Hunger Is Not a Disease

How to Successfully Shop at a Food Pantry

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At a time when people are busy wrapping gifts and planning festivities, some are struggling just to pay the rent and buy gas to get to work.  Hungry is not a category of people.  It’s a situation that happens.  It can happen to anyone.  December is especially hard on those visiting a food pantry for the first time.  It’s the reason I write this guide

Leave fear, embarrassment, shame, tears at the door.  Most people using pantries are finally in a place where they can rebuild and heal.  When the struggle for food is relieved, life finally feels as if it’s getting better.  For many, the pantry is a safe place.  This is a good group to join.

Arrive a hour before the pantry opens  This makes for a long wait but there’s a better selection right at the beginning.   Use this time to network with your line neighbors.  They can be a resource if you’re trying to  navigate your way through Department of Social Services, being foreclosed upon, get your car repaired.

Learn how long you’ll be in the shopping room, what foods are usually found on the shelves, whether you get to choose the food or receive a bag of groceries, what other pantries people shop at.

Bring some ID.  Some pantries require much:  photo ID, proof of residence, proof that other family members exist.

Once you’re registered, shop every time you’re allowed.  With luck, you’ll find a pantry offering weekly visits.  People sometimes just don’t go if they still have any SNAP card (food stamp) money or if they have a few bucks left over from a paycheck.  Pantries have different food every week and you may miss out on some real savings by not shopping often.

Some pantries have periodic visits from nutritionists offering recipes and food tastings.  Don’t be shy.  Ask for information you need to adjust to the new way of cooking offered by pantries where food choices are different from the super market.  If you’re suddenly cooking with only a crock pot or microwave, the nutritionist can be a valuable resource.

You may see fresh fruits and vegetables you don’t recognize.  At each pantry visit, take home one new food, find a recipe and prepare it.  If you do this, your cooking skills will be vastly improved over time.

Volunteer.  Giving away food and sharing smiles with those around you offers its own spirituality.  You’ll interact with people you never thought in your wildest dreams you would ever even meet.  Pantry shoppers are traveling down a path away from hunger.  Go with this journey which opens the door to inner growth.

Stick with this new routine.  It’s the 21st century way to get delicious, nutritious groceries  for your household.  It’s been years since pantries offered exclusively emergency food.

Thank you for reading this blog/book.

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Peace and food for all..

Thurman Greco

Libraries – and the Hungry

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“Hunger and income inequality is probably the single biggest issue facing this country.” – Susan Zimet

LIBRARIES ARE EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO A TOWN, TO A COUNTRY.

Libraries are equal opportunity events offering information, learning, culture for any and all who enter.  They also offer an opportunity to get in out of the rain, snow, heat.  As far as I can tell, it’s easier to get into a library than it is to get into a lot of pantries.

For one thing, I don’t think you have to prove where you live to get into a library.  There may be libraries out there that require proof of address, and other identification but I don’t know about them.  (If you know of a library requiring identification or proof of residency to enter, please let me know.  I don’t want to be wrong about that.)

Libraries are important to a community.  The most important thing I carry in my wallet is my Woodstock Free Library Card.  I never have to show it to anyone to use the library.  I just walk in the door and all this wonder, this knowledge, this information is available to me…for nothing.  But, for some reason, I feel that it’s important to carry it.

At the Woodstock Free Library, a person can even take his/her dog if it’s on a leash.

As soon as I walk in the door, I see the computers.  And, of course,  they are available to everyone.  These computers are sooo important to those of us who are in a situation where there are only funds for rent and gas.  For those  in the “broke” category, a computer is out of the question.

For those in the homeless category,  library computers  are even more important because they are a homeless person’s ticket to communication with the outside world…especially offices  such as Department of Social Services, Office of the Aging.  For a homeless person seeking shelter, they are invaluable.  For a housed person seeking a larger or less expensive apartment, they are necessary.  A job seeker cannot get hired these days without access to a computer.

We can all get an email address quickly and cheaply at Gmail.

I’ve been connecting with area libraries recently to book a series of speeches I’ll be giving this year.  Libraries in communities all around Woodstock are in such wonderful condition.  They are right in town in beautiful buildings.  Ample parking is available.  The libraries are open for extended hours.

They have bathrooms – a luxury that we all need.

I mention these things in a blog about hunger and food pantries because, in a perfect world, I would have a library and a pantry in the same building.  It only makes sense really.  After all, all the people I see in the pantry are also all the people I see in the library.

Thanks for reading this blog.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media network.

Don’t forget to join the email list.

Thurman Greco