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Support Farmers’ Markets: Buy Local

Over the past year, I’ve slowly shifted my food purchasing to 99% organic.  I started slowly by seeking organic food at my regular groceries.  Eventually I was disappointed with the limited options at the big name stores and tried local natural food stores.  At these stores I found a wide array of choices & helpful staff; but they were expensive.

Then, I discovered the best thing to ever happen to my grocery shopping experience—Trader Joe’s.  TJ’s has a huge selection of organic fruit, vegetables, sauces, & breads; organic cage-free eggs; and organic free-range meats.  The produce is some of the freshest I’ve come across—items like salad & broccoli from Trader Joe’s last me a week+ longer than the same produce purchased from the big name groceries. Perhaps the best thing about Trader Joe’s is the staff.  I am always impressed with the friendliness & helpfulness of every single Trader Joe’s staff person that I come across.

Clearly, I am a huge Trader Joe’s fan.  The only thing that keeps the store from being perfect in my eyes is that much of the food is not local.  While my health plays a big part in my food purchases, I am also concerned with ethics & the environment.  In my eyes, perfect food = organic + sustainably/locally grown.

Farmers’ Markets = ♥
In the summertime, all of my prayers are answered at my local farmers’ markets!  I am so blessed to live in rural New Jersey where farmers’ markets can be found all over the place.  Currently there are three farmer’s markets within ten to twenty-five minutes of me.  I can visit the markets on Sundays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.

I absolutely adore my local farmers’ markets.  All of the vendors are so friendly and happy to answer my questions about their products.  It is so great to actually be able to talk to the producers of my food.

Far too many people are completely disconnected from the food that they eat.  We tend to have no idea about the stuff that we are putting into our bodies. We simply go to the grocery and pluck anything from the shelves and throw it in the cart—especially if it’s On Sale or Tastes Good.

We don’t stop to ask the important questions:

  • What is in this product?
  • Where did it come from?
  • Who worked to get this here?
  • How was this animal treated?
  • How was the earth treated in growing this product?

These questions are incredibly important—for your health & for the health of our planet.

Why buy local?
There are countless reasons why buying local food is both rewarding and delicious, including enjoying the taste of fresh food, improved health and nutrition, support for family farms, and ensuring animal welfare.

There is also significant peace of mind in knowing where our food comes from.  Developing a relationship with local farmers gives us an “in” with our local food system. Some farmers are thrilled to share their knowledge and experience with their customers.  Ask about the challenges your local farmers face and what they are doing to address them.  It doesn’t have to be complicated.  Ask about the weather!  Any farmer will be pleased to talk about how the growing season is going and how that affects the food they grow. Knowing local farmers can go a long way to simplifying buying local.

Another significant reason to buy local is to keep food miles to a minimum. “Food miles” refer to the distance a food item travels from the farm to your home.  The food miles for items in the grocery store are, on average, 27 times higher than the food miles for goods bought from local sources.

In the U.S., the average grocery store’s produce travels nearly 1,500 miles between the farm where it was grown and your refrigerator.  About 40% of our fruit is produced overseas and, even though broccoli is grown all over the country, the broccoli we buy at the supermarket travels an average of 1,800 miles to get there. Notably, nine percent of our red meat comes from foreign countries, some as far away as Australia and New Zealand.

Our food is trucked across the country, hauled in freighter ships over oceans, and flown around the world. A tremendous amount of fossil fuel is burned to transport foods such long distances, releasing carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter and other pollutants that contribute to global climate change, acid rain, smog and air and sea pollution. The refrigeration required to keep our fruits, vegetables, dairy products and meats from spoiling during their long journeys burn up even more fossil fuel. In contrast, local and regional food systems produce 17 times less CO2.

This information came from The Sustainable Table, to read more visit thesustainabletable.org.

My Sunday Visit to the Market
Yesterday I visited one of my favourite farmers’ markets—The Warwick Valley Farmers’ Market. The pictures at the top of the post are a few of my snaps from the day.  I came away with a fantastic haul of:

  • Fresh flowers
  • Homemade cheese & potato pirogis
  • Homemade artichoke-asiago ravioli
  • Homemade garlic marinara sauce
  • A gorgeous bunch of carrots
  • A basket of fresh raspberries
  • A pint of half-sour & new pickles
  • And a bag of delicious shallots
My favourite take-away—the flowers!

 

It’s going to be a good food week in my house! 😉

So what about you? Do you visit your local farmers’ market?

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    Tired of Conflict Bringing You Down?

    Dealing With Conflict

    Conflict takes many forms—misunderstanding, frustration, ignorance, hatred, envy, and so on—but despite the cause, the result is largely the same: someone walks away with hurt feelings.

    The truth is, however, that this is not necessary. You can choose to be unaffected by conflict. It is not an easy thing to accomplish. You have, after all, lived your life believing that conflict equals pain. But with practice & patience you can learn to live above conflict in a place of true peace.

    “True peace can not be disturbed by gain or loss.”

    The reason that conflict hurts us is because we allow it to. Most pain comes from another person(s) or from our own minds. The key to being unaffected by conflict is to understand that anything that another person says to us (out of anger, frustration, etc.) is actually a reflection of her feelings about herself and is rooted in fear. Likewise, anything that our mind says to us (self-criticism, self-hatred, etc.) is also rooted in fear. All forms of discomfort—sadness, anxiety, worry, rage, hatred, envy, and so on—are rooted in fear.

    When you accept that angry words are actually reflections of fear, it makes them much less painful to tolerate. Even the angriest and most cruel of arguments is based in fear & insecurity.

    For example, you have a large project due at work. You bring it into your boss’s office an hour prior to the deadline. She notices that it is riddled with errors. Her face turns red and she begins to scream. “You idiot! How could you be so stupid? This is unacceptable. I can not believe I ever hired you. Get out!”

    On one hand, you are devastated. Her words have stung you at your core. You are insulted, sad, angry, afraid. But if you really stop to analyze the situation, why do you think she acted this way? Most likely, she is afraid. Most likely, she is terrified about the way that your “failure” is going to reflect on her. After all, wasn’t it her who hired you, gave you this assignment, failed to give you proper instruction, and so on? What will her boss think when she turns this project into him? Her explosion was based in fear.

    Another example, it is Saturday afternoon and you are sitting on the couch. Your husband comes in the door and notices that you have not swept the floors. He begins to speak angrily, “Haven’t you swept the floors? Didn’t you see this dirt? You’ve been so lazy recently.” You are crushed and devastated. How could he be so mean? But then again, you stop and analyze. The lawn is not mowed, the gutters are uncleaned, there are piles of crap strewn about the yard. Your husband is insecure about all of his unfinished chores and is projecting his self-frustration onto you. His remarks were based in fear and insecurity.

    If you take the time to truly analyze, you will find that almost every conflict is rooted in fear. Therefore, the vast majority of hurtful things that are ever said to you actually have absolutely nothing to do with you. This is an incredibly liberating concept (not to be confused with the rare scenario when you are actually wrong by the way). Still, just because the other person’s (or even your own self-inflicted) anger is based in fear, that still doesn’t make it right. Yes, perhaps both your boss and your husband were entirely out of line. It is alright for you to tell them so, but what is more important is the way that you process the conflict within yourself.

    Most people internalize the conflict. In any case, you take what was said and push it deep within yourself. Perhaps you believe the other person words. “Yes, I am lazy, stupid, ugly, etc.” The conflict turns into emotional pain and festers within you eventually becoming depression, anxiety, and so on. But as I mentioned at the start, none of that is necessary.

    You must accept the conflict (words) for what they are—someone else’s (or even your own mind’s) fears and insecurities. Fear is nothing to be afraid of or affected by. Most fear is completely unnecessary (read more about that).

    After the conflict, words, and judgments have passed, simply allow all of it to pass through and around you like water or air. Understand that it is something outside of you, that has nothing to do with you at all. It is not inside of you, it did not come from you, and you do not have to absorb it. Simply let it pass and then move on.

    Holding onto the pain of conflict is insane and unnatural. What do the birds do after the great storm has passed? They sing, of course! You will never hear the birds singing so sweetly and so loudly as they do after the storm has passed and the sun shines again. They do not mourn the broken nest, the wet feathers, or the lost supper. They simply sing and praise the light in gratitude. They rejoice that the sun has come again.

    In his book, The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment, Eckhart Tolle talks about his observation of duck fights. Two ducks approach one another. They squawk in anger for mere seconds. Then they turn away from one another, flap their great wings a few times, and swim on as if it never happened. This is true wisdom, true peace, in action. There is so much that we can learn from this simple observation.

    There is really no need to hold onto anger or discomfort. There is really no need to suffer. In life, you will find many reason to suffer. But a good reason to suffer, you will never find. Let conflicts pass through and around you. Do not hold onto them. You will almost always find that it never has anything to do with you anyway.

5 Comments

  1. Saw your pics via Twitter and loved ’em. Lots of folks in the Charleston SC area are getting excited about Trader Joe’s coming to town. There are none close at all and the new one will be open this fall in our area. The lovely Miss Teresa and I lived in California for seven years before coming to Charleston and we had Trader Joe’s there and we loved the place. We will be all over this one when it opens.
    We do have some really good local Farmers Markets here as well and the biggest one is in downtown Charleston at Marion Park on Saturdays. It is really popular and reallly crowded so we try to get there before 9 am and be done within an hour.

    Since our growing season is so long, we have the Farmers Markets from early April until mid November so that is really a treat.

    1. @ Lou – I am so pleased to hear that you are supporting your local farmer’s market, too! There is nothing like really fresh fruit & veggies. Our blueberry bushes are starting to ripen and some tomatoes & cucumbers are appearing on our vines. Even better than the market is food fresh from my own garden! 😉

      Ya’ll are going to LOVE Trader Joe’s!

  2. Love your site, girl. And this post made me drool. Check out my new website too. I hope to inspire people as you inspire me. Love love love.

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