Eating For Myself, Or Indulging in Simple Pleasures

Medically reviewed by Christiana George Updated Date: January 1, 2026

For One Breakfast

Last week, Chris’s dad, a fanatical triathlete, was competing in the bike portion of a competition in Santa Barbara when he got hit by a car. When his mom called, absolutely panic-stricken, we were horrified. Luckily, the doctors determined that he would suffer no lasting damage, but Chris still decided to fly out to help take care of his parents.

I made the most of this unexpected autonomy. For starters, I swept, straightened, rearranged, and scrubbed… what? Are these not enjoyable activities to you people? No? Well, they aren’t to me either, but for some reason, there’s never time to get the chores out of the way when He’s around.

I also spent time with friends and caught up on the phone with ones I hadn’t talked to in awhile. And I went to the gym, multiple times! I also found myself lingering over meals, continuing to read long after I’d finished the physical act of eating. And finally, when it came to choosing what to eat, well, I had no one to think of but myself.



It’s not that I’m normally constrained in what I eat. Most of my meals are prepared for only myself—after all, for the majority of us, work and other obligations dictate our schedules, even when we work at home. But dinner, that’s always a shared affair. And when you’re preparing meals for more than yourself, you really ought to figure in the caloric needs of the other person, especially when that other person is a man (and is almost a foot taller than you). Yes, normally, dinners are a bit heavier than what I ended up making myself last week. And with meat.

Besides the times I ate out, dinners over the week can be broken into two categories, as follows:

Noodles. The ultimate comfort food. I would probably eat noodles every day if I could; the variations are endless.

For One Noodles

Spicy noodles with stir-fried green beans

For One Noodles

Udon noodles with eggs and tomatoes (For me, eggs and tomatoes is perhaps the ultimate comfort food.)

For One Noodles

Burrata. I’d bought a container of burrata right before Chris left—and gleefully consumed all of it on my own. Renditions included:

For One Salad

Pizza with caponata and burrata



For One Pizza

Apologies for the splatters and generally unruliness. These photos were taken impatiently, right before I tucked in.

What kinds of foods do you like to make for yourself?

(Breakfast, by the way, nearly always consists of Greek yogurt with granola, a squirt of honey, and whatever fruit I’ve got on hand. Along with a generous mugful of coffee from the French press. I am a total creature of habit.)



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Family Night

Christiana George

Sometimes being a parent is the perfect excuse for doing fun kids stuff.  I mean , yeah, we can all say we are just doing it for the kids, but who are we kidding.  We are all big kids ourselves.  This past weekend we had beautiful fall weather in New England , so my husband brought the fire pit on the deck and we had ourselves a campfire.  We grabbed some pizza and ate in by the fire.  Then afterwards it was time for some s’mores.

We have taken my daughter camping before and she loves campfires, toasted marshmallows and s’mores.  The little guy is new to all this, but he loved watching the fire and we gave him a taste of toasted marshmallows and s’mores.  He was all over it. Couldn’t get enough.

I always ate the s’mores when we went camping, but I was never really into them much.  I love chocolate and we used Hershey’s milk chocolate bars, but the taste was never right.  Now I seemed to have figured out the problem…dark chocolate.  Oh my, what a difference it made.  The dark chocolate was a perfect match for the sticky marshmallows and crispy graham crackers.  I had to have more than just one.  They were eewy, gooey, chocolaty good.



Just look at this guy’s face, doesn’t he look happy?  We all had fun and enjoyed our evening.  My daughter had chocolate all over her face and clothes.  I found a lump of chocolate in the little one’s hair.  And the deck was a sticky mess.  But hey, it was all about the fun.  These are the memories that I hope my children remember as they get older and hopefully share with their children.



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