Eat your vitamins!


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Eat your vitamins!
Food Rationing & Nutrition in Wartime - 1940's WW2
Why Does American Food Have Ingredients I Need Google Translate For?
I was standing in the grocery store reading a label on a granola bar like it had personally offended me. At some point, we have ALL picked up a snack and realized half the ingredients sound less like food and more like something your primary doctor warns you about.
And listen, I am not one to tell anyone to fear a bag of chips. I love salt and vinegar chips as much as the next person- maybe even more depending on the day. This is a judgment free zone. But the more I started actually paying attention to ingredient labels, the more I found myself asking one very FAIR question: what exactly are we eating?
In America, ultra processed foods are kind of everywhere. And honestly ? That adds up. They're cheap, convenient, easy to grab between classes or work, and usually taste amazing because, well, that's literally the point. Nobody's expecting college students to wake up at sunrise and handcraft oat flour crackers from scratch.
However convenience and science are not always friends.
So naturally, I did what any curious person would do: I started looking into the research.
What Even Counts as Ultra Processed Food?
Okay, before we all start panicking and throwing things out of the pantry, let us define what "ultra processed" even means, shall we ?
Not all processed food is bad. Frozen vegetables ? Processed. Canned Beans ? Also processed. Bread ? Usually Processed.
So no, I am not here to accuse your frozen broccoli of crimes. And I don't know about you, but I am definitely not making chickpeas from scratch on a random Tuesday.
Ultra processed foods are foods that have gone through a lot more than simple prevention or preparation. These are the products slam packed with additives, preservatives, emulsifiers, artificial sweeteners, flavor enhancers, and ingredients that most of us are definitely not keeping in our kitchen cabinets for fun... unless you're maybe Bill Nye.
Think:
Sugary Cereals
Instant Noodles
Pop Tarts
Frozen Dinners
Soda (Dr. Pepper, Yes I know. I am also sad about it)
Candy
Some protein bars that swear they're healthy because the wrapper says "wellness"
Basically, if the ingredient list requires a hydration break halfway through reading it, we might be in ultra processed territory.
Okay, But Is This Just Another "Calories Bad" Conversation ?
That is what I thought at first too.
Because usually when people talk about unhealthy food, it turns into the same conversation: too much sugar, too much fat, too many calories, I'm David Goggins, and cue the guilt spiral.
But one of the articles I found (Health effects ultra processed food: uncovering casual mechanisms by Mathilde Touvier) made this way more interesting.
Researchers aren't just looking at how many calories these foods contain- they're also asking whether the actual additives and processing methods themselves could be affecting our health.
That Includes possible links to things like chronic inflammation, metabolic disease, and type 2 diabetes.
Which to be real, make sense.
Because real life is not scientist handing you one isolated preservative in a tiny lab cup.
Real life is grabbing a coffee that somehow contains 17 ingredients, eating a protein bar because you were "too busy" for lunch, microwaving dinner at 9 p.m, and then stress eating salt and vinegar chips while pretending tomorrow will be different.
Your Gut Is Basically the Most Overworked Employee in Your Body
The second article I looked at (Impact of food additives, artificial sweeteners, and domestic hygiene products on the human gut microbiome... by Gerasimidis and colleagues) focused on gut health.
And before anyone immediately zones out because "microbiome" sounds intimidating, here's the simple version:
Your gut is full of bacteria.
I know. Horrible opening sentence.
Hear me out though, these are actually the good guys.
Your gut bacteria help with digestion, metabolism, immune function, and basically keeping things running behind the scenes while you go about your day making questionable food choices.
The study looked at how certain additives and artificial sweeteners may affects those gut bacteria.
Now, this is NOT me saying one diet soda means your digestive system is filing for bankruptcy.
Let's stay grounded.
Now if your diet is consistently loaded with ultra processed foods and additives ? Yeah, it would make sense to ask what repeated exposure could do over time.
Honestly, learning that food could affect your gut bacteria made me pause harder than calorie counts ever did.
Because I can mentally recover from a sweet sugar cookie with rainbow sprinkles.
But now I know it is messing with my internal support staff ? That feels more personal.
Why is America Food Built Like This?
Short answer?
Convenience.
Long answer?
We live in a country where everyone is tired, busy, broke, stressed, overworked, under-rested, and approximately one minor inconvenience away from needing emotion support fries.
Oh and the food companies know this.
People want food that:
Tastes good
Lasts forever
Doesn't require cooking skills
Won't destroy their bank account
And honestly ? Valid.
That is quite literally why additives exist in the first place. Some help preserve freshness. Some improve texture. Some make food look more appealing because apparently beige yogurt wasn't exciting enough. It has to glow in the dark now too.
Relax, I'm Not Becoming A Kale Influencer
Let me make something SO clear.
This is not me telling you to throw away every snack in your house and start growing your own spinach under the moonlight.
Let's be real for most of us, including myself, that's not happening.
I also love convenience food. I love snacks. I am deeply emotionally attached to foods that come in crinkly packaging.
This is about awareness, not perfection.
Reading labels doesn't mean becoming obsessive or suddenly distrusting everything in aisle 7.
It means to start asking questions.
Maybe swapping a few things when you can.
Maybe realizing "high protein" on the front of the packing doesn't automatically make something good for you.
That my friend, is growth.
Final Thoughts from Your Friendly Snack Detective
At the end of the day, food should still be enjoyable. We do not have to eat kibble for the rest of our lives.
But I do think it's fair to ask questions when ingredient labels start sounding like Wi-Fi passwords.
This research doesn't say every processed food is evil.
It does suggest that when ultra-processed food becomes a major part of daily life, it's worth paying attention to what we're actually putting in our bodies.
So no, this is not anti chip manifesto.
It's just me, your friendly neighborhood Snack Detective, wondering why my granola bar needs a chemistry degree to be understood.
my teacher today (i’m paraphrasing) said
we recognize goiters as a women’s health issue, but since it’s not *that* important we pushed it to the back burner (actual words)
the process to show us the statist that 9/10 ppl effect are women
????? hun, that’s a back burner issue ????????
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