4.6 • 628 Ratings
🗓️ 17 November 2023
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
As we approach a holiday season that’s highly focused on food, we’re thrilled to be joined by Diane Summers, MS, RDN, CEDS-S, CD, a highly experienced and nationally registered dietitian specializing in the treatment of eating disorders, for an insightful exploration of the multifaceted issue of food insecurity. Drawing on her 19 years of expertise, Diane delves into two essential frameworks through which to understand this critical topic.
The first framework begins with a stark reality: 12.8% (17 million households) in the US face food insecurity, with disproportionately higher rates for Black and Hispanic households, as reported by the USDA. Food insecurity is defined here as the uncertainty or inability to acquire enough food due to insufficient funds or resources.
This conversation also explores a second framework, inviting us to examine food insecurity through the lens of our culture's pervasive obsession with altering bodies through dieting and restrictive eating. A note to listeners that this conversation does mention disordered eating but does not go into detail.
Diane, along with Dan and Rachael, navigate the delicate terrain of recognizing the privilege of having access to enough food while also acknowledging the potentially unhealthy relationships many harbor with food. The discussion touches on the impact of societal norms, trauma associated with growing up in a diet culture, and the subsequent internalization of food as an adversary.
This episode provides a thought-provoking and compassionate examination of the complex issue of food insecurity, with insights into the societal, cultural, and personal dynamics involved.
Listen to our previous conversation with Diane Summers in Food, Kindness, and Our Bodies
Resources cited in this episode: Poverty, by America by Matthew Desmond; USDA Food Security in the U.S. Statistics, 2022
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0:00.0 | Thank you for listening to the Allender Center podcast. |
0:06.7 | I'm Dr. Dan Allender. |
0:08.7 | And I'm Rachel Clinton-Centen. |
0:10.5 | We're fiercely committed to providing hope and healing to a fragmented world. |
0:14.7 | And restoration for the heart. |
0:17.2 | Thank you for joining us. |
0:18.5 | Let's get this conversation started. |
0:29.6 | Thank you for joining us. Let's get this conversation started. Well, undoubtedly, for most families, Thanksgiving is a season of delight, a coming back home, a large, sumptuous, delectable meal. |
0:46.3 | So of course, what would the Allender Center do as we invite you into your Thanksgiving |
0:52.8 | feast, but to talk about food insecurity. |
0:55.6 | Doesn't that feel? |
0:58.3 | We're just your resident, |
1:01.3 | trauma-informed folks trying to make sure |
1:04.0 | there's space at the table |
1:05.5 | for a lot of the things that will go unnamed |
1:09.4 | and unaddressed, but no less at the table. |
1:15.2 | Yes. So we are going to talk about the glory of food. But given that there is glory, truly God |
1:24.1 | given glory to food, it shouldn't surprise anyone that there is a war with, at times against the reality of the pleasure, the delight, the honor of being able to eat and to eat well with others. |
1:40.8 | So that's what we want to reflect on, and we could not have a better guest on than what we |
1:51.2 | would refer to as our resident nutritionist, Diane Summers. |
1:56.5 | And Diane, you've been on before, but again, for the audience, you are a professional nutritionist, |
2:02.8 | but you're also essentially a remarkable therapist who works in the intersection of the human |
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