The Alchemy of Hunger
Dear reader, I have been thinking about the way we feed ourselves. It is rarely just about the body, is it? We sit at tables, or on curbs, or standing in the middle of a busy street, and we try to fill a space that goes much deeper than the stomach. There is a quiet, desperate grace in the way we prepare for a meal—the ritual of gathering, the heat, the scent that pulls us back to a place we once called home. We are always looking for comfort in the mundane, hoping that a simple act of nourishment might settle the restlessness in our chests. It is a strange, beautiful thing to witness someone finding art in the everyday, turning the basic necessity of survival into a celebration of color and texture. When we stop to truly look at what is on our plate, we are really looking at the hands that made it and the life that sustained it. Does the hunger ever really leave us, or do we just learn to dress it in better light?

Natalia Zotova has captured this beautifully in her image titled Chicken Shawarma. It reminds me that even the simplest meal carries a story if we are willing to pause and taste it. Have you ever found beauty in the things you usually consume without a second thought?

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