Beyond the Outbreak: What a Foodborne Parasite Reveals About the Systems We Rarely See

The headlines are alarming: a growing outbreak of cyclosporiasis, an intestinal illness caused by the parasite Cyclospora cayetanensis, has sickened hundreds of people across the Midwest and prompted investigations by state and federal health officials. While the source of the contamination remains under investigation, the outbreak raises a larger question that extends beyond one contaminated food item.

What if the bigger story isn’t what made people sick but the system that allowed it to happen?

That question sits at the center of what I call The Systems Lens, an approach that looks beyond headlines to examine the infrastructure, policies, and processes shaping our everyday lives.

What happened?

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Cyclospora is a microscopic parasite that spreads through food or water contaminated with human fecal matter. Unlike many stomach viruses, it is not typically transmitted directly from person to person because the parasite requires time in the environment to become infectious. Fresh produce has historically been associated with outbreaks because many fruits and vegetables are consumed raw and receive minimal processing before reaching consumers.

Health officials are continuing to investigate the current outbreak, and, as of publication, they have not identified a single confirmed food source responsible for every reported illness.

Why did it happen?

That is where the conversation often stops. News reports understandably focus on identifying the contaminated product. Public health investigators work to trace illnesses back through farms, distributors, and retailers. Those efforts are essential.

But there is another question worth asking.

How does human fecal contamination reach fresh produce in the first place?

The answer is rarely simple.

Contamination can occur through improperly treated irrigation water, sewage entering agricultural water supplies, contaminated wash water used during processing, flooding events, or inadequate sanitation infrastructure for agricultural workers. Each represents a different point where a safeguard intended to protect the food supply may have failed. None of these scenarios automatically means individuals are defecating in crop fields. More often, they reflect failures in water management, sanitation systems, or food-processing infrastructure.

Why should people care?

Food safety is not created at the grocery store. By the time lettuce, herbs, or berries reach your shopping cart, they have traveled through an interconnected system involving water management, agriculture, transportation, food processing, regulation, and retail distribution.

Every step depends on the one before it.

When one layer of protection fails, another is supposed to prevent contamination from reaching consumers. A widespread outbreak suggests that multiple safeguards may have broken down somewhere along the chain, even if investigators have not yet determined exactly where.

This isn’t about assigning blame to a particular farmer, company, or country. It’s about recognizing that public health depends on resilient systems, not perfect people.

What questions should we be asking next?

Instead of asking only, “What food made people sick?” we should also ask:

  • How is irrigation water monitored before it reaches crops?
  • How often are agricultural water systems tested for contamination?
  • What safeguards exist to prevent wastewater from entering irrigation supplies?
  • How transparent are food supply chains when outbreaks occur?
  • What investments in water and sanitation infrastructure could reduce future outbreaks?

These questions shift the conversation from reacting to the latest headline to preventing the next one and building a community.

Looking through the Systems Lens

Every major outbreak tells two stories. The first is about illness. The second is about infrastructure.

While scientists work to identify the immediate source of contamination, the public has an opportunity to think more broadly about the systems that produce, transport, and regulate the food we eat every day. Understanding those systems doesn’t make us fearful; it makes us informed. And informed communities are better equipped to ask better questions, demand greater transparency, and support stronger public health protections.

Sometimes the most important story isn’t the outbreak itself.

It’s the system the outbreak exposes.

Want to learn more about systems thinking?

This article uses what I call The Systems Lens, looking beyond individual events to understand the structures, incentives, and relationships that shape them. If you’re curious about the broader field of systems thinking, I recommend starting with The Donella Meadows Project’s “A Visual Approach to Leverage Points.” It’s one of the clearest introductions to seeing problems as interconnected systems rather than isolated events. Helping everyday people understand a complex subject.

Working From the Inside Out: Triple B Challenge with Order of Ascension Crew

Go forward but get back to where you were when you were complete. Get to know me, click here for an all about.

This new moon we’re setting intentions to create balance and new habits. We’re going to be working together but at our own individual pace. We’ll be doing a different fast every week for six (6) months (June 2021) starting today (December 2020), to develop a focus on three things: brain, brand, and body. Pick four (4) habits you want to fast from and every week either pick new ones, mix them up, or continue on your journey the way you see fit. Just make sure you stick to the script. You can drop out at anytime but we, the collective, ask that you join us in cycles of 7 (days that is).

For your brand, get in tune with you. What are some hobbies you have? What ideas have been flowing through? Are you a great speaker, reader, or developer? Let’s put a list together of some ventures you can embark on to increase your equity and generate some revenue or simply just feeling good about yourself if that’s a home manicure and pedicure, sleep, or taking yourself out.

For example, for week one I am: (1) working out 30 minutes a week, (2) omit eating any animal meat or by products, (3) do one thing at a time and keep schedule to develop managing my projects, (4) no drinking alcohol or smoking weed. I am replacing these habits with drinking more herbs, practicing yoga and mediation consistently, exploring industry matters and content to keep my knowledge base fresh, and focus on my business while minding my box. Minding my box, according to sistar Divine, is minding your vagina into a healthy state by avoiding toxic foods and sex, developing your emotional intelligence, and being patient with people: including yourself, practicing transmutation. For my brand, I am producing more content for my audience(s) using my public relations, marketing, and advertising skills; and staying ready or being still until I am ready.

This challenge was inspired by Tony Gaskin’s book I read titled “Single Is Not A Curse”, and for the past few years since I’ve been dating this has been one of my reference tools for a sense of direction especially when I get off track. We’re also getting ready for the great conjunction December 21st, making space so we can have a full download of healing energy that will carry into our next ascension.

Single doesn’t mean alone, it means being autonomous with self first then reflecting that connection in your relationships with others. Practicing self care, love, and wealth creation is some benefits you can manage to factor into your life that will help you and collective consciousness, which is a equal reward for us all. Are you part of the collective human race?

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5 most Wealthiest Things in the World

Happy Tuesday!

It’s 3 days into the New Year, counting from April 1, because it’s harvesting season where things are being planted. I shared my solar return (birthday) April 1, too.

It’s a great season to detoxify, rejuvenate, and regenerate your energy to create for the summer.

 

King Spa

 

For 24 hours, on the first day of the “New Year”, I spent the day cleansing at King Spa:

  1. Aura 

  2. Mind 

  3. Body 

  4. Soul 

  5. Spirit 

These are the 5 most wealthiest things to me in the world. The reason I know this to be true is because if everything else fails, all you have is you. If your health is declining because you are failing to keep a balance in your life, you can become toxic. Just think about if you never took the time to cleanse your self ?  And most of us can’t reach our back, so I know someone out here is walking around with a dirty back.

Nonetheless, we still have to find time to rid our body of the toxins we inject or allow others to inject into ourselves, aid our digestive system, as well as our immune system or what we pick up in our environment daily. Our body is constantly trying to cleanse itself, so we have to aid it in its process.

I really enjoyed the refreshing rebirth of the year. Take care of your self.

 

Peace.