This somehow upsets me. The same milk once pushed into my hands by well-meaning adults is now quietly discouraged by my doctor. Eggs, sugar, white rice, and red meat—once praised as fuel for growth—now appear on medical charts with warning marks beside them. I find the reversal unsettling, even slightly absurd, and deeply human.
As a child, food was instruction. “Finish your rice so you’ll grow tall,” elders said, as if height itself were proof of virtue. Meat was strength, sugar was reward, milk was destiny. These were not myths invented by marketers; they were rooted in the real nutritional needs of developing bodies that demanded calories, protein, calcium, and energy in generous amounts. At that stage of life, abundance was not excess—it was necessity.
Then time intervenes, quietly but decisively. The same foods that once built bone and muscle begin to overstay their welcome. Sugar that powered play now taxes the pancreas. White rice that fills thin frames now spikes blood sugar. Fat that once padded growing limbs starts circling arteries like an uninvited guest who refuses to leave. Biology does not moralize; it simply changes the rules mid-game.
What troubles me is how slow we are to accept that the body has seasons. Many of us continue eating like growing children long after growth has stopped. Habit, nostalgia, convenience, and comfort keep the old menu alive. The plate becomes a museum of childhood needs, while the body outside it has already moved on.
There is also a cruel irony in how food carries memory. A bowl of sweetened cereal is never just carbohydrates; it is Saturday morning. A heap of rice is never just starch; it is home. Letting go of these foods, or even reducing them, can feel like betrayal—of family, of culture, of the younger self who thrived on them without consequence. The body, however, has no sentimentality.
Modern illness exposes this contradiction daily. Diabetes clinics are filled with people who did nothing scandalous except eat what once sustained them, just far longer than their bodies could forgive. Heart disease and gout are not sudden punishments; they are slow negotiations between biology and habit, usually lost because habit speaks louder.
This does not mean food turns evil with age. It means context matters. Quantity, frequency, and balance begin to outweigh sheer nutritional content. What once needed encouragement now requires restraint. Maturity, in eating as in life, lies not in denial but in adjustment—knowing when to stop applauding abundance and start practicing care.
The wiser response is neither fear nor nostalgia, but attentiveness. Eat with the body one has now, not the body one remembers. When food is treated as a lifelong conversation rather than a fixed rulebook, it remains what it was meant to be all along: nourishment, not poison, and certainly not regret.



