a peek inside the fishbowl

30 Apr, 2013

Live below the line: Tuesday

Posted by andrea tomkins in: Challenge me, challenge you|Yaktivism

Heeyyyy! I received a donation! Thank you Anonymous, may you always have salt at your table and never know hunger. :)

We had a quiet evening last night, which included a long walk with the dog and trip to Home Depot to pick up a couple of things. There came a point around 8:00 that I started to feel exhausted and slightly nauseous, but I persevered. For the record, I did not go to bed feeling hungry. I don’t know why, but there it is. I went to bed a bit early, and read. I felt ok.

Breakfast today was exactly like yesterday’s:

IMG_1327

I am pretty happy with my breakfast plan. It doesn’t seem like very much but it’s hot, sweet, and does the trick. I do miss making my oatmeal with milk though.

I had a half of a banana and some tea as well. I am trying to figure out how many cups I can get out of one teabag. The thing with hot tea is that it’s a zero calorie, low-cost, filler. It takes the edge off. It’s warm and comforting, a bit of caffeine to stave off the headache, and it keeps me distracted and feeling content even though I’m really not. I need to drink it hot though. If it cools it’s not nearly so satisfying. It’s funny how the body can be tricked this way.

This was today’s lunch, which I started thinking about around 10:00 a.m.:

April 30 #dailylunches - Day two of #livebelowca

Mishmash soup! I boiled two cups of water and dropped 2/3 of a bouillon cube in there, along with 1/3 cup of pasta. It was looking a little sad (I am detecting a theme here) so I dropped in a couple tablespoons of my diced tomatoes, a tablespoon of canned peas, and some of the parsley I have growing on my window. When it returned to boiling I cracked an egg in there. I ate it slowly, with a fancy spoon.

Pictured above wasn’t even the whole portion. I saved a bit for an afternoon snack.

As you saw in my first post, I don’t have much in the way of variety.

As a solo Live Below participant I am at a real disadvantage because of my low buying power. The budget is $8.75 per person, for the week. According to the rules I am not supposed to shave off a tablespoon of oil that I already have in my pantry, even though I may have been able to make it fit my budget.

If Mark had done this with me, or the kids, we would have had a better budget to work within. And a better budget means that I would have had a greater variety of foods, and maybe even a fresh vegetable.

I might break down later, but that remains to be seen.

My new strategy to stave off hunger is to drink lots of water before and after each meal and brush my teeth five times a day with super minty toothpaste. Hey, whatever works right?

Here’s my dinner:

Live below the line - dinner day two

1/3 cup white rice (measured uncooked), with a 1/3 of a vegetable bouillon cube, 1/4 cup peas and a slice of onion that was “cooked” a little on a dry frying pan, and a bit of parsley.

It was pretty tasteless, and I’m upset I didn’t plan my menu a bit better. This lack of food isn’t just hunger-inducing, there’s much more to it than that. There is so much comfort and joy to be found in eating, to have all that taken away is very very depressing.

I honestly don’t know how people do it. I really don’t.

This post was written for the Live Below the Line challenge, in which I am trying to feed myself on $1.75 per day, for five days. You can support me by making a small donation right here. Even donating the amount you’d spend on your coffee today would make a big difference. Thank you!


6 Responses to "Live below the line: Tuesday"

1 | Vivian

April 30th, 2013 at 9:05 pm

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I think the harshest reality in doing this challenge is just how meagre everything is. I can see how in the long-term, this would affect one’s mental state.

I’ve realized how much joy I get from good food, and that sadly, “enough” food makes me a lot happier.

2 | molly

April 30th, 2013 at 9:27 pm

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You are foodie person trying to be creative with your buck 75. I keep thinking that the person who isn’t doing this as a challenge but actually eats for less than $2 a day likely eats Kraft dinner (though likely not made with butter or milk), eggs and a junky loaf of bread that costs 79 cents. I can see why they would eat the packaged food because at least there would be salt for flavour.

I remember watching a program about poverty and diet. They were interviewing people about what they ate and why. Basically, it was next to impossible to purchase fresh fruits and vegetables and quality meat and that they could stretch a dollar further by buying low quality packaged food and fast food. This makes me sad….

3 | Psychgrad

April 30th, 2013 at 11:06 pm

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I had considered trying this challenge – but I wouldn’t be able to do it. Even looking at what you’ve eaten today makes me feel hungry and sad.

4 | Javamom

May 1st, 2013 at 9:26 am

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This is awesome Andrea. I just last week had a chat about food being too much of a science for me lately, which goes to show just how spoiled we are here in the middle-class North American culture. All this talk about sensitivities or allergies, nutritional optimization, taste…and convenience, too.Don’t have cherry tomatoes for the salad? Just run up to the store and pick some up! No biggie…

What you are doing is showing us just how limited some people’s choices are. They eat what they have, not what is necessarily nutritionally adequate, they don’t worry about presentation, they worry about whether it will fill the child’s (or your) tummy. Congratulations to making it through the second day.

5 | Ginger

May 1st, 2013 at 11:56 am

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I am way behind in my blog reading. But I have heard of this challenge on the news. The only thing I can think about right now is question what people do who have food allergies or special dietary needs. We just found out that Emory is allergic/sensitive to eggs, milk, peanuts, almonds, and cashews…as well as gluten intolerant. Dean is allergic/sensitive to milk, almonds, and wheat and is also gluten intolerant.

I cannot even tell you how much I have spent on items to replace those things they cannot eat. I am making most everything from scratch now and it does save a bit of money…but not much. Other milk options like rice or coconut milk are so expensive but needed now.

How many poor people are not only starving or very underfed but are also suffering from an allergy or sensitivity and can do absolutely nothing to alleviate the chronic health problems from the food they can eat. And all those processed, boxed foods that are so cheap…full of gluten and other things now restricted in our home.

Learning a new way to eat and cook and live is hard…but at least I can afford to buy the alternatives.

I think you are doing an amazing thing. I am sending my support!

6 | Katie

May 1st, 2013 at 6:41 pm

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Hi Andrea,
Keep it up, you are doing good by this effort, and by sharing your challenge. I was trying to imagine how I would face this kind of trial. I think I would try and give thanks more thoroughly for what I say eating. I try, but am not always successful at gratitude now. Then I realized, those living with this restraint are doing without a whole lot more. Warm broth likely tastes better if you have not heat in your home.
You are drinking water and that is good. You will make it and be better for this opportunity.

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