Comment on Porridge is staving off child malnutrition in Madagascar - for nine cents a bowl

ininewcrow@lemmy.ca ⁨5⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

I grew up on porridge and I still eat it every morning with my coffee and toast

I think it was the difference between me being a good student in elementary and high school compared to my classmates who all barely passed or just dropped out. This and a steady diet of fish at least twice a week when I was growing up.

We never had a lot of food because we are Indigenous Canadian, grocery food was way too expensive so mom and dad relied on wild food and wild fish to supplement our diet … I estimate about half my diet before I was 15 was wild food. The only cheap thing mom could buy for breakfast was oatmeal and its something I’ve eaten every day of my life. Milk was a luxury so most of the time, it was just watered down canned milk every morning.

I don’t have kids of my own but I have lots of nieces and nephews and I see what they are living on now. Almost 100% store bought food and sugar laced boxed cereal every morning. Almost all of them are either chubby or just plain overweight. I look at pictures of me and my siblings when we were ten, and we looked like skinny scrawny kids … my nieces and nephews are now all overweight at the same age.

It’s not just the quantity of food that is important … it’s the quality of the food we eat or feed to a child.

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