Chocolate Egg Day
It’s Easter Sunday Morning. I’m sitting in the junk room, eating chocolate at 11am. It seems wrong somehow. I probably need the chocolate - after staying up until 3:30am last night waiting for my middle daughter to get home from work. She’s up too, and making chocolate brownies in the kitchen.
It’s Easter Sunday Morning. I’m sitting in the junk room, eating chocolate at 11am. It seems wrong somehow. I probably need the chocolate - after staying up until 3:30am last night waiting for my middle daughter to get home from work. She’s up too, and making chocolate brownies in the kitchen.
I wonder if people that work in chocolate factories can’t stand the sight or smell of it? I know M&Ms have a distinct smell - from the times we have visited M&M’s World in London. It’s a strange acrid sugar smell.
I remember watching a scientific demonstration of our body’s defences against “too much of a good thing” on the internet years ago. A tutor asked the members of a class to volunteer if they liked pop-tarts. Somebody was chosen from the class, and given a box full of pop-tarts, and instructed to try to eat them - one after another - with no break - but to stop if they started to feel sick.
It was interesting - after perhaps the third pop-tart, the student felt sick and couldn’t carry on. The tutor explained about the physiological reaction going on inside the body - that the brain will change how it processes taste receptors - and that in extreme situations it will begin to form the same response it does to a virus - essentially building a defence against the substance that is causing the overload. It doesn’t always get it right either - which is how food intollerances and allergies happen.
I remember talking to a friend years ago that had lived in Japan for some time - he remarked that you could broadly group Japanese people into “those that can deal with alcohol” (at all), and “those that cannot”. It’s not just a tolerance thing - it appears to be genetic - in the same way that some people’s urine smells awful if they eat asparagus.
I wonder how much coffee I can consume before my body decides to form defences against it? Perhaps it already has - people are often shocked to discover I can drink coffee throughout the evening and still fall asleep within moments of falling into bed.
Anyway.
I better get on. My in-laws are arriving in a bit - we’re wandering into town together for lunch.
This evening we’ve been invited over to our neighbours for a drink or three - I haven’t seen any of them for months, so it will be a good chance to kick back, relax, and catch up. I’m looking forward to it.