My aunt didn’t marry the man — some insignificant matter about him having no hair — and I was understandably crushed.
| When I was five years old and living in Bombay, I was dragged along by my extended family to check out a prospective groom for my young aunt. I don’t remember much about what he looked like, or his kind parents or lovely home, but as we were leaving, I was handed a big bar of Cadbury chocolate by the nice young man who explained to me that he worked for the Cadbury Company and he’d be happy to give me more any time. In that era, for me, and probably for most other Indians too, the terms Cadbury and chocolate were synonymous, as the British company was one of the few chocolate makers in the country. As things turned out, my aunt didn’t marry the man — some insignificant matter about him having no hair — and I was understandably crushed.
Since ancient times, the Mayans and the Aztecs have known the value of chocolate and even used it as a form of currency. Its botanical name Theobroma Cacao literally means “food of the Gods.” Michael Levine, a nutrition researcher, says, “Chemically speaking, chocolate really is the world’s perfect food.” Chocolate releases endorphins in the brain and make us feel good. Chocolate has been found to have the properties of an analgesic, a stimulant, an aphrodisiac and a relaxant. Dark chocolate has been associated with reducing migraines, calming the mind and body, lowering blood pressure and improving heart functions. Several centenarians have sworn by it: a recent report on 100 year-old Peggy Griffiths of Devon, U.K., claims that she eats 30 bars of chocolate a week — specifically Cadbury’s Dairy Milk. At a time of financial stress and uncertainty, simple and affordable and immediate pleasures become important and are in a sense re-discovered. Epicurus said, “Not what we have, but what we enjoy, constitutes our abundance.” Our stocks, now simply declining numbers on a screen, don’t give us the sensory pleasure as a piece of chocolate melting in our mouth. Echoing many world philosophers and sages, Abraham Maslow said “The ability to be in the present moment is the major component of mental wellness.” Eating a chocolate bar brings that message home. Kevin Walsh, a Federal Reserve governore eloquently said recently, “We are witnessing a fundamental reassessment of the value of virtually every asset everywhere in the world.” Well the world re-evaluated the humble chocolate bar and found it ... still good. When this economic downturn first started, some experts — probably in the pay of fashion houses — said that luxury goods would be recession-proof: they were wrong. Cadbury CEO Todd Stitzer preferred a more cautious stance: he calls the company not recession-proof, but recession-resilient. Other terms like counter-cyclical stock have been used for businesses like Wal-Mart, McDonald’s and training institutes, and necessities like healthcare and basics (such as toiletry goods produced by Colgate-Palmolive) — all of whom are doing relatively well in this economic slowdown. So are stocks of home entertainment companies and book sellers, like Amazon. But in this world where banks seem to flounder overnight, nothing is certain and unforeseen dangers loom, one of the main suppliers of cocoa, the Ivory Coast, had a smaller harvest last season and, consequently, the price of cocoa beans spiked in December.
The writer, a chocolate-connoisseur, shown above at age 5, does not own any stock or have any other association with Cadbury. |
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