Friday Feature: MSG:Tasty Death?

It’s cheap, tasty, and filling, but it can make you fat, be addictive and even be deadly. I’m talking about monosodium glutamate, commonly known as MSG, an ingredient in many packaged and fast foods. Food manufacturers use MSG because it’s a cheap way to flavor foods, but they don’t consider your health risks, but you should.

MSG “is an excitotoxin, a substance that overexcites neurons to the point of cell damage and, eventually, cell death” (The Link between Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) and Obesity). When MSG enters the brain it “creates a lesion in the hypothalamus that correlates with abnormal development, including obesity, short stature and sexual reproduction problems” (The Link between Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) and Obesity). Other reported health problems from MSG include headaches, including migraines, ADD, joint and bone pains, sleep disorders and heart irregularities.

So, you see, you should not take ingesting MSG lightly. You just may be suffering from migraines or other chronic issues because of MSG. Avoid fast food and junk food, and read labels. Just because a product says “No MSG” doesn’t mean it doesn’t contain MSG. Yes, that’s possible because the additive has different names, including yeast extract, autolyzed proteins and hydrolyzed vegetable proteins. Make sure when you read labels that you check for these names along with MSG and monosodium glutamate. Read here for a more comprehensive list of MSG names.

If MSG is so bad for us, why hasn’t it been regulated? I’ll let the conspiracy pundits answer that in detail, but let me say this: Systems, be they economic or political, often only care about their financial bottom line not the bottom line of your health. No one is going to care for your health the way you should. As Christians, it’s our responsibility to be a good steward over our body, the temple of the Holy Spirit. We need to seek optimum health so we can do the optimum work of building God’s kingdom. Watching what we eat always helps us to do that.

Joy as a Weapon

What Do You Think? Wednesday

Some definite things move me: the depth and beauty of God’s word, His creation, my husband’s sweet talk and words that dance off a page begging me to embrace them. Oh, how I love words so good writers presenting a good message make me sit back, curl up and smile. This is what author Patricia Raybon, a strong writer, master storyteller and, above all, a Christian unashamed of her faith, does for me.

Author Patricia Raybon

You may recall that I wrote a bit about how her memoir My First White Friend: Confessions on Race, Love, and Forgiveness prepared me to meet my first white friend, again. Today I am pleased to be a stop on Raybon’s virtual book tour for her latest book, The One Year® daily devotional God’s Great Blessings that is encouraging, yet challenging, me. I believe the following excerpt will challenge you to let go of your strong black woman persona and long for God’s strength instead. Please, tell me what you think.

Fight Back With Joy
By Patricia Raybon

She’s laughing. Even though her home is a wreck. She’s laughing. Even though her kitchen looks lousy. Paint colors all wrong. Fabric choices breaking her budget. When the wood cabinets finally arrive—several weeks late—both the size and grain completely miss the mark.

“But I’m laughing,” says the TV host of the home renovation show, giggling into the camera. “It’s how I deal with setbacks,” she explains. “I mean, you have to laugh. It gets me back on track.”

It’s a timely philosophy. Joy imparts strength. For wise Black women, however, joy in the Lord activates His strength. In our lives. In our circumstances. Even in our kitchens. Both big and small.

Speaking to His disciples, Jesus put it this way: “Here on earth you will have many trials and sorrows. But take heart”—be of good cheer—“because I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33) We love that promise, indeed.

But why would joy in Him—and not courage or bravery or boldness—deliver the strength of almighty God? Could it be the illogic of the principle? That the beauty of joy is so winsome and unexpected that it’s disarming?

No enemy expects a foe to fight back with joy.

Yet there’s something strangely powerful about joy. About laughing in the face of a storm. About sizing up your enemy but knowing that, compared to God, your enemy is powerless. About staring up at a mountain and accessing its peaks, crags and valleys, but knowing—as you laugh—the mountain can’t overcome God’s power. Is this rationalizing? Or denial? Or is it wisdom?

“I have told you this so you will be filled with my joy,” Jesus told His disciples in the upper room (John 15:11). “Yes, your joy will overflow!” Then as His joy flows, your enemies flee. Can you laugh at that? Try it today. Then don’t be surprised when your victory follows.

Award-winning author Patricia Raybon’s newest book is the One Year® daily devotional God’s Great Blessings, which includes this reflection on strength in joy. She is also author of two acclaimed memoirs, My First White Friend and I Told the Mountain to Move. She also collaborated with calligrapher Timothy Botts in his upcoming gift book honoring African American spirituals, Bound for Glory. Learn more at her website: PatriciaRaybon.Com.

Raising Children of Virtue

Photo courtesy of Sherwood Pictures Ministry, Inc. from the movie "Courageous"

My heart was simply thrilled when I saw “Courageous,” the new blockbuster Christian feature film that chronicles the lives of five men and their challenge to be courageous. Though this movie centers on men, the women and children in their lives learn just what courageous should look like by witnessing their husbands and fathers. Watching “Courageous” made me think of the seven qualities of a strong believer in 2 Peter 1 and how modeling may be our strongest weapon in helping our children achieve for themselves virtue, the first quality in the list.

The definition of virtue in 2 Peter 1:5 is “courage, fortitude, resolution” and many people, including youths, lack this. Though some are born with virtue, others aren’t, so this is something we must teach or cultivate in our children so they will stand firm on God’s word. They need virtue in our day where everything seems relative, children are largely indifferent and social media helps develop and destroy trends and friends with lightening speed. Read the rest at EEW Magazine.

Non-Negotiables

What a blessing it was last night to be on Your Bedtime Blessing radio show with host Dr. Michelle Johnson. She truly is a gift to the body of Christ. As you may know the show’s title was “She’s Dead: Saying Goodbye to the Strong Black Woman.” On the show I mentioned that you have to have some non-negotiables to help you stay centered on God’s will and not your own. My number one non-negotiable is getting into the word of God. I must read it, meditate on it or study it daily. This, along with prayer, has been the ONLY thing that has kept me from losing my mind. Continue reading

Say Goodbye to the Strong Black Woman

You know how passionate I am about black Christian women receiving strength through the help of the Holy Ghost. That is the main focus of this blog and I make every effort here and offline seeking to make this a reality. Tonight will be another way to do this on Your Bedtime Blessing, a Blog Talk Radio show hosted by Dr. Michelle Johnson, founder of Alabaster Woman Ministries and my writing sister at EEW Magazine. Join us tonight at 9:30 p.m. as we discuss live “She’s Dead: Saying Goodbye to the Strong Black Woman.” You can call in to make a comment or ask a question at 347-857-3974. In the meantime, check out Dr. Michelle’s blog post and comment on her blog to help make our on-air experience more interactive. We look forward to hearing from you.