An exploration, both personal and deeply reported, of how we learn to
eat in today's toxic food culture.
Food is supposed to sustain and nourish us. Eating well, any doctor will
tell you, is the best way to take care of yourself. Feeding well, any
human will tell you, is the most important job a mother has. But for too
many of us, food now feels dangerous. We parse every bite we eat as good
or bad, and judge our own worth accordingly. When her newborn daughter
stopped eating after a medical crisis, Virginia Sole-Smith spent two
years teaching her how to feel safe around food again -- and in the
process, realized just how many of us are struggling to do the same
thing.
The Eating Instinct visits kitchen tables around America to tell
Sole-Smith's own story, as well as the stories of women recovering from
weight loss surgery, of people who eat only nine foods, of families with
unlimited grocery budgets and those on food stamps. Every struggle is
unique. But Sole-Smith shows how they're also all products of our modern
food culture. And they're all asking the same questions: How did we
learn to eat this way? Why is it so hard to feel good about food? And
how can we make it better?