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Just finished listening to the audiobook version of “Burnt Toast” by Teri Hatcher (the cute brunette who played Susan Mayer on the TV show Desperate Housewives.)

 

The book is sweet, but I didn’t find it particularly inspiring. I did, however, like the title metaphor. 

 

Hatcher asks, what do you do when you burn a toast?

 

“Are you the kind of person who tries to scrape off the black? Or do you smother it with jam to hide the taste? Do you throw it away, or do you just eat it? If you shrug and eat the toast, is it because you’re willing to settle for less? Maybe you don’t want to be wasteful, but if you go ahead and eat that blackened square of bread, then what you’re really saying — to yourself and to the world — is that the piece of bread is worth more than your own satisfaction.”

 

This is something I struggle with a lot. 

 

Throwing away food is a particular issue for me. As children, my parents grew up with very limited food, so that was a big no-no in our household. My brother, who was a picky eater, wouldn’t finish the food off his plate, and then my parents would eat his leftovers or offer them to me. 

 

Were you allowed to throw away food as a child?

 

For me, this morphed into an environmental issue. I am deeply troubled by the effort and energy that goes into growing and delivering food. If I let it go to waste, I feel extremely guilty. I am a master of making food with tired ingredients, somewhat past their sell-by date. My husband thinks I’m insane, but no one ever got an upset stomach from something I cooked! 🙂

 

I even have a method for saving burnt toast! I use a hand-held grater to scrape off the charred parts, and the toast is as good as new. It’s most useful when you promise your kids toast and burn the last pieces of bread in the house. No replacement possible, just scraping…

 

But truth be told, usually the problem isn’t toast. It’s eating leftovers that I don’t want to throw away, even though I don’t feel like it, and would rather prepare something fresh.

 

I call this “mercy eating”. 

 

On the one hand, it’s something I can stand behind. Not throwing away food is environmentally responsible, it’s more economical. And to be honest, cooking with odd ingredients languishing in the fridge, give me a little creative win that feels satisfying. 

 

On the other hand, it’s telling yourself that the little piece of bread, the wrinkled tomato, the leftover rice, are more important than your time and your desires. 

 

For me, mercy eating is not even the worst of it. That’s between me and the food, and I can tell myself that the nutrients go back into mother nature’s cycle or something. (Cough, bullshit, cough… I know my municipality doesn’t separate it and it goes landfill, creating methane as it rots, but whatever. It’s an internal struggle.) That notion of deserving less and having to put yourself last can become a habit of parenting. It can also become habitual in a toxic work environment. It can happen in relationships. 

 

Culturally, we often call people selfish and spoiled when they prioritize themselves. This creates a powerful expectation to be a martyr, especially for women.

 

Settling for less and putting yourself last are precursors to feeling overwhelmed. Of course it’s ok to shift priorities and do things for others (or the environment) before you take care of yourself, if your choices make you feel good. This is a question of balance and proportions. 

 

What are your actions telling you? How often are you ignoring your own needs for the needs of others?

Try a little exercise. Take a piece of paper and create 3 columns. 

  1. In one column, write down a list of the major things you did today. 
  2. In another column, write down who they were for (you, kid, spouse, work, household, charity, mother earth…) 
  3. In the last column, write down how it made you feel. 

 

For example, I don’t love cooking. I feel especially frustrated when my kids don’t like what I make. (And no, it’s not because the vegetables are a week old. It’s because they’re picky brats!) So that’s a task that usually makes me feel undervalued and annoyed, and that’s what I’d write down.

 

What does the third column look like? Look at the overall trend. How are things balancing out for you? If most of what you’re doing during the day is frustrating and draining, you should watch out. You might be heading toward burnout.

 

If you want to talk about this, either email me or schedule a free coaching call. Find a convenient time slot here.

 

PS – Check out an excerpt of the “Burnt Toast” book here: https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Books/story?id=1922877&page=1 

 

PPS – Do you know Greek?? If “mercy killing” is Euthanasia, what’s “mercy eating”? Maybe Eutrofia? I’m trying to brand this thing… 🙂

(from Greek: εὐθανασία; “good death”: εὖ, eu; “well” or “good” + θάνατος, thanatos; “death”)

 

Toast photo by Mishaal Zahed on Unsplash

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