tom Colicchio– saying something along the lines of he’s not about the food anymore; he’s about high fructose corn syrup.  (Tom Colicchio had recently appeared in a Diet Pepsi commercial.)

Elia vs Tom Colicchio

Watch the video: Elia vs Tom Colicchio

Colicchio’s response on the show went something like this: I have supported the local food movement for over 17 years– even before it was the thing to do. I have always bought from local farmers.  There is no way to run a steak house without having some corn fed beef. Much of my beef at that restaurant is grass fed.  To the point about appearing in a Diet Pepsi commercial: I drink Diet Pepsi, I sell it in my stores. I like it.  Elia then fought back trying to reiterate her point that all of this was just to say that she thinks he could cause a shift in the food industry if he were to only serve grass-fed beef. I believe there was something in there about it being his responsibility because he is a celebrity chef.

I bring this up because it shines a light on what is not only a very important issue in the food industry– supporting local farmers– but because it also asks a question, where is your ethical line in the sand?  I think where the conversation went flat for me was when Elia was pushing her values on Colicchio.  She wanted him to choose not to be in a Diet Coke commercial because it’s a bad product. Bad meaning a highly processed food which is bad for your health and bad for the environment.  Certainly not local or sustainable.  I can tell her from my own experience that pushing your agenda on someone else just doesn’t work.  She has every right to disagree with his choices, but they just that– her choices. Not his.

I am a Health Coach. I support people in making changes in their lives so they can live a healthier life.  That takes shape differently for each and every person because we are all unique.  What I eat to feel healthy and the choices I make in support of a healthy world are different than someone else’s choices because we are all different.

In the past week I have been told what to eat by several different people.  All nice people, all wanting to share their success with me. Where the advice fell flat for me was exactly at the point they said “you should” eat this way, or “what you have to do” is eat that way.  How do they know?  I was so shocked that I, a health coach and more importantly, someone who is probably healthier at this point in my life than i have ever been– not asking for any advice whatsoever– was suddenly being told what I had to do and how I had to eat.

I think we humans do this a lot.  We want to help other people, we want to share our successes and show the world we did it! Especially us New Yorkers, we love to dole out advice.  My education at the Institute for Integrated Nutrition was fantastic.  I had the opportunity to learn from leading experts in the health and food industry. When I think back on it now I can see that many of them came before us, armed with studies and statistics, waving books and products to show us about how their way was “the way”.  We heard it all: Animal products are good, eat only vegetables, eat in the zone, don’t eat fruit, eat lots of fruit. We could have easily lined up behind our gurus who were standing on the stage waving their books.  In fact we pretty much did.

I took away much larger lessons.  We are in deep shit if we don’t start eating healthier and losing weight. Our nation is in deep shit because health care costs are rising due to the cost of treating curable conditions like heart disease, diabetes, obesity and cancer.  Our planet is in deep shit if we don’t start taking care of her, supporting local farmers, using fewer plastic bags, using and buying less in general — and becoming more educated consumers.  Food has become an industry that is closely linked with our health care industry.  Keeping people sick benefits big business.  We can improve our health by eating more whole foods, eat more fruit, vegetables and whole grains, eat less meat, drink more water and move our bodies more. But being sick is good for business.

Change is good, my friends, and it doesn’t work when you push your ideas on someone else. So if Tom Colicchio wants to drink Diet Coke he has a right to do it.  Do I love the fact that he got paid to tell the world about Diet Coke?  No. And if he asked me how it was affecting his health I would be happy to tell him there are many far better choices.  But– and this is a big but– the choice has to be his.  I am here to ask people to think differently, to ask questions that get people started thinking about their own health and the health of the planet– and to provide support to those people want to make changes that support them.

Our Nation is getting fatter and fatter.  This has to be stopped. I am disgusted by the articles I have read so far this week.  One saying most Americans who are obese by medical standards don’t even acknowledge that they are fat.  The next, an article saying over 2/3 of Chinese people are going to be obese in the next 20 years.  And now this article about how tweaked our portion sizes are.

The article shows that most major food chains are serving portions that are 3x the recommended daily portion size.  For example a Starbucks chocolate chip cookie is really 3 servings, not one.  If you were to add up the calories of the food in the article, which many people consider a normal day of caloric intake – a muffin for breakfast, sandwich for lunch, a cookie for a snack and a steak for dinner it would have totaled over 2,000 calories. That’s not counting the chips with the sandwich at lunch, what ever else was served with the steak for dinner, probably french fries and creamed spinach, and the beverages — probably soda and mixed coffee drinks throughout the day.

Big Enough For Three

Big Enough For Three

America, this is why we won’t ever run out of contestants for The Biggest Loser.  We HAVE to change. I know this sounds radical and that change can be difficult but I know it can be done.  So what does our nation do?  We are surrounded by big food companies who want us to be fat? Pushing their triple latte iced high fructose corn syrup gunk?

We have to fight back, because the next article I read was the worst of them all — Obese is becoming the new norm.  And let’s not talk about the article that’s yet to come — the one about how big food companies are actually the one’s behind the bee collapse disorder. Which they actually might be — consider this it’s the pesticides that Monsanto is dishing out that are being used on crops all across the nation that are killing the bees. There is nothing Monsanto would like more than to have their “crops” become the norm turning our food system into a bio engineered food system where organic farmers don’t exist and everyone has to eat “big company, man made food”.

Okay now I am steaming mad.

So what can the “average” person do to take back their life?  Choose to eat differently. I think the first two things that people can do to make a major impact on their weight and over eating is to stop drinking soda, or fake sugary coffee like drinks and to cut their portion sizes in half. Wait I have a third!  Replacing one snack, or breakfast with fruit or oatmeal. That alone would save a person hundreds of calories a day and start them eating and drinking whole foods instead of processed foods.

My list of suggestions goes on from there. The basics of which are start changing over from a highly processed diet to whole grains, you know good old rice, quinoa, oats, bulgur wheat.  Eat some vegetables not potato chips or french fries — and I promise for those of you who say I don’t like vegetables — your taste buds are so damaged you don’t know what a vegetable really tastes like.  Eat fruit, consume less meat, drink water, move your body, take the stairs, go for a walk.  I’m not the first to say this stuff and I know I’m not the last. But folks, this is truly a matter of life and death.

 

I have an obsession with owls.  It all started the summer before last when my husband was invited to be the guest speaker at a The Allegany Nature Pilgrimage near Albany New York.  Being the New Yorker I am I thought oh what fun, we can get out of the city for the weekend and be in nature.  Nobody told me they kept The Alleghany’s so far away.    So we drove, and drove, and then drove some more, and finally reached our destination.  We were in the country for sure. And it was gorgeous.  All the things they say about the country are true, fresh air, lots of beautiful colors, nature sounds — refreshing for the body, mind and soul.

The weekend included the opportunity to take mini “courses” if you will.  Nature walks, bird classes, and an old forest walk. The Saturday afternoon event featured a group who rescued and rehabilitated birds of prey. Just the idea of a group that rescues and rehabilitates any living creature, especially since that’s what my husband’s work is all about, warms my heart.  We all sat in the giant tent and learned about owls, what they eat, how many feathers they have .. and then out came the owl. My jaw dropped open. It was stunning.  It had piercing eyes, amazing color, a HUGE wing span and attitude.  I was in love.   I realized I had never seen an owl up close.  I mean really where in my every day life would I see an owl?  Meet Borris the Barred Owl

Borris the Barred Owl

Borris the Barred Owl

Fast forward, I’m sitting at work.  I get an invitation to visit the Deepak Learning Room at ABC Carpet and Home for a special event of Wind Over Wings a non-profit group that rescues birds of prey. They were bringing them right here to New York City. I almost fell off my chair.  Done.  I was like a kid in the candy stor counting down the hours from the time I woke up on Sunday to the event.

It was there I met Sassafras. Sitting about 10″ high and perfect in every way.  Enjoy, celebrate seeing different things!

Perfection

 

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