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Where will you sit ????

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In many cultures, refusing food can even be seen as rejecting connection. Accepting a dish is accepting community.

And when someone serves you from their plate, it’s an act of care.

Modern Tables: Changing Dynamics
Today, not all tables look the same.

Some meals happen:

On kitchen islands.

On coffee tables in front of the TV.

On picnic blankets in parks.

Around restaurant tables with strangers.

The shape of the table may change — round, square, rectangular — but the question remains: where will you sit?

Round tables, especially, remove hierarchy. There is no head. No corner. Everyone sees everyone equally.

Rectangular tables subtly create roles.

Small tables create intimacy.

Large tables create energy.

Your seat affects your experience more than you realize.

The Emotional Seat: How You Show Up Matters More
Here’s the deeper truth: sometimes your seat isn’t physical.

It’s emotional.

You can sit at the head of the table but feel invisible.
You can sit quietly in the corner and feel deeply connected.
You can sit among many and feel alone.
You can sit beside one person and feel understood.

The real question becomes: how are you showing up to the table?

Are you:

Present?

Distracted?

Grateful?

Defensive?

Open?

Food can bring people together, but presence keeps them together.

Cooking as an Invitation
Behind every shared meal, someone cooked.

They chopped.
They stirred.
They tasted.
They adjusted spices.
They worried whether it would be enough.

Cooking is an invitation.

When you accept a seat at someone’s table, you are accepting hours of effort and love.

Even the simplest meal — eggs and bread — can carry meaning when shared intentionally.

And when you cook for others, you’re silently saying:
“I thought of you.”

Where Will You Sit in Life?

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