"Hangry" is Hunger for Privileged People"--article on The Daily Beast
jvt63
Posts: 89 Member
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Pretty much....although I would add that anybody who describes skipping a meal or two as "starving" themselves is also talking from a place of privilege.0
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Is what a bad thing?0
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I just posted this because I never heard the word "hangry" before I came here. I've been hangry--just never had a word for it before. It would appear to be true that hangriness is a first-world problem. So no, you don't have to apologize. Maybe just be grateful? Or not. It was just an interesting article, and thought it would spark discussion.0
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I understood the words, but whatever idea he's trying to get across is over my head. I've been hangry and it certainly didn't spark ideas. It just made me extremely b!tchy and wanting punch babies.0
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"hangry" -- a term we use in the South for "cranky/angry due to being hungry"0
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I'm a total assclown when I'm hungry. It's usually not from dieting, but from poor planning. And I'm certainly no genius in this state. In my 20s and 30s, I cried a few times when I was hungry.0
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BS. "Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc.
Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I appreciate the wake-up call. I grew up in a world where one was more likely to know 10 anorexics than 1 obese person. But that's a world of luxury, believe it or not. I just think this article is silly and communicates the idea very poorly.
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What a weird article.
"We perform our best when we're hangry"? I perform my best when I'm feeling good.
Leave it to some author to take a cute/funny phrase and turn it into one long self-serving bore.0 -
I fast 24 hours two times a week. I don't feel this way (most of the time).0
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I've been hungry on many occasions in my life but it's never had any impact on my emotions (sleep deprivation, on the other hand.... ). Nor do I see any "hangry" people in my day to day life, despite knowing an awful lot of perpetual dieters.0
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I thought it was weird, too. It seems disjointed. (Maybe he wrote it on a full stomach.) However, I appreciate EWJ Lang's points. "Hangry" is nowhere near the same as true hunger. But perhaps that prove the point of the article's title.
I am ashamed to say that I've tried to fast more than once (for spiritual reasons). I never made it longer than 36 hours. I began to fantasize about toast and peanut butter. I was disgusted with myself, but I am a robust gal, and when I'm hungry, I eat.0 -
"Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc. ... Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I currently work a 10-4 shift at my work on most days - in my state, I don't get a meal break unless I work longer than six hours. So basically, I start the day with breakfast and don't eat again until dinner. I don't have to live in poverty to know what hunger feels like. The best part is that I work with food, so not only do I get to be hangry, but I get to be hangry while handing people their lunches. On the opposite end, to suggest that people who can't afford a proper meal can't be so hungry that they're angry flies in the face of basic human physiology. Your ability to be frustrated by the lack of food in your belly is in no way tied to your socioeconomic status.
This is the most ridiculous way to define hunger OR hanger that I've heard so far. I've never had the self-control or gullibility to follow fad diets, but I can say for sure that I've felt hangry on more than a few occasions. You don't have to be poor to go hungry, and you don't have to be privileged to feel hangry.0 -
"Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc. ... Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I currently work a 10-4 shift at my work on most days - in my state, I don't get a meal break unless I work longer than six hours. So basically, I start the day with breakfast and don't eat again until dinner. I don't have to live in poverty to know what hunger feels like. The best part is that I work with food, so not only do I get to be hangry, but I get to be hangry while handing people their lunches. On the opposite end, to suggest that people who can't afford a proper meal can't be so hungry that they're angry flies in the face of basic human physiology. Your ability to be frustrated by the lack of food in your belly is in no way tied to your socioeconomic status.
This is the most ridiculous way to define hunger OR hanger that I've heard so far. I've never had the self-control or gullibility to follow fad diets, but I can say for sure that I've felt hangry on more than a few occasions. You don't have to be poor to go hungry, and you don't have to be privileged to feel hangry.
I get what you are saying...but in regards to the article linked in the OP....really? we are going to compare some idiot who has Atkins flu to someone whose SNAP benefits ran out mid month?
NOT THE SAME.0 -
Well I do live a routine life, with scheduled breaks, and if I don't eat at specific times it certainly can mess up with my mood or productivity later on in the day.0
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People skipping a meal is an achievement now and a corporate "thing" to ... be edgy in the workplace.... WHAT?
I feel very cane-wavey and crotchety about that whole article. I don't even like the portmanteau "hangry" to begin with.0 -
"Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc. ... Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I currently work a 10-4 shift at my work on most days - in my state, I don't get a meal break unless I work longer than six hours. So basically, I start the day with breakfast and don't eat again until dinner. I don't have to live in poverty to know what hunger feels like. The best part is that I work with food, so not only do I get to be hangry, but I get to be hangry while handing people their lunches. On the opposite end, to suggest that people who can't afford a proper meal can't be so hungry that they're angry flies in the face of basic human physiology. Your ability to be frustrated by the lack of food in your belly is in no way tied to your socioeconomic status.
This is the most ridiculous way to define hunger OR hanger that I've heard so far. I've never had the self-control or gullibility to follow fad diets, but I can say for sure that I've felt hangry on more than a few occasions. You don't have to be poor to go hungry, and you don't have to be privileged to feel hangry.
Poor thing. Now try telling that to a child whose gone 3 days without food and is wondering when they may get another meal. THAT, is hunger. Skipping lunch is NOTHING compared to that. I do that on a regular basis, and actually, the hungry stage goes away after a couple hours.0 -
sweetdixie92 wrote: »"Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc. ... Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I currently work a 10-4 shift at my work on most days - in my state, I don't get a meal break unless I work longer than six hours. So basically, I start the day with breakfast and don't eat again until dinner. I don't have to live in poverty to know what hunger feels like. The best part is that I work with food, so not only do I get to be hangry, but I get to be hangry while handing people their lunches. On the opposite end, to suggest that people who can't afford a proper meal can't be so hungry that they're angry flies in the face of basic human physiology. Your ability to be frustrated by the lack of food in your belly is in no way tied to your socioeconomic status.
This is the most ridiculous way to define hunger OR hanger that I've heard so far. I've never had the self-control or gullibility to follow fad diets, but I can say for sure that I've felt hangry on more than a few occasions. You don't have to be poor to go hungry, and you don't have to be privileged to feel hangry.
Poor thing. Now try telling that to a child whose gone 3 days without food and is wondering when they may get another meal. THAT, is hunger. Skipping lunch is NOTHING compared to that. I do that on a regular basis, and actually, the hungry stage goes away after a couple hours.
YUP... and that poor kid then has access to a couple of Value Meals and wolfs down a few thousand calories when they are there....because the whole family is hungry and the SRO hotel doesn't have a kitchen and they just need food so they can work a double shift again tomorrow.
But....it's HARD when you cant have what you want exactly when you want it. SO HARD.
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If you are CHOOSING to restrict your food, or have the ability to complain about the type of food you GET to eat... yeah, you're privileged. Yeah, you've never had the kind of hunger pangs a 3rd world individual can face, or even the homeless population here in the 1st world countries led by assclowns that think being homeless makes you deserving of hunger.0
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"Hangry" refers to appetite making you cranky. Most often, it's seen in some dumbdonkey who is following a fad diet, restricting certain foods and food groups overnight to the point of headache, fatigue, etc. ... Actual hunger, as experienced by people in poverty, is a gnawing craving for nourishing food that leads to short-term decisions about buying calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods to fill one's belly. Actual poor people can become obese as they rush to beat the horrible feeling of not having enough to eat....or the means to prepare actually nourishing food.
I currently work a 10-4 shift at my work on most days - in my state, I don't get a meal break unless I work longer than six hours. So basically, I start the day with breakfast and don't eat again until dinner. I don't have to live in poverty to know what hunger feels like. The best part is that I work with food, so not only do I get to be hangry, but I get to be hangry while handing people their lunches. On the opposite end, to suggest that people who can't afford a proper meal can't be so hungry that they're angry flies in the face of basic human physiology. Your ability to be frustrated by the lack of food in your belly is in no way tied to your socioeconomic status.
This is the most ridiculous way to define hunger OR hanger that I've heard so far. I've never had the self-control or gullibility to follow fad diets, but I can say for sure that I've felt hangry on more than a few occasions. You don't have to be poor to go hungry, and you don't have to be privileged to feel hangry.
You really are speaking from a position of privilege and don't realize it.
There are children who go days and days without eating. DAYS. Don't think for a minute that the paltry hours you rack up even begins to compare.
Google famine victims in Africa for some perspective, please.
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KingofWisdom wrote: »
No one asks you to apologize, just admit you're lucky you get the CHOICE of turning down food.0 -
What annoys me about rich folks who write about poverty and hunger, don't get...you are not "hungry" when you are poor, the cupboard usually has plenty of Ramen. What you hunger for is a big steak, fresh salad with cucumbers, tomatoes and blue cheese dressing, a big fresh orange.
You can afford "food", just not the food you want.0 -
You can afford "food", just not the food you want.
Are you poor?0 -
Hangry = Angry from being hungry for a couple hours. Yes, it's a first world problem. So are most of the problems on this forum.0
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softblondechick wrote: »What annoys me about rich folks who write about poverty and hunger, don't get...you are not "hungry" when you are poor, the cupboard usually has plenty of Ramen. What you hunger for is a big steak, fresh salad with cucumbers, tomatoes and blue cheese dressing, a big fresh orange.
You can afford "food", just not the food you want.
That's true of the US.0 -
No, I'm not. I'm wondering if I'm seeing a lack of empathy, when really she is just stating what is a fact to her. But I'm not rich, either. Entirely middle class.0
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softblondechick wrote: »What annoys me about rich folks who write about poverty and hunger, don't get...you are not "hungry" when you are poor, the cupboard usually has plenty of Ramen. What you hunger for is a big steak, fresh salad with cucumbers, tomatoes and blue cheese dressing, a big fresh orange.
You can afford "food", just not the food you want.
Wut?
Yes, there are people who are poor who have Ramen in the cupboard, because that's what they can afford.
There are also people who are poor who have nothing in the cupboard. Their children cry at night because they can't go to sleep because their stomachs are growling.
I think you can define both of those people as poor. But there's more than one kind of poor.0 -
To be clear--I meant no disrespect.0
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Thanks, PeachyPlum, for saying it better than I did. She said, "you are not hungry if you're poor," and I wondered if she was stating that as a fact, for her. This is not coming out right at all.0
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In the US, even our beggars are wealthy, compared to some parts of the world.0
This discussion has been closed.
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