Guest guest Posted February 3, 2006 Report Share Posted February 3, 2006 “Who is Macrobiotic?” A Chat Hosted by t Rice. Sunday January 29th 2006 To find out more about t, click here . Please join our chat mailing list to keep informed of all upcoming chats, and visit our Chat Forum to further delve into the topics addressed in our weekly chats. t: Good evening, everyone. Welcome to MacroChat #2 with me, t Rice. We have a great topic today. Are you ready? ( joined.) t: My understanding of who is macrobiotic has developed over 26 years of practice. At first, I thought " being macrobiotic " meant eating rice and not eating, say, figs. But that gets tricky. So let's start, then, by asking: What is the purpose of a macrobiotic lifestyle? Then we can explore what constitutes " being macrobiotic. " Sheldon(Q): Are there macrobiotic foods? If not, then a macro person cannot be classified by what they eat. t(A) Good; Are there, indeed, macrobiotic foods? ( joined.) : Hi everyone - I am new to this so bear with me Klara(Q) The purpose of a macrobiotic lifestyle is understanding how food affects life, and also how everything else affects life. t(A) But what is the purpose of that, Klara? Welcome, , and everyone else. Chick© I think there are macrobiotic foods. The same as there are SAD foods. Sheldon© Rice, beans and vegetables can hardly be classified as macrobiotic; if that is the case, food classification requires another means of measurement or understanding. I don't believe that there are macrobiotic foods - rather there are macrobiotic principles that govern all foods. Chick: Foods are macrobiotic in the sense of how we, as macrobiotics, use them in our diet. Vic(Q) Tricky, indeed. I have considered myself to be living a macrobiotic lifestyle for 30 years -- does " being macrobiotic " mean I can get a disease like osteoporosis??? I have never " counted my milligrams " of calcium, I never thought about " absorbable calcium " and now I am humbled, and I sit here with a glass of organic milk and rice cakes! I don't know if there are folks out there age 50 something dealing with any osteoporosis issues? t(A): This is an important question...we touched on it last week, and it will continue to be relevant forever onwards. Why do " macrobiotic people” get sick? And again, what does it mean, then, to " be macrobiotic? " Sheldon: I know a lot of people who eat brown rice but never heard of macrobiotics. Furthermore, why can't I eat so called non-macro foods and still be macro? Chick: What do you consider non macro foods? t: Let's deal with one question at a time. First, what is the purpose of macrobiotics? Then, is there such a thing as " macrobiotic food? " For me – macrobiotics means WHAT IS NECCESARY - how can such a definition exclude or include any particular food type? t , for what purpose do you practice " what is necessary " ? (Rick joined.) : FOR HEALTH t Then health is your highest goal? (swim joined.) Chick YES : not at all - but it is a prerequisite for attaining certain other goals Sheldon: I don't believe there are non-macro foods. Sometimes I eat widely, and then try to balance it with wide opposites. If I continue to do this all the time it will affect my health. If I want to maintain a good condition, I need to moderate eating inside a relatively narrow range of yin and yang foods. Klara(Q) For me, macrobiotics is an adventure in discovery - a consciousness of the interplay of food and life t(A) Again, for what purpose? Our purpose for health is to keep our bodies as pure spiritual receptacles, so to speak t Yes, , can you elaborate further on your bigger dream? Why do you want to be a pure receptacle? *smile* --- it's not a case of want. Its is a case of purpose - only if we are pure can we begin to help others. t Got it! Agreed! We've just raised our level of consciousness to the fifth level, social judgment. Is there an even higher purpose of a macrobiotic way of life? Super consciousness is not on a higher level than social consciousness --- but we need social consciousness to maintain super-consciousness Sheldon© Generally, health is my highest goal, but not always. Sometimes I push myself beyond my normal range of foods for social, emotional or other reasons. With the experience that I have accumulated, I generally do not do this too often or too extremely. Klara© My goal is to get to a life full of joy, peace, fullness Sheldon What is joy, if not having the health to make wider choices, when desired, without having a serious reaction that follows. (leslieaashburn joined.) t Don't get caught in semantics of better or worse. They are simply levels of being, . Let's focus once more on who is macrobiotic. Does it matter what one chooses to eat? Yes t Then is macrobiotics defined by our diet? Klara(Q) To me joy is getting to see a bigger picture. Understanding more t(A) Yes—raising your level of understanding. Where does macrobiotics fit in with this? Klara(Q) it very much matters what one chooses to eat, especially how it affects him/her Sheldon We have free choice to choose whatever foods we want. What we need are tools to make these choices, and moderate them so that balance can be created and maintained. (Lorela joined.) t(A) Let's be specific. WHO IS MACROBIOTIC? And what for? The important word being CHOOSES – macrobiotic food choices are obviously made with specific intent --- taking just one principle - compassion - we would choose foods which do not harm the environment, the ecology and the body...... Sheldon That may be more or less of a problem depending on the person's condition and constitution. t: Good. Now we're getting somewhere. talks about the intent of our food. Klara knows that food affects us. So then, is macrobiotics about food choices rather than about specific foods? (tofupax joined.) Chick: I can't see where you can separate the two. t: Good, Chick. The question is this: does macrobiotics mean eating brown rice, or does it mean recognizing the effect of brown rice and making a choice? leslieaashburn To me, someone who is macrobiotic is someone who applies macrobiotic principles to his/her life, not just with diet, but also thinking about one's environment in general leslieaashburn It's about consciously choosing, so I would say, 'food choices' not specific foods Klara(Q) This feels abstract, but I'm guessing everybody is macrobiotic, they just don't realize it - that is, all bodies try to come to some kind of balance. I think the crux is the realization and how to do it on purpose when someone can call himself macro. t(A) Excellent! Mmm - it means thinking about the implications of eating brown rice and therefore - about HOW the brown rice is eaten (Q) Macrobiotic is about LIFE CHOICES t(A) Yes, of course. But please be a bit more specific. Explain your idea, s'il vous plait. Sheldon: Klara, I like what you say about doing it on purpose. In other words, making a conscious choice. Chick I don't think everyone is macrobiotic. Certainly my diabetic son-in-law isn't. Sheldon(Q) I believe that a macrobiotic person is one that makes conscious choices based on the order of the universe according to yin and yang to achieve balance. I use the word conscious to differentiate between those who eat within macrobiotic guidelines because of their culture and those that do so because of what they have learned and understand. t(A) This is interesting. Is the bushman in New Guinea macrobiotic? Is everyone macrobiotic? aashburn: everyone seeks balance, but does everyone seek that balance consciously and intentionally? Perhaps that is the difference? t: Nice, . Then are you saying that macrobiotics is the conscious choice of food, activity, etc? Is the bushman not macrobiotic? leslieaashburn It's just a fact of yin and yang. day turns to night, activity to rest... it's unavoidable. The bushman is not conscious of the fact, but yes, he is macrobiotic. Klara(Q) Doesn't one need to experience it first before one can recognize the effect and then make the choice t(A) Experience is one way to learn. There are others.... Chick How does one seek balance? I don't understand that. Sheldon Understanding yin and yang is so simple; applying it takes a lifetime of experience that improves more and more as time goes on. t: then, , everyone is macrobiotic, whether they consciously apply yin/yang principles? Sheldon© The bushman is not macrobiotic. He eats what is available to him. In a different environment he would eat what is available there without understanding that his new choices will not maintain his health. (G joined.) leslieaashburn I think everyone is macrobiotic. We are all responsible for the outcome of our health. leslieaashburn: Sheldon, macrobiotic eating is locally, in season -- so why is the bushman not macro? He's in tune with nature around him/her © Probably the bush person is macrobiotic since they are living in harmony with their environment, t Here's a new question. Is the goal of macrobiotics to live a long life? Klara© Now we're going back to whether health is the main purpose. I think it's one object, but may not be the only one. Chick It should help. Klara(Q) You asked if experience is the only way to learn. I believe we also learn from copying others, like our parents and our peers, in what we eat. t(A): Is that learning? or copying? Sheldon The bushman is doing what comes naturally with being a bushman. If what he eats maintains his health that is OK. But he doesn't have any awareness of principles of balance; put him in a different environment and will he still be macrobiotic. Of course not. leslieaashburn: I think macrobiotics means to live in the present, to be happy in the moment, and to create a strong consciousness, and not necessarily to live a long life. A long life might be a natural byproduct of living a healthy lifestyle and eating a healthy diet ( joined.) aashburn: I think the bushman would have strong knowledge of balance, but not defined in the words we use t: If someone gets ill, meaning their application of yin and yang is off, are they " macrobiotic? " aashburn: Yes, they are macrobiotic, but there is still an imbalance occurring Chick: I should think a long life would be a by product of a healthy life style. ©: For me the answer is NO about the length of life; the goal is to live a good quality life with a purpose Sheldon: , I agree with you. I don't believe that a macro lifestyle necessarily has long life as a goal. Long life is a byproduct. Klara©: Living a long life seems lovely, but so does living a full life, and a life with great adventure. t: Yet, my macrobiotic teacher says that living a long life is indeed a goal of macrobiotics. We should all live long (and meaningful) lives. Sheldon: I feel that quality of life is more purposeful than quantity. Chick: Speaking from experience, being macro avoids some of the problems of old age. t: Wonderful, Chick! t So one's skill at applying yin and yang does not determine if he is macrobiotic, yes or no? Chick: Yes Sheldon©: I prefer to think of long life as a byproduct of good health rather than a goal. Macrobiotics seems to be a great means of achieving this if your practice is good in relation to your condition. Chick: That is how we learned it. aashburn: I think it's Pitchford who says that we can take good food and still distort our application based on our condition. Klara(Q): You mean you can give guarantees by " being macro. " ? I would like to hope that old age, good health does come from eating macrobiotic, but I still feel there's so many other factors that we may not understand. aashburn: My sister started to try macrobiotics, and then was eating macro desserts 3 times a day. she asked why she didn't feel so well..... and when I suggested that it was the desserts, she said, " well, they're macrobiotic. " t My mother, who barely heard of the word macrobiotic, is in declining health. But she's still alive, and so in some sort of balance. Is she macrobiotic? Sheldon© Skill is not a factor in determining if one is macro. Applying yin and yang is a factor. As experience accumulates, the application gets better and better, the skills improve, and the person enjoys the results more favorably. Chick: I don't say that being macro means you have no problems in old age, because chances are you weren't macro all your life. t: Right, Chick. Now back to the issue of illness. As Sheldon says, the crux is in the application, not just the understanding, of principles. t: Ohsawa taught that theory without practice is useless. Practice without theory is dangerous. Chick: But you will avoid some of the problems that non macros experience. I see other older people with regularity problems that I don't experience. t: Klara, Aihara says that food is only 5% of macrobiotics , yet the most important 5%. t: Macrobiotics to me means being flexible. Everything changes, and as natural beings, we are able to flow like water and dance with the wind. (How's that!) (Q) t, that was beautiful and poetic. t(A) (Blush) Sheldon©: Flowing like water and dancing with the wind is pretty hard when you don't feel well. (_C joined.) t: At one point, Sheldon and I decided that anyone who calls himself macrobiotic, is. ( joined.) t: Many people have a health consultation, buy rice, and don't think in terms of yin and yang. Are they macro? Chick: It depends on what else they eat with that rice. I don't think in terms of yin and yang and I think I’m macro. I think in terms of balance. aashburn: We have a restaurant here where I live that sells burritos. They call them macrobiotic, but they also have steak, salmon, and Chicken on their menu. The other macro person I know here and I get upset they call their food macrobiotic.... it gives people the wrong idea.... I wonder where that fits. Klara© What happens when you are teaching and see something very blaringly off in the person's understanding, or in their diet - they can call themselves what they wish, but can you go back to the question of how people learn to get more aware of what they are doing? Klara(Q) I think of macro as a direction - if they do not yet have any understanding of yin and yang they are at the very beginnings of the direction. At least they are eating the rice and hopefully understanding something from the consultation. t(A) I'm humbled by your beautiful understanding. So, Klara asks, " How can we learn to be aware? " How about the silent chatters out there-- C, .... Sheldon© It takes time to think in terms of yin and yang. The concept is too new for most people and it takes time before the habit of a changing thinking-patterns sets in. Nevertheless, I wouldn't define a macro person on the basis of his thinking in terms of yin and yang as long as it is clear that he is headed in that direction. © Sheldon, today a lot of things have not been great, and I was not feeling well at all at the beginning of this chat, then when t mentioned flowing like water, my mood changed and I fell great right now....things were not great...and I was NOT flowing t How can we learn? Tofupax© we try aashburn: Read and study with someone good! t: These are two good ways. How do we know if someone, or a book, is good? © We listen to what they say, or what we read, then we apply it to our lives, and we see if it works or not t: Abraham says, " Words do not teach. Only experience teaches. " Agree? ...How else do we learn? : Agree totally. aashburn: …Keep a food journal t: Food journals are excellent. Klara© What, we have to reinvent the wheel all by ourselves? We can't learn from others????? aashburn: We all have favorite teachers and those who we did not learn from. So, I would fit that in with experience too. (Q) We learn by experience, and from others when we have that intention. t(A): Is intention enough? Is it necessary. Sometimes we learn even when we resist, although it's a tough way to go. ©: t I agree, we learn also when we resist...sometimes the lesson is faster. ©: For me the way I learn best is by doing. Sometimes I have little conscious knowledge of yin/yang, yet at an underlying layer is a growing. : Application is taking the wheel and getting it moving and that moving covers a road of experience. t: Let's summarize so far. Who is macrobiotic? --We all are? --The one who says he is? --The one who consciously applies yin and yang? aashburn: All three options are macro! Klara© Sometimes I am told something and it doesn't " sink in. " Then I am told again and it just starts to make a dent. And sometimes I am really lucky and get an “aha” moment. © Klara, we need to " experience " it by ourselves, even if we learn it from others t: Good, . I like that idea. To me, again " being macro " means being open to change. It means saying yes. And the purpose of that????....What is the purpose?... t: ....no takers on this $64,000 question? : Growth...understanding...unlimited potential. t: But, , to what end? _C: I think the best use of the term macrobiotic is to limit it to people who apply the tools. Not define it as a state of mind. t: , it seems like we're saying there that there are various levels of macro practice, some using tools, some just being human. _C Okay. Klara:(Q) The purpose of saying yes, to being flexible, is to bring in the fullest of life that you can. t:(A) Same question: Klara--why? :© To me, being Macrobiotic means to live a happy, healthy life...in tune with the Universe _C: If we use such a broad definition then yin/yang aren't required, right? Or diet? t: There is macrobiotic understanding in one's thinking, and then there is application in ones life. Different levels of application. Different results. : And when the final good night comes and I go gently into the netherworld I can say it was worth the trip. Klara:© Do you do it with a full heart, right away, just because that's what you want? or do you have to go through first a lot of hard learning, being bumped along the road of life, going through not feeling good sometimes as mentioned. aashburn: Saying yes is another way of being grateful and the universe opens up for us in new ways... : To live a big life...a life with purpose and freedom. t: Yes, yes, yes.....and why, why, why? Tofupax:(Q) That question is like asking what is the purpose of life itself... t:(A) Exactly! Shall we examine what is the purpose of life next month? It's a biggie! Sheldon: Great idea--what is the purpose of life? : Now that may take a whole month. t: Any last ideas for tonight? aashburn: Thanks t: for moderating. so happy to have caught part of this chat. I’ll check out the transcript when it's posted to see what I missed earlier. :(Q) The purpose of life is the purpose we give it t:(A) Nice! Then it's totally personal, not universal. _C: Thanks t: Klara:(Q) Did we cover all ways of learning?? :(A) I understand that there are 3 ways of learning--with a book, with a teacher, and by yourself. Interesting to think which is most yin, which most yang. We can practice yin/yang application next month as well. : Thanks! :© t, the purpose we give to life is totally connected to the Universe, so it is both personal and Universal : I think it is both and they are intertwined. (Waco joined.) Hello! Is the chat still on? He he, a little late! good evening everyone! t: Hello, Waco! That’s my family’s home town! t: It's such a pleasure pondering with you all. Thank you so very much. Let's gather again this time next month for our February chat. _C I would love to have examples of yin/yang that we can observe and analyze. : Thanks t: for a great chat, and for everyone that attended. t: , and everyone--please gather yin and yang questions for the group next time. : Next week will be a general chat at the same time, 2pm eastern. On February 15th will be a chat with Porter. That time will be a bit different—on a Wednesday evening at 8pm. t: Goodnight, everyone! Many thanks, and happy trails. Next Scheduled Chats: Sunday February 5th 2006, General Chat 2pm Eastern Time Wednesday February 8th 2006, Food and Love A Moderated Chat Hosted by Marque 8pm Eastern Time A lively discussion of how we use food to create mood, give love, receive love and attract love. To find out more about , visit her web site @ www.susanmarque.com Wednesday February 15th 2006, A Moderated Chat Hosted by Porter 8pm Eastern Time Join us for a fun chat with the macrobiotic hip chick herself, the authoress of the highly popular, The Hip Chick's Guide To Macrobiotics. Porter is a macrobiotic chef, cooking instructor, and hypnotist. She completed her macrobiotic training at the Kushi Institute in Becket, Massachusetts. She hosts a weekly radio show in Portland, Maine, has written and appeared in her own one-woman show, Zen Comedy, and has been featured in Simon Doonan's recent book, Wacky Chicks: Life Lessons from Fearlessly Inappropriate and Fabulously Eccentric Women. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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