Oct. 4th, 2010

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For the next three or four days or so, I am meant to be living on the contents of a typical food bank hamper, as part of a diocesan campaign. And I am meant to be keeping a journal of this experience, and this seemed like a convenient place to do so.

And the first thing that I'm aware of, only a few hours in, is that I tend to depend on healthy snacking during the day to keep my energy up, and that's not going to be possible. Right now, under normal circumstances, I would go into the kitchen and eat a handful of nuts, and then go back and work on my sermon. But I can't do that. I do have three granola bars in my hamper, and I could break one of them in half and eat half of it now and save the rest, but on the other hand, I don't know if I'm going to really need something like a granola bar later, so I should probably save them. It's a small thing, but a very obtrusive missing piece from my normal habits.

Of course, it isn't meant to be an especially fun or healthy experience, so I'm not saying this in a spirit of complaint, but of observation. But I think that may be the most difficult part of the experience for me.

I am debating whether or not to take my usual vitamins. It's not like people who rely on food banks have any kind of access to vitamins, so properly speaking I oughtn't. It may affect my mood pretty quickly, though.
em_h: (Default)
Wow, less than 24 hours on the food bank diet and I'm already hungry all the time, and plugging the holes with slices of white bread because that's all I have in quantity. Today: Kraft Dinner and a juice box for lunch, a granola bar at Trinity, and for dinner one potato fried with half an onion and half a tin of chickpeas, and white bread. Tomorrow I will have my tin of tuna (plain, as I have nothing with which to turn it into tuna salad) on white bread. Bland stodge R us ...

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