15 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. ots more intervention is needed to change behavior. For one thing, we're all used to routine, and many of us will just keep shopping where we've been shopping, even if a newer, more convenient and bountiful store moves in.

      The main cause is due to hysteria in society which causes people to not try these new places. Some will say it's either too expensive, too far, or even too uncommon. This doesn't make sense at first, but when you see a new store open up in your neighborhood, your first thought isn't to go check it out, it'll probably be wondering what it is and what it's like. However, it's like Matthew's said himself, "People will go and check it out"

    2. In inner cities and poor rural areas across the country, public health advocates have been working hard to turn around food deserts — neighborhoods where fresh produce is scarce, and greasy fast food abounds. In many cases, they're converting dingy, cramped corner markets into lighter, brighter venues that offer fresh fruits and vegetables. In some cases, they're building brand new stores.

      I know where this is already heading because I have the same issue in my neighborhood where I have little to no supermarkets that produce fresh and "healthy" foods. Instead, there are massive amounts of fast-food restaurants surrounding schools and homes.

    1. nvestors will no doubt be eager to find out what went wrong. For the rest of us, a more pressing question is why anyone ever thought it could go right. Why did so many people buy into the dream that cultivated meat would save us?

      I think they all thought that it was possible because it was a shortcut many could get some profit from and another is that it's something they likely rely on. People with power and riches have to worry about where their diet comes from because it's what they need to live, but have a different view on it than other people.

    2. And today, a few products that include cultivated cells have been approved for sale in Singapore, the United States and Israel.

      A lot of these companies seem to have a major part in what we know as the meat market business which includes how our meat is processed and what is really in them. I believe it's interesting how in any topic there's always a business to it. Especially when it comes to something like food.

  2. Sep 2024
    1. So how manypeople are you cooking for tonight?” thecashier asked to defuse her agony as a long line of impatient people behind her glared.“Oh, just one,” she responded, and her Solitude Food instantly turned into LonelyFood.

      This might be my own personal bias but I feel like questions that employees may ask customers while trying to calm things down and ease the pressure are kind of unnecessary because there are the chances of something like this affecting a person's mental well being because now her new found adventurous food became a Lonely food.

    2. a show I’ve seen a hundred times. Just me, meltedcheese, and the anksgiving episode of Gilmore Girls. at’s divine solitude.Read: Why do we look down on lonely people?But as we’ve all experienced, Solitude Food can become a Lonely Food—and that’swhen it turns sad. Solitude is slippery and can morph into loneliness with anaccidental listen to a particularly evocative song on shuffle, or when the place you’vechosen to eat isn’t as charming as you anticipated, or when something goes awry inyour pursuit of Solitude Food and it goes from an indulgence to a burdensome ritual.I’m thinking of a fellow barista at thecoffee shop where I used to work, an8/24/24, 4:02 PM What You Learn From Eating Alone - The Atlantichttps://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2022/11/eating-food-alone-lonely-solitude/672222/ 4/9

      It's the things like these which can bring us happiness because even I personally like go getting combos of rice and beans with chicharron and some lettuce with a coca cola because my family decided to join my dad to enjoy the concert he worked on.Something like that really brings me happiness because I get some form of peace with myself and the meal.

    3. When a date got up and left in the middle ofour dinner, throwing down insufficient cash with an insufficient “I’m not feeling this—take care,” my plate of pasta was extremely sad; it became only sadder when thewaitress asked me if I wanted it packaged up to go. I did

      That's really sad and unfortunate because sometimes other people see how we clearly are affected by something like that despite the effort we put into meeting new people. Small things like that end up affecting our mental health negatively.

    1. This made us all feel good, especially me, for I couldn’t remember the last time she had felt any hunger or had eaten something I cooked. We began to eat. My mother picked up a piece of salmon toast and took a tiny corner in her mouth. She rolled it around for a moment and then pushed it out with the tip of her tongue, letting it fall back onto her plate. She swallowed hard, as if to quell a gag, then glanced up to see if we had noticed. Of course we all had. She attempted a bean cake, some cheese, and then a slice of fruit, but nothing was any use.

      At first it's a nice scenery of family enjoying food with each other because food is something that can bring all types of people together to grow through a bond or even. However, it seems even after all that time. her mother is still unable eat food which can really affect somebody' mental health.

    2. My mother would gently set herself down in her customary chair near the stove. I sat across from her, my father and sister to my left and right, and crammed in the center was all the food I had made—a spicy codfish stew, say, or a casserole of gingery beef, dishes that in my youth she had prepared for us a hundred times.

      It's really important to recognize just how significant it means to pass down dishes from generation to generation because sometimes foods and entire cultural meals can be forgotten because the next generation was never taught

    1. Which is to say, in order to write a personal essay that reaches your readers, that persuades your readers, you must write something that resonates beyond itself. Your dog is all dogs, all loss. Your story is part of a universe.

      Going back to what I annotated that sometimes in order to write a well written peace we sort of have to insert a form or a fragment of ourselves into this because readers might not understand or grasp the message we're trying to relay or express.

    2. We experience a tragedy on two levels: the first is the one that feels, that grieves, that aches in every room where he isn’t; that plans the ceremony for the children, that speaks to the vet on the phone about the bill for the dead dog. The second level is the writer who is gathering evidence, who understands this story will grow more stark with time—who knows it’s too painful to write about yet but will nonetheless hold onto it in fragments, for down the road it will become part of the experience of sensemaking.

      Something like grief is very important in our journey to grow and living because no war was ever won without losses. However, when it comes to unexpected losses, we normally don't comprehend what just happened so sometimes people use coping skills like writing to make sense of what they lost.

    1. “Another time,” I fired back, exhausted from the long day of fasting. Another time never came, and never will.

      This is will always be something we can see as little or small but yet holds so much significance or meaning because those small little moments are ones that we may learn or even cherish. A common lesson we're all taught is to cherish all the moments we have with loved ones because we may never know when those can come to an end.

    2. But Um Hani happily came to the rescue, sharing her comfort-food recipes over the phone.

      It really is amazing at how something as amazing as food could bring somebody peace or even tranquility which is really a spectacle.

    1. “someone had to … chop and burn the wood for cooking, dig the pit, butcher, process, cook and season the animals, serve the food, entertain the guests and clean up afterward” — and after Emancipation, white diners sought out Black pit masters and cooks, although their talent was often subsumed into white-fronted businesses.

      This really doesn't surprise me considering no matter of what version of history or even what view we see history from we can always find the oppressor and the oppressed on either side of the course. It really goes to show that in history or even our very own lives we can find a winner and a loser.

    2. The diners were eating out of a peculiar calculus of desire that had little to do with what the ingredients on their plates actually tasted like or how much nourishment they offered.

      It's insane how much history can go into foods and meals being made or prepared and yet somehow there are some in the world who can enjoy such delicacies without a worry in the world.