Salt of the Earth, and the Ocean

Is any other natural substance so encrusted by myth and practical observations? The number of informal borrowings of the word to imply humanly recognized concepts is staggering. For example,
“To capture unwary investors, they salted the mine.”
“She salted away most of her fortune.”
“He’s not worth his salt.”
Salt is fundamentally sweat, whether generated by brutal forced labor or pleasant voluntary exercise. Everyone has heard salt used as a figure of speech. (A-Z Quotes offers close to 700 sayings by the famous and the obscure.)
All over the world, in many times and places, salt has been an international currency accepted with no questions asked. Despite being an eminently pragmatic commodity, it has been valued like gold or jewels. Even in an era like this one, when salt seems common as dirt and is given away for free in little paper packages, it is universally recognized as having value.
How naughty is it?
On the topic of unwise food choices, the role of salt as accomplice and enabler is paralleled by no other substance. Consider the delightful movie-theater snack combo of salted popcorn and chilled cola drink, so loved, yet only available during recent history. This culinary masterpiece packs such an extraordinary one-two punch that the people who lived before its time can only be pitied.
Salt is probably the single greatest cause for the rise of the soda industry. The unique experience of switching from salty to cold-fizzy-sweet, and then back to the salted potato chips (or salted any sort of chips), and then to the chilled beverage, on and on, interminably… ad infinitum… Is any sensation more heavenly? The poignant contrast can bewitch a person for hours.
Just a side note, but the second-largest accomplice to the insidious rise of cola drinks has to be the refrigerated vending machine. The genius who figured out how to keep bottled beverages cold until some poor sucker came along and dropped a quarter into the slot may be responsible for just as much obesity as salt itself.
A slice of history
Many of us who are middle-aged and beyond grew up very familiar with the experience of sitting at a table where each adult thoughtlessly grabbed a salt shaker and automatically covered everything on their plate with salt, barely pausing to glance, and knowing exactly how much of it should be distributed per square inch of food surface. In every case, it was too much.
Today, a sane person, if one can be found, draws the line at about a level teaspoon (about six grams) of salt per day. But, considering how much sodium is already injected into packaged food items, even that is probably excessive. And, 2,000 mg of salt per day is about the outer limit a conscientious adult should go with.
It was tempting to include here a compendium of examples from this very website, to prove the overwhelming presence of salt in the human diet and consciousness. One alternative would have been a comprehensive list of each Childhood Obesity News post that has thus far mentioned the word “salt,” totaling at least 360 of them. This would be somewhere close to the neighborhood of one out of every 10 posts ever created for this venue.
The likelihood that any American suffers from insufficient sodium intake is vanishingly small.
Okay, someone who sweats a lot may be an exception to that broad generalization. These include competitive athletes and workers exposed to major heat stress, such as foundry workers and firefighters.
But for pretty much everybody else, on the scale of Things to Worry About, a sodium deficiency is way down the list, registering less than a whisper of a dream. This same American Heart Association information source, by the way, warns that sodium can be sneaky, and offers a printable version of its one-page infographic, “7 Salty Myths Busted.”
Additionally, and especially appreciated here at Childhood Obesity News, is a printable poster geared for kids, explaining the myths and the facts of sodium.
P.S. A note: While no doubt full of many virtuous qualities, green salt does not taste salty. Sorry, it just doesn’t.
Your responses and feedback are welcome!
Source: “Isak-Dinesen-The-cure-for-anything-is-salt-water-sweat-tears-or-the-sea,” QuoteFancy.com
Image by Isak Dinesen/QuoteFancy.com









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