Listening Session and the Bigger Story Behind Food Systems
Food systems have always helped me understand the bigger picture. A conversation about what we eat is rarely just about food. It is also about health, labor, policy, culture, land, access, and who gets invited to the table.
That is what brought me to Listening Session: White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health in Virtual / Washington, DC. Even before the program began, I was thinking about how this experience fit into the larger stories I keep returning to on DG Speaks.
Listening as Food Policy Work
Listening Session connected everyday choices to larger systems. The event made hunger, nutrition policy, public health feel immediate instead of abstract, which is exactly where important food conversations belong.
Hunger Is Never Just Hunger
What I appreciated most was the way the event created room for connection. Whether people came to learn, network, taste, listen, watch, or simply be present, the gathering offered a reminder that shared spaces still matter.
Nutrition Needs Dignity
The event also reminded me that the best stories rarely sit on the surface. They live in the side conversations, the details, the questions people ask, and the small moments that make a room feel alive.
What Public Health Asked of Us
I left thinking about how often food policy shows up in ordinary life. The grocery store, the school cafeteria, the farm, the restaurant, and the family table are all connected.
