Sonntag, 13. Februar 2011

On Eating - a row of smithereens about hunger and eating No 10

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different kinds of cabbage and comestible roots c ignazwrobel

yesterday: the sparrows


Today: conformity and the instinct to continuously look for food.

Next: insulin, fat and sugar.

Some people never seem to have to think about their BMI. They are never too thin, they are never too thick – and they never have to monitor their food intake. This is a vast injustice? No. This is a result of lack of extremes.

These people never taught their bodies by bringing down food supply that they – from the point of view of the body – seem to live in an insecure surrounding where food supply will terminate from one moment to the next.

Their body is not set to store each and every calorie of the daily intake they can´t burn at the moment. Conformity, steadiness, no changes in amount ouf food supply is a joker helping to maintain a healthy BMI.

Cooked food.

Cooked food is an invention some scientists say it´s responsible for the development of high culture. Why? Cooked food contains much more energy than crudités. In Greek mythology the act of bringing fire to men was a very big deal. Very big. It was regarded a crime and the guy who did this had to face a very hard sentence. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prometheus

Fire was the key for the development of high culture. Why? People were able to stop running all over the place the whole day and do nothing else but search for bits and bites of low energy crudités. Fire helped them to increase energy amount of their food.

Ten minutes of eating secured energy supply for half a day. So they had time to invent things.

(Caricature: Group of Neanderthals, 10.000 B.C. One of them is carving the first wheel ever. His friends: Do you want to come hunting or do you want to keep sitting around all day inventing?)

To get enough energy to keep the regulatory circle system running properly people had to go searching food about up to ten hours a day.


Remember for example the inuit. - Europen friend to an Inuit friend on the phone:

…nice to hear from you! long time no see. ..and what did you do between January and March?

Answer inuit friend: I hunted two seals. -

An example how time consuming it is to chase food.

The trap:

Walking around looking for food is a function of the oldest part of our brain.

It´s written in our BIOS.

With other words: people who suffer from a binge-purge syndrome are continuously chased by men´s disposition of constantly looking for food. This starts to run out of control and we can´t but run around and look for food all day.

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