chandresh 🪴
@chandresh.eth
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antimo 🎩
@antimofm.eth
not being able to cook signals entitlement (expecting society / spouse / someone else to feed you)
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tldr (tim reilly)
@tldr
This is an insightful take. I agree w you, even though I am one of the entitled. However I wouldn’t say so much that I “expect” people to feed me - I feel like it’s totally fair to need to trade them something (such as money) in order to eat the great things they’ve produced. But I should appreciate it more.
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antimo 🎩
@antimofm.eth
I think about this often! And it's obviously not about fancy cooking It's about dependence, but also about growth and our relationship with society (and nature) We all start out unable to feed ourselves; that changes, and eventually we must feed our children
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antimo 🎩
@antimofm.eth
Being able to cook a meal is the first step towards understanding our role (and weight) not just in society but in nature I'm thinking about Michael Pollan's books and about the kids who wouldn't recognise the food they eat everyday if they saw it hanging from a tree branch
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antimo 🎩
@antimofm.eth
Finally, growing or cooking your own food is different from buying it because it's non-transactional We must not forget that the economy is an artificial layer we've built on top of the natural one The taller the building is, the deeper the foundation must be
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