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Chocolate delays reality. When
I am eating chocolate, everything is on hold: anxiety,
panic, frustrations, and insecurity. Chocolate offers a
profound richness, a sweetness of life, a euphoric
sensation of luxury. I love chocolate in many forms, from
M&M’s, to imported Lindt balls, to dark fudge
frosting in a pop-top can, to Hershey’s dark chocolate
bite-sized morsels.
It is difficult to eat only
a little chocolate. I cheat myself when I chew it up
quickly and swallow it like other food. To eat chocolate
correctly, one must let it melt in the mouth with eyes
closed, feeling the tasty, thick smooth velvet coat the
tongue. It is also difficult to eat really good chocolate
silently. I usually purr a long ummmmmmm of feminine
satisfaction when enjoying such a pleasure.
I have strategies to keep
from eating chocolate. I meditate after lunch, enjoying
the sweetness of life without calories, I brush my teeth
after drinking my afternoon coffee, and I give chocolate
away to my mother so that it’s not in the house. But it
comes back as gifts from other sources, knowing that it is
loved and cherished in my presence.
My daughter loves
chocolate, too. A hereditary trait, I guess. Sometimes my
mother and my daughter and I enjoy chocolate together, a
female bonding of sensuous gratification.
We give each other gifts of
Easter Bunnies, Christmas balls, and Valentine
confections, then share our blessed bounty with each
other. We hide it from other family members, and never
apologize for succumbing to such greedy decadence. We have
trained the men in our lives to buy it for us as well by
expressing our enjoyment and satisfaction as lip-smacking,
vocalized bliss. It’s as if we permit our chocolate gift
givers to be voyeurs of our pleasure.
I have a girl friend who
refers to chocolate as the fourth basic food group. She
eats it publicly, in front of people, instead of holding
private chocolate sessions where no one can count bites or
pieces. Self-righteous jailers they are, those indignant
souls who reprimand us. Sometimes it is us, ourselves, our
split personalities loving and hating our obsession. My
sister-in-law denies her children from chocolates’ evil
influence, but yields personally to its entrapment.
Chocolate calls her name, beckoning her in a trance- like
state to follow its’ seductive aroma to the kitchen. I
know that aroma well, it cannot be contained in a
cardboard box, a foil wrapper, or an insulated
refrigerator.
Sometimes I eat chocolate
to wake me up, or to keep on working when I want to stop
and take a nap. Much preferred to a carrot on a stick. A
self-imposed bribe to keep pushing. Of course, this bribe
has negative consequences when my jeans don’t fasten.
I suppose the alligator
here is the addiction. But addiction to what? Chocolate?
Or pushing to achieve? What a shame that my time is spent
in activities that don’t burn calories. Striving,
planning, dreaming, persisting, setting boundaries,
checking off chores, reviewing goals, paying bills.
I refuse to give up
chocolate. I know women who have. Women committed to thin.
I’m committed to enjoying my life. I have accepted other
limitations, and I refuse other desserts, bread, and wine
during the week. But chocolate has its place.
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About
The Author
Ana
Tampanna, “The Alligator Queen,” is
author or the “The Womanly Art of
Alligator Wrestling.” To learn more
about her books in addition to her
speaking and coaching services, visit her
site at http://www.alligatorqueen.com.
NOTE
You’re welcome to “reprint” this
article online as long as it remains
complete and unaltered (including the
“about the author” info at the end),
Please a send a copy of your reprint to ana@alligatorqueen.com.
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