The Power of the Meal
by Daniel
Punch
zone3
Since the beginning of time one human social experience has stood
out in facilitating communication and family bonding: the meal.
Since the beginning of time one aspect of human social experience has
stood out as the ‘place to be’ for communication and family bonding: the
meal. In contemporary human life the evening dinner is often the only
place and time that a family all sits down together. In tribal times (of
course there are still tribes today) the cooking of a slaughtered animal
or cultivated vegetables brought the group together to share ideas and
feelings. Think about it these days; when you want to take someone out for
a romantic date, meet business colleagues, get together with old friends
and acquaintances, we go out for a bite to eat. What is it about sharing
some food that puts us in such a relaxed and communicable state? Could it
simply be science, and the fact that if you are tense when you eat, the
food doesn’t digest as well? Or, could it have some psychological basis
having to do with the idea that you are sharing some life-giving
sustenance with your fellow species instead of warring over it?
Subconsciously do we recognize the facts that we will be able to live
another day as well as sew healthy seeds for future generations?
Think of all the problems in the world today. Maybe if we all got
together for a feast we could work out some practical solutions, say while
sipping on coconut milk, or chewing on a loaf of bread. The current (14th)
Dalai Lama is quoted as having said, “I sometimes think that the act of
bringing food is one of the basic roots of all relationships.”
There is also the idea of food as being a medium for the transferal of
emotional energy. I am currently living with a friend who is very adept in
the kitchen. He uses high quality ingredients and professional techniques,
but he also follows the belief that what mood you are in, the amount of
effort and awareness you give the cooking process, and the love and
gratitude that you feel for the ability to eat is imperative to making a
good meal. I have read in a famous Hari Krishna cookbook as well as Taoist
teachings how the actual emotions that the cook feels when making a meal
is transmitted into the food via chi energy. Feelings and food are both
forms of energy. Native Americans believe that all thoughts and emotions
are ‘alive’.
You may have seen the recent film, ‘What the bleep do we know?’ Read
about it at whatthebleep.com. In this film world-renowned scientists
discuss the idea that all thoughts and emotions are actually physically
material in the sense that they are produced by chemicals and are
transmitted in electrical forms. Therefore, a happy chef truly spreads
happiness by enjoying the preparation of a meal.
So, next time you sit down to a meal with friends or family, or cook
for guests, remember the significance of this often undervalued
experience. For hundreds of thousands of years our distant relatives’
whole way of social life was based around the acquisition and sharing of
food. It is often the main time to communicate to the ones you hold most
dearly, so please don’t take it for granted or think that just
because it is necessary for survival that there aren’t any meaningful and
mysterious aspects to the experience. Relating to each other is one of the
most important elements in a social creature’s existence; the meal is a
time and place for relationships to sprout and grow. That’s just some of
the power of the meal.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jesse S. Somer, M6.Net, http://www.m6.net/ Jesse S. Somer is a
creature that eats a little bit too much food at times, and needs to share
more meals with other organisms that he loves.
Jesse S. Somer is a creative writer working at M6.Net: ‘The web-hosting
company for humans.’ M6.Net is working hard to help humanity experience
the power and freedom to develop their own part of the Internet, to share
their information and connect with anyone, anywhere, anytime.
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