Topic: Food for thought.
Food is a topic that always comes up in spiritual/metaphysical discussions, and with good reason. What you put into your body is definitely something which is important to consider, not only in terms of physical health but spiritual health as well.
In my own experience I have found that the knowledge of what is good to eat is not enough to fully implement, and sometimes is downright misleading.
After sitting through 150 hours of class time on the subject of nutrition, it became very apparant to me that, outside of the basics, we really don't know that much about it, and are changing our minds all the time.
On the surface level there are the foods themselves in terms of nutritional content, glycemic index, and proclivity to make our bodies more acidic or alkaline.
Most of us would agree that eating a fresh salad for lunch is a healthy thing to do, but if you ask a proponent of the old Chinese system of nutrition, people should rarely eat uncooked vegetables because they are too 'cooling' to the body, and do not digest very well.
Then you add information on the quantity of food, combinations, times to eat and not eat, etc. It becomes very complex, very quickly.
Everybody's got a theory. But in the end they are just theories. An example which comes to mind is the free radical theory of health and nutrition which is rapidly gaining a blind dogmatic following among many people. Antioxidants are the up and coming panacea for all sorts of degenerative health conditions, and it is not uncommon to find people that are spending hundreds of dollars monthly on antioxidant supplements that are supposed to keep them young and healthy.
Yet all of this focus on physical food distracts our attention away from the other forms of sustenance that we take in every day. Thoughts and ideas are food, emotions are food, biological impulses such as sexual desire and fear are food. All of these things fuel our behavior, and I would venture to say that they are even more primary than physical food.
In naturopathic school, I was always struck by how quickly people would come down on me for grabbing a microwave bean burrito from the gas station for lunch (obviously a poor choice of food), but would turn right around and gorge themselves at the trough of emotional negativity and drama, or plant themselves at the fear box every night while they munch on their dinner of organic tofu and steamed greens.
My point is that, while eating well is a noble goal, it is very easy to become so obsessed with physical food that we ignore all of the more subtle forms of food that are equally, if not more, important.
If we consider spirit to be the other polarity of matter, then it would seem that choosing more appropriate forms of nonphysical food is more ecumenical to spiritual growth than whether we eat beef, chicken, or broccoli for dinner.