A
Reflection on the Permanent Things
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
Sometimes,
for your own mental well being, it is a meritorious act to remove
yourself from the hustle-bustle of daily life, with its mind-boggling
busyness, technological frenzy, ever-changing professional demands,
and relentless pressure to be drawn into ephemeral fripperies, and
instead reflect on what T.S. Elliot called the Permanent Things
that bind us across time and space and unite the generations, the
things that we know will long outlive our limited days on earth.
I speak, of
course, of breakfast cereal. This is America's number one choice
of morning food.
As
with many of the Permanent Things, its origin is religious. In the
ancient days, people ate very little fiber for breakfast. Then in
the last quarter of the 19th century, a Protestant religious
reformer who ran a sanatorium had the idea that eating grains was
good for mind and spirit. The idea was then picked up by John Harvey
Kellogg, a Seventh-Day Adventist.
Specifically
our minds are drawn to the brands that seem to have always been
with us and always will be. They are permanent fixtures of the cultural
landscape, as alive and present in the life of someone born a few
years ago as those who were born many decades ago. Even today, a
walk through the grocery isle is a blast from the past for many
of us. We feel nostalgia even as our children feel a sense of excitement
at what is, for them, something completely new.
Nothing
lifts the spirit like watching a young member of a new generation
discover a classic we know so well. "Hey, Dad, can we get these
great-tasting Smacks?" That phrase which can be heard around the
world should be accompanied by music!
It is evidently
very difficult to introduce a new cereal into the market. Which
is as it should be. Consider the ever old, ever new. As you do,
think of this. We all recognize these names from our childhood.
The young today know them all too. Our children's children will
know them too, mostly likely. How many icons of popular culture,
brand names no less, of which this can be said?
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Cheerios
(since 1941, and still the most popular)
Shredded
Wheat (since 1893)
Rice Krispies
(since 1929)
Wheaties
(since 1924)
Grape
Nuts (since 1897)
Kellogg's
Corn Flakes (since 1906)
Cap'n
Crunch (since 1963)
Smacks
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Kix
Trix
Alpha-Bits
Apple
Jacks
Boo Berry
Lucky
Charms
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Cookie
Crisp
Fruity
Pepples
Frosted
Flakes
Cocoa
Puffs
Cocoa
Krispies
Froot
Loops
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Raisin
Bran
Frosted
Mini-Wheats
Life
Honeycomb
Wackies
Captain
Crunch
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Here
is a comprehensive list
Half
of Americans eat cereal every day. We eat 2.7 billion packages of
cereal every year. The wonderful cereal industry uses 816 million
pounds of sugar every year to produce them.
Truly, Americans
love cereal! But not as much as societies where tradition is valued
even more highly than here. Ireland ranks number one in cereal consumption,
England second, and Australia third. (All this data comes from here.)
And how marvelously
impervious to the complaints of the puritans we are. Amazon sells
a number of books denouncing cereal for its supposed dangers. How
often do we hear complaints that these companies are attempting
to sell junk food as if it were health food?
But we ignore
it all, and just keep crunching away.
It's true,
of course, that anyone with an all-cereal diet wouldn't fare well.
But that's not what we are talking about here.
What makes
cereal great? Of course it only takes a minute to prepare: pour,
pour, eat. Also, I'm not kidding about its ability to link the generations.
It is comfort food, a breakfast that we eat when we are very young
and very old.
It's true that
our tastes change. Young kids fall for every advertising gimmick:
coo coo for cocoa puffs! Middle-agers go for the grainy-health thing
with the soothing voice. Never mind that it is basically the same
stuff. We are what we eat, and we want to eat what we are. Cereal
is there through all stages of life.
How happy are
my memories from my mid-teen years, when I would get the largest
mixing bowl in the house, pour in an entire box of Cap'n Crunch
with Crunchberries, along with half a carton of milk, and start
crunching away using the largest spoon I could find.
These are the
memorable scenes from our "coming of age" that we carry with us
throughout life even unto death.
There are some
mysteries yet to solve in the cereal world. I've never understood
why some cereals like Sugar Smacks come wrapped in foil, whereas
others, like Froot Loops, come wrapped in plastic.
I
wrote Kelloggs, and they sent back the following answer: "We base
our choices for both inner and outer packaging materials on our
need to deliver fresh product to stores in the best possible condition.
We look at our packaging to control the absorption of moisture,
control breakage and prevent any other type of damage that might
occur during the shipping and handling of our foods."
Well, that's
not quite was I was after, but good for them for answering at all!
I confess to
some disappointments. As you might guess from the above, my number
one top favorite cereal of all time is Cap'n Crunch with Crunchberries.
When I was growing up there was only one kind of Crunchberry: red.
The idea was to eat all the "crunch" and save the crunchberries
for later (unless you are 15 and you no longer care).
Then somewhere
along the way, some jerk decided that crunchberries should be many
different colors, even though it is not the case in nature. So now
Cap'n Crunch with Crunchberries comes with green, blue, purple,
and who knows-what-else crunchberries. I don't know what's with
the people who would dare to make such a change.
Respect
the classics, I say!
August
23, 2006
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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