Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Ash Wednesday  (Read 8614 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Soubirous

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 2109
  • Reputation: +1663/-44
  • Gender: Female
Re: Ash Wednesday
« Reply #30 on: February 11, 2024, 07:04:51 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • You are correct, it’s because of that I am a carnivore, haven’t eaten a fruit or veggie in 6 months, we’ve been lied to about them as well. Red meat has way more nutrition then any fruit or veggie; not saying don’t eat them if they’re working for you but all fruit is loaded with sugar and fiber doesn’t digest well, all fiber is good for is moving the veggies out of your system; you don’t get gas from meat, only from vegetables. But, TBH, please do your own research like I did, will never tell anyone to take my word for this stuff

    So you're saying that thousands of years of agriculture are in error? That the ban on flesh meat during Lent in the early Church was a mistake, that the fasting standard of a single slice of plain bread for frustulum/collation is dietarily ill-advised, that Our Lord should not have multiplied all those loaves, though maybe OK about all those fishes?

    FYI, gas only happens if, as a malady of modern bad habits, a person's innards are bereft of the normal healthy native gut bacteria bestowed upon us since the days of Genesis. My research tells me that the mono-carnivore thing is less about proper nutrition and more about neopagan biohacking revisionism.

    For dinner I had a good-sized steak, well salted and seared black and blue, and a glass of red wine with all those beneficent plant phenols. (And followed with a paczki :laugh1: as a nod to the season, though Eastern folk will say the deadline for that was Thursday. :fryingpan:) There are two more steaks in the fridge for tomorrow and Tuesday. Carne-vale. Thereafter, the mammalian and avian protein sources will be quite restricted, to be replaced mainly by plant matter through the end of March (except for Sundays).
    Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, all things pass away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. - St. Teresa of Jesus

    Offline jtucker

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 16
    • Reputation: +23/-21
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #31 on: February 12, 2024, 06:34:15 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • So you're saying that thousands of years of agriculture are in error? That the ban on flesh meat during Lent in the early Church was a mistake, that the fasting standard of a single slice of plain bread for frustulum/collation is dietarily ill-advised, that Our Lord should not have multiplied all those loaves, though maybe OK about all those fishes?

    FYI, gas only happens if, as a malady of modern bad habits, a person's innards are bereft of the normal healthy native gut bacteria bestowed upon us since the days of Genesis. My research tells me that the mono-carnivore thing is less about proper nutrition and more about neopagan biohacking revisionism.

    For dinner I had a good-sized steak, well salted and seared black and blue, and a glass of red wine with all those beneficent plant phenols. (And followed with a paczki :laugh1: as a nod to the season, though Eastern folk will say the deadline for that was Thursday. :fryingpan:) There are two more steaks in the fridge for tomorrow and Tuesday. Carne-vale. Thereafter, the mammalian and avian protein sources will be quite restricted, to be replaced mainly by plant matter through the end of March (except for Sundays).
    If it makes you feel better, I too enjoyed a heaping size of red meat for dinner and will replicate that again...

    Regarding your opening sentence, I recommend you reread my post as by doing so you will see I never said years of ag are in error nor did I say banning flesh meat during Lent is a mistake. However, if you think eating today's version of bread poses no health risk, have at it...this isn't the same bread our Lord multiplied but I am hoping you know that already. Foul preservatives were not a thing back in the day, hence why bread is not a healthy thing to eat anymore.

    Finally, my closing statement in my post recommended that one do their own research and to not take what I said as being the final word. In other words, you-do-you.

    God Bless!


    Offline Matthew

    • Mod
    • *****
    • Posts: 33053
    • Reputation: +29373/-604
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #32 on: February 12, 2024, 09:46:17 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • jtucker is completely right about one thing: Our Lord didn't multiply bleached, spongy Wonder Bread. And any time you read about a Saint or religious (monk, nun) eating a single piece of bread for the day, etc. DO NOT PICTURE A SLICE OF BUTTER-KRUST, WONDER BREAD, or any other brand of modern "white bread". Please!

    It used to be that only children would picture such silly things. It was cute. But today, since we are so divorced from reality and things like farming, baking, cooking -- I'm sure there are some 30 year olds who might make that mistake now!

    Has anyone besides me (and a few other ex-seminarians) experienced eating REAL BREAD? Made from scratch? The kind you have to cut with a bread knife? The texture, smell, and taste is completely different. Even the white variety is different, believe it or not!

    And jtucker is also correct that modern farming methods leave the soil depleted of *trace minerals*. So vegetables aren't as good as the homegrown equivalents of yesteryear. But there is still a lot of nutrition there -- the bare minimum, as it were.

    But I strongly disagree with jtucker about the "carnivore diet" thing. All things in moderation: meat, fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy. God made them all for us to eat, and man has been eating ALL of these things for MILLENNIA -- and with good result!
    Want to say "thank you"? 
    You can send me a gift from my Amazon wishlist!
    https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

    My accounts (Paypal, Venmo) have been (((shut down))) PM me for how to donate and keep the forum going.

    Offline Matthew

    • Mod
    • *****
    • Posts: 33053
    • Reputation: +29373/-604
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #33 on: February 12, 2024, 09:49:18 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • My family used to waste a lot of white bread when I was a kid. When some bread started to get moldy, we'd transfer it to a single bag, and call it "duck bread".

    We had a river/lagoon at the center of my hometown, and we frequently went there to walk, get some fresh air -- and "feed the ducks". That was a regular activity for several years.

    Getting to my point --

    I remember taking a single piece of white bread and balling it up like a snowball, and throwing it as hard as I could into the lagoon. Sometimes it even made it all the way to the island in the center!

    YOU CAN'T DO THAT WITH REAL BREAD. If you *tried* to ball up real bread, it would crumble and CERTAINLY wouldn't happily assume its new ball shape, like so much play-dough!

    So yeah -- there's something different about factory-baked white bread. Even the "wheat" bread isn't much different, if you buy it from the store.
    Want to say "thank you"? 
    You can send me a gift from my Amazon wishlist!
    https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

    My accounts (Paypal, Venmo) have been (((shut down))) PM me for how to donate and keep the forum going.

    Offline jersey60

    • Jr. Member
    • **
    • Posts: 362
    • Reputation: +235/-55
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #34 on: February 12, 2024, 11:25:07 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • jtucker is completely right about one thing: Our Lord didn't multiply bleached, spongy Wonder Bread. And any time you read about a Saint or religious (monk, nun) eating a single piece of bread for the day, etc. DO NOT PICTURE A SLICE OF BUTTER-KRUST, WONDER BREAD, or any other brand of modern "white bread". Please!

    It used to be that only children would picture such silly things. It was cute. But today, since we are so divorced from reality and things like farming, baking, cooking -- I'm sure there are some 30 year olds who might make that mistake now!

    Has anyone besides me (and a few other ex-seminarians) experienced eating REAL BREAD? Made from scratch? The kind you have to cut with a bread knife? The texture, smell, and taste is completely different. Even the white variety is different, believe it or not!

    And jtucker is also correct that modern farming methods leave the soil depleted of *trace minerals*. So vegetables aren't as good as the homegrown equivalents of yesteryear. But there is still a lot of nutrition there -- the bare minimum, as it were.

    But I strongly disagree with jtucker about the "carnivore diet" thing. All things in moderation: meat, fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy. God made them all for us to eat, and man has been eating ALL of these things for MILLENNIA -- and with good result!
    I adopted the carnivore way of eating about 6 months ago, never looked back but I’m not a strict carnivore, admit it’s not for everyone’s taste but it’s ancestral eating at its finest IMHO of course. Do I miss bread and pasta? Yup! But not veggies…


    Offline Matthew

    • Mod
    • *****
    • Posts: 33053
    • Reputation: +29373/-604
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #35 on: February 12, 2024, 11:41:59 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  • I’m not a strict carnivore, admit it’s not for everyone’s taste but it’s ancestral eating at its finest IMHO of course.

    HUH?

    Are you saying you believe in evolution, and/or cavemen? Ancient man didn't eat any differently than he does today, except less (by that I mean, NONE) processed food. And the common man probably got a lot less meat in his diet, because it was expensive. Probably a lot more starches (bread, potatoes, vegetables).

    Mankind didn't used to eat raw meat from the tip of a spear. That is godless-evolution "molecules to man" nonsense. We've had fire, cooking, and civilization from the moment we were created. Adam and Eve (and his direct descendants) knew things that would blow your mind. A lot of knowledge has been lost. *Some* has been since re-discovered.

    The only "cavemen" were those who got off Noah's Ark and didn't immediately have any structures to move into. Especially as they migrated to new places all over the earth. And perhaps caves were used after other smaller-scale natural disasters. But there was no point at which mankind's highest level was "living in a cave" wearing animal skins, hunting mammoth with a spear, eating raw meat, having names like Grog, etc.
    Want to say "thank you"? 
    You can send me a gift from my Amazon wishlist!
    https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

    My accounts (Paypal, Venmo) have been (((shut down))) PM me for how to donate and keep the forum going.

    Offline Soubirous

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 2109
    • Reputation: +1663/-44
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #36 on: February 12, 2024, 11:45:07 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • If it makes you feel better, I too enjoyed a heaping size of red meat for dinner and will replicate that again...

    Regarding your opening sentence, I recommend you reread my post as by doing so you will see I never said years of ag are in error nor did I say banning flesh meat during Lent is a mistake. However, if you think eating today's version of bread poses no health risk, have at it...this isn't the same bread our Lord multiplied but I am hoping you know that already. Foul preservatives were not a thing back in the day, hence why bread is not a healthy thing to eat anymore.

    Finally, my closing statement in my post recommended that one do their own research and to not take what I said as being the final word. In other words, you-do-you.

    God Bless!

    Glad we agree in general. The goal was to elicit a corrective reply since, as we both know, this is the sort of topic that gets oversimplified and entrenched in daily real-life application. As with the penitential purpose of Lent, there's the risk of missing the forest for the trees.

    Re bread, it's one more example of how miserably deracinated the relationship to food has become, in which we've been reduced to dumb gullets and passive-aggressive nodes of market consumption. Ways to remediate: make semolina bread while exercising patience and observation, since this demanding sort of dough doesn't behave like other doughs. Make vollkornbrot, several days of watchfully tending to multiple steps from start to finish. More simply, make old-style batch bread with fresh unskimmed milk, itself an effective preservative and dough conditioner.
     
    OK, forget bread for the carnivores. Instead, do some grounded research (assuming zones north of the equator) about Easter eggs and Paschal lambs, also monastic aquaculture and the medieval trade in stockfish.

    Without this re-racination and refocus on Creation, Lenten rules can seem like arbitrary abstractions and just-so stories waiting to be ridiculed and dismissed by cynical modernists. Ironic that atheistic rational materialism refuses to consider the true reasons for this material we're given by Divine Providence. Their own willful loss.
    Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, all things pass away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. - St. Teresa of Jesus

    Offline Soubirous

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 2109
    • Reputation: +1663/-44
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #37 on: February 12, 2024, 12:02:42 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • But there was no point at which mankind's highest level was "living in a cave" wearing animal skins, hunting mammoth with a spear, eating raw meat, having names like Grog, etc.

    Yeah, I'm starting to think that all these recent media influencers like Liver King, etc. are riding on some ulterior monetization/paganization prompts and aren't what they present themselves to be. Ye shall be as gods by way of the primitive flesh meats (or rather these exclusive costly capsule extracts), not by way of apple-eating effeminacy.
    Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, all things pass away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. - St. Teresa of Jesus


    Offline jersey60

    • Jr. Member
    • **
    • Posts: 362
    • Reputation: +235/-55
    • Gender: Male
    Re: Ash Wednesday
    « Reply #38 on: February 12, 2024, 12:31:48 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • HUH?

    Are you saying you believe in evolution, and/or cavemen? Ancient man didn't eat any differently than he does today, except less (by that I mean, NONE) processed food. And the common man probably got a lot less meat in his diet, because it was expensive. Probably a lot more starches (bread, potatoes, vegetables).

    Mankind didn't used to eat raw meat from the tip of a spear. That is godless-evolution "molecules to man" nonsense. We've had fire, cooking, and civilization from the moment we were created. Adam and Eve (and his direct descendants) knew things that would blow your mind. A lot of knowledge has been lost. *Some* has been since re-discovered.

    The only "cavemen" were those who got off Noah's Ark and didn't immediately have any structures to move into. Especially as they migrated to new places all over the earth. And perhaps caves were used after other smaller-scale natural disasters. But there was no point at which mankind's highest level was "living in a cave" wearing animal skins, hunting mammoth with a spear, eating raw meat, having names like Grog, etc.
    Me thinks you’re off my point; carnivore eating, in its less stricter form, allows for fish & dairy in its way of eating, primary focus is to eliminate sugar, carbs and seed oils. 
    Cavemen and animal skins, raw meat, etc are not part of carnivore lifestyle, we bit far fetched as I never insinuated that in my comments.
    Gee, I’m a meat eater and enjoying the health benefits as such, that was the only reason of my original post. Lest there be any doubt, and I can’t see any reason why there would be, I’m not an evolution believer…where did that even come from? Certainly not in anything I wrote…think this thread has ventured to left field and beyond.