A perfectionist goes to the Nutritionist
Today
 I went to see a Registered Dietician, which is a covered benefit of my 
health plan (thanks, Board of Pensions!), and she welcomed me and sat me
 down and asked me why I was there. 
Well, the entire drive 
over I'd been thinking of how to answer that question - "why are you 
here?" - so I was well armed. I don't know why I thought she would ask 
it with sharp hostility, or why I needed to use the "well armed" 
metaphor for my answer, but I'm always ready for a battle, so I had 
great answers to all her questions. I wanted to see her so that I could 
learn all kinds of ways to eat Better and optimize my health and be a 
nutrition ninja and experiment with rigorous diets like going 
gluten-free or dairy-free or sugar-free or anything else appropriately 
extreme. Because I am good - in fact, I'm pretty terrific - at trying 
harder and smarter and more intensely... so all she'd need to do would 
be to give me big assignments, and then she could sit back and be 
impressed as I delivered results in the form of Perfect Health. In two 
months or less, I'm sure. 
She didn't say yes to any of those ideas. 
We
 had a baffling experience, instead, where she asked me lots of detailed
 questions about what I eat and in what amounts, and then she repeatedly
 told me that I was doing a great job. Baffling, I tell you, because 
other than the suggestion to eat more Omega-3s (which, she said, 
everyone in America should eat more of) and drink an occasional 
kombucha, she didn't actually think I needed to improve my diet. What?? 
And my perfectionist mind kept popping back in with reasons why I wasn't
 doing good enough -- isn't there a lot of cholesterol in all those eggs
 I eat? -- and she kept answering with these soft, kind, supportive 
answers. It wasn't baffling in the puzzled sense, but more like an 
acoustic baffle; you know, like those soft tiles on the walls of 
recording studios that take all your noises and gently make them 
disappear. She warmly and calmly dismissed objection after objection and
 told me I was doing great. 
Finally she found 
the prescription that I needed. She recommended more Vitamin P... as in,
 p for pleasure. I'd never heard of such a thing, but apparently it's 
important. Vit.P. might be found in generously buttered toast for 
breakfast, chocolate chip cookies for afternoon snacks (they could be 
proteiny cookies, or they could just be cookies), and bowls of ice cream
 after dinner. Coconut milk in your oatmeal, and ricotta cheese on your 
pancakes. More goat cheese on your salads. All good sources of vit. P.! 
The curious thing is that guilt has an inhibiting factor on the 
absorption of vit. P., but when you have enough vit. P. it actually can 
enhance the absorption of all other nutrients by enabling relaxation of 
the digestive system as a whole. She gave me a good long spiel about how
 other countries can be so much more relaxed about their diets (take 
France or Italy) and here in America we're always chastising ourselves 
for enjoying anything, or worrying about things we shouldn't worry 
about. 
I'm really good at chastising and 
worrying. Kind of amazing, actually. I've internalized all of America's 
social conditioning around food. So this assignment isn't the easiest 
for me. I'm glad and grateful that it came as an assignment from a 
person with a degree, and diplomas on the wall, because I respond well 
to assignments from authority figures. Vitamin P, here we come! 
 
Incredible!! (Not surprised...) I remember the day that the doctor told me to I should consume more salt and fat... Ryan asked if this might be accomplished by, say, eating more bacon. The doctor said that was a great idea; Ryan about passed out, and then makes the doctor repeat it two more times. Turns out I could have saved a lot of money by listening to my husband instead of going to the doctor ;-) Got to love those Givenips genes!
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