Lately I have gone
back to my old ways of spending time napping in the sleeping room in
the workplace and then using the remaining 15 minutes for a quick
lunch. I sleep early these days, 2 hours earlier than before when I
used to go home from work. My rented place is just ten minutes from
the office and so I am happily now able to eat dinner at an earlier
time and to read my books.
And because people
at the office prefer to eat first than nap, I usually have lunch
alone. Yesterday was no different. A colleague saw me as I was in the
middle of lunch and said, “It’s not fun to eat alone.” And
inside my mind, I was like, huh??? In what way is eating alone not
fun? I thought to myself, poor girl probably hasn’t traveled alone
yet.
In many societies,
eating is a communal activity. To some people including me, eating is
a form of meditation, my me-time. This is not to say that I do not
enjoy some company when eating, but what I am saying is that having
company or not, I eat well and I take advantage of the situation
regardless of what it is. Meaning, if I eat with people, I take the
opportunity to get to know them better (and sometimes to try out
their food. LOL) If I eat alone, I take the opportunity to know
myself better, because it provides me with time for myself. Normally
my work hours are consumed by meeting different kinds of people which
makes me prone to energy depletion (although people find it
incredible when I say I am an introvert because I get along well with
anyone)
So anyway, back to
eating alone. I remember an ex-officemate who is vocal about not
wanting to eat alone. For her it just is plain lonely and
uncomfortable and she doesn’t get to enjoy her food. I find it
curious, then as now, because maybe I do not have any issue on eating
either with company or not. For me, eating is eating. It’s your
interaction with food that should weigh more because you only get to
eat, what, three to four times a day. (Although I am also guilty of
small snacks thanks to chocolates and chips office people give to me
especially when they know I am meeting deadlines. And I am not
ashamed to say that I feel loved when people give me food. What more,
when people cook for me.)
Perhaps it has
something to do with me doing solo travels. One of the things I
always look forward to when traveling is having full liberty to stop
somewhere when I find interesting eats. Another is dining at
recommended restaurants (mostly seafood restaurants) where I get to
observe how people eat what. That, eating and savoring the food
without thinking of the time, is I think, a form of meditation that
everyone should experience once in a while. It makes you think how
food is produced, prepared, and served to you. It makes you feel more
grateful for the abundance of the earth. At the same time, it makes
you think about mans greed and lack of concern for the environment,
how we foolishly opt to have cemented jungles instead of thriving,
cultivable land that can address food shortage. Eating alone seems
like a lonely activity, but you don’t really feel that lonely when
you think about how everything is interconnected and interdependent.
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