Great documentary about hunger in America

Last night, Tom and I watched and were very moved by A Place at the Table, a new'ish documentary about hunger in America. You may recall my mention of this film a few months back on the day many of us bloggers dedicated our day's post(s) to this very issue. Here's mine if you'd like to read it anew or again. At that time, A Place at the Table hadn't been widely released; it wasn't until yesterday that we received it from Netflix, and last night, watching it was all I wanted to do. Not surprisingly (to me at least), I was simultaneously moved to tears, inspired, enraged, disgusted and ashamed. The documentary reminds us that in the 1970s, following public galvanization about the degree of hunger weakening America (then a smaller problem, in terms of numbers, than today), Food Stamps and other anti-hunger legislation were passed; they so adequately addressed the needs of American poor that the U.S. actually did effectively end hunger.

Today, as the rolls of hungry children and adults grow -now 50 million American citizens are hungry- we do nothing more than wring our hands and hope that another soup kitchen or food pantry pops up because otherwise, "government would overstep its bounds and spend taxpayers' hard-earned money." This is all hogwash. As the documentary makes abundantly clear, soup kitchens and the like, while wonderful, critical and from a true source of sincere christian* outreach, help mostly on a day-by-day or week-by-week basis. They don't change the system that keeps people entrenched in poverty and hunger, they don't address the food desserts that lay waste to many of our communities, they don't make people permanently un-hungry, and they certainly don't address wrongfully subsidized industries like agri-business, factory farms (CAFOs) and monoculture farming of corn, soy, wheat (the latter degrades the land and makes certain foods sinfully cheap and others disproportionately expensive).

That discussion is critical but it's the meta-picture; if you only talk about policy and systems, the individuals get lost. They become faceless, nameless sufferers rather than men, women, boys and girls who are hungry and who are struggling with the many repercussions hunger wreaks: cognitive delay; stunted physical growth; shame; stigma; and so forth. Those among us who suffer most become some of society's most invisible, and this is a tragic and a moral failure.

Barbie, a single mother of two in a poor part of Philadelphia, and Rosie, a 5th grader from a tiny town in CO, were the two individuals in A Place at the Table who most stood out to me. Barbie's strength and determination were humbling, her daily struggles terrifying and her love for her children enormous. I truly can't imagine the horror of wondering where I'd find food for my hungry children, of having to look them in the eyes when they pleaded for food and reply "there isn't any." Rosie, a darling, bright-eyed young girl, seemed so hopeful yet so, simultaneously, resigned. It pained me to hear her articulate the often-daily hunger that makes it hard to pay attention in school, hard to learn, and embarrassed about not having enough. She said that she writes "focus" on a sticker on her desk but despite her efforts to do so, sometimes looks around her classroom and sees a banana where her teacher stands, apples where her classmates sit. What on earth are we doing, now and for our future, by letting this happen?

Feeding ourselves is an elemental part of living, yet most of us take for granted the ability to do so regularly and with little thought. Of course I'll have breakfast, lunch and dinner. Probably some snacks and treats here and there. But for too many of us, counting on all that is a pipe dream, a wishful plea almost not worth entertaining.

The U.S. is the richest country in the world, and we produce more than enough food for everyone. Yet the number of malnourished, undernourished and seriously in need is higher than ever. I look at the complete dysfunction in Congress and at that those members who wish to gut funds for food stamps, WIC, school breakfast and lunch programs and on and on, and I am, again, disgusted and ashamed.

*with the lower-case "c" I mean to imply the general belief, held by many faith communities including those not officially Christian, in helping those in need and treating those less fortunate with dignity and respect; akin to the difference in Catholic vs catholic.

Smoothie 2, granola, couch surfing

I would rank last night's sleep session as a bottom-feeder on a 1-10 scale. I literally could not breathe. This morning I was Niagara Falls, and now I'm plugged again. Pneumonia, I'm over you. The only thing that has thus far sounded palatable, in addition to a lovely latte made by my sweet T, was another smoothie. Because I need some excitement in my sick-life, I added coconut. I know, I'm going wild. But about coconut....it is one of those flavors that when I like, I love but when I dislike, I do so pretty seriously. Its applications are very specific.

Let's take granola. In my opinion, granola is ruined, positively devastated, by the addition of coconut, chips or shreds. On a related note, trail mix should never include coconut. And, the mere thought of a piña colada makes me feel like I just scratched my fingers on a chalkboard.

On the flip side, coconut cream pie? Perfection! Well-made macaroons? Sublime! And in a smoothie (or fresh-pressed juice if you so fancy), coconut adds a wonderful depth of flavor and a gentle (read: not metamucil or the like) heft that you just don't get if using berries on their own.

Coconuts are a real b*&ch to peel and break, especially if you want to not have the precious liquid inside spread all over your floor. So, when I buy a coconut (because peeling one yourself ALWAYS results in better- and fresher-tasting fruit than those pre-husked ones which are expensive, dry and gross), I carefully puncture holes in the bowling ball hole-like indentations on top, pour all the coconut water out, then place the coconut into a ziploc bag, seal that and go to town (carefully) with a hammer, meat tenderizer or rolling pin. This part is very therapeutic; completely de-husking the tender white meat is not so don't get too excited. Anyway, once this ridiculous process is finally complete, I freeze all the bits and pieces of coconut that I've earned and save them for smoothies later. Awesome, huh?!

I've just realized it's 1:00p and I'm hungry. I admit to having made fresh granola earlier because 1) it's easy and requires little effort, and 2) I'm bored out of my mind and tired of the couch.

UPDATE: new puzzle delivery has just occurred. This is excellent news. Off to eat something, probably granola because it's just sitting there, all fragrant and cooled and looking at me. What's a girl to do?!

Sick sux, so does your son cutting his own hair in bed in the dark without a mirror

So, when I picked Jack up from camp today, I noticed his hair was definitely off. A closer inspection revealed the aftermath of jaunty chops by unpracticed hands. His own? Indeed. When he finally fessed up, he admitted to having taken scissors to just-shorn locks while in bed at grandma's house last night. The look is vaguely serial killer, like someone who just does not know or care how his mop appears. If he's sweaty, I can brush things to one side, but otherwise, the equivalent of a lady growing out her bangs has just begun. Well, nothing is that arduous, but you get my drift. It's a good thing he's so handsome. I just got an email from a store I love pepping me up for my next weekend getaway. That kinda depressed me because the only thing on vacation is my ability to easily breathe; yes, my congestion has expanded and now includes my nose as well as my chest. Do you think antibiotics might foil the Hitler mustache chap-pattern I always get when I blow my nose for more than two days? Unlikely, but wouldn't that be a benefit.

Do you know what you can do with a lot of time on your hands? You can clean out your inbox as if you're gunned up on speed and sort through piles of darling art-work from your lovies and finally, with the mercilessness you've long needed for this task, recycle 80% of it with nary a twinge. You can also send so many emails to crappy, non-responsive customer service people that they finally get back to you and assure you that your subscription has been cancelled. You can actually scan most of your Twitter feed. And you can tire of every phone-based video game you once loved.

Harder to accomplish is Italian homework and ridding your mouth of the awful tinny, metallic taste your mouth takes on when ill; I've not met with success on either of those fronts today.