Videos by Creating Peace with Food, LLC in Seattle. Creating Peace with Food, LLC. Brandi Olden RDN, CSP, CEDRD-S, CD Fighting for Anti-Oppressive Healthcare. Fat Positive. Body Liberation. HAES(R). Connected Eating. Embodied Parenting for Embodied Kids.
Though you can't tell by the exhaustion on Juliette's face, they actually like doing these videos with me. #teenlife #feedingarfid #foodplay
Though you can't tell by the exhaustion on Juliette's face, they actually like doing these videos with me. #teenlife #feedingarfid #foodplay
Juliette & I are back with another edition of the food game we call Name That Food! A fun food game where one of us tries to guess the name of a food by their descriptions. This is a social media experiment for us so apologies for any tech issues as we figure out what we're doing. What type of food do you think we should try to describe next? #foodplay #havefunwithfood #gentleparenting #haesdietitian #sensorykids #adhd
Want to help your family learn more about food while having fun? Play the “Name That Food” game. It’s like I spy but the food doesn’t need to actually be within eye sight. Watch my kiddo and I play to learn how it goes.
TW: O-word. F-word. On Saturday, Nikki Gepner, a dietitian colleague, and I sat down for a chat about the latest AAP Guidelines for the Evaluation and Treatment of Children and Adolescent's with O***. We decided to share our conversation with you. We might go live next weekend to continue the discussion...
#Repost @sonyareneetaylor with @make_repost ・・・ [video description: Sonya sits outside in front of a lush and verdant oceanscape with palm trees and sunlight flooding in behind her. She is wearing a blue and white patterned top along with her pounamu stone. She discusses how colorism can be understood in terms of her theory of the ladder of bodily oppression. She asks us to consider who is at the bottom rung of the ladder — the darkest folks, the fattest folks, the most gender outlaw folks, the most disabled folks, and so on — and to center THEIR voices and freedom dreams in our movements. Much like the Combahee River Collective Statement, Sonya reminds us that when those most terrorized by the ladder find liberation, everyone else by definition will, since the ladder will no longer be able to sustain its own weight. She calls for folks to own both their positions of marginalization AND where they hold some privilege and power.]
#Repost @whitneytrotter.rd with @make_repost ・・・ Of all mental health disorders, eating disorders have some of the most barriers to access care. Not only can it be incredibly hard to find a culturally compotent treatment team, it can be equally as hard to find an anti-racist, socially justice aligned treatment center. The loss of household income when black women enter higher levels of care can be detrimental to the family. Without health insurance, access to disposable income, or a culturally compotent treatment center close to home, black women are faced with impossible decisions when seeking treatment for their eating disorders. This is why we must continue to fight for equal access to care within the eating disorder community