The French Baguette. Four ingredients: flour, salt, water and yeast. Simple and delicious. Yet get any of those ingredients wrong and the perfect baguette is doomed. Without water, it doesn’t glutenise; without flour, it doesn’t hold together; without salt, it doesn’t ferment; and without yeast, it doesn’t rise.
It makes me think about the balance of simplicity and complexity.
I’ve always been one for simplicity, breaking problems into their component parts and determining the core drivers. But, in doing so, it’s easy to lose the nuance and ignore the layers. Take the common health problem of obesity. The solution is simple: eat less to reduce weight. Everyone understands that, yet if you examine the cultural, psychological and physical drivers behind weight gain, then complexity abounds. To ignore such complexity, is to come up short in terms of solutions.
Good health, like a good baguette, has few ingredients: sleep, stress, diet, exercise and community. Simple, when they’re in balance, but get the ratios wrong, or leave an ingredient out and the chemistry doesn’t work. Poor health is the outcome.
As my holiday continues, I feel my tension dropping and my pace slowing. My sleep is deep, my laughter is loud and my stomach is full. Simple ingredients, simple life and good health. Oh, but the layers — would I appreciate the yin without the yang? Can I appreciate simplicity without facing complexity?
Perhaps that’s the art of good health and good living. Holding simplicity and complexity in tension; learning to navigate both with grace.
The baguette teaches me that simplicity doesn’t mean easy; it means essential. Just as the boulangère learns through trial, error and refinement how to achieve the perfect baguette, I too learn, over time, how to balance the ingredients of my well-being.
En Provence, I’m reminded that health is not a rigid formula, but a dance between effort and ease, between structure and spontaneity, between simplicity and complexity. Maybe it’s in embracing it all that we find our true nourishment.