Mageirocophobia originated from the combination of the Greek words “mageiros” and “Phobos,” which stands for “chef or butcher” and “fear or aversion,” respectively.
Mageirocophobia is defined as the morbid fear of cooking. This phobia manifests differently across individuals in various forms. Some are only afraid of having to cook for many people.
At the same time, some magericophobics are so scared of merely boiling potatoes for themselves. Although this condition may sound weird, it is quite common.
However, it is only regarded as a phobia when it is intense enough to disrupt the healthy daily life of an individual.
This is also known to be a common social anxiety disorder (SAD) and is highly linked to malnutrition and unhealthy dieting, which could result in diabetes, obesity, and hypertension because the anxiety response they have causes them to prefer pre-prepared and processed foods to healthy homemade dishes.
Form of Mageirocophobia
Magericophobics come in various forms, and each form causes extreme worry to the sufferer. The forms of magierocophobia are summarised as the following:
Fear of Causing Illness
Because of this condition, Mageirocophobics are mostly concerned about the spreading of foodborne diseases.
They are highly obsessed with this, and they understand that these diseases can be spread through undercooked meals, dirty cooking environments, improperly prepared meals, unwashed fruits and vegetables, soured milk, spoilt foods, wrongly stored grains, and pest or chemical-affected fruits, crops, and vegetables.
Their obsession can make them uncomfortable while cooking because they are concerned about what they put in their food.
Most people with this condition have this as the reason why they are scared to cook. However, their level of fear may vary, yet it is still prevalent.
Fear of the Cooking Processes
In cooking, ingredients undergo many different processes to produce the meals we have today.
The cooking processes may involve cutting, frying, grinding, blending, pounding, boiling, slicing, roasting, etc. These cooking processes may cause harm to the cook if he or she is not careful.
However, even with all the protective wear in the world, a Mageirocophobic may still not feel safe because he or she is filled with so much fear that they sees potential danger and the possibility of getting hurt if they cooks themselves.
And when they try, their anxiety might kick, making them act so clumsy that they hurt themselves; this would confirm their fears.
Fear of Recipes
Reading recipe-making recipes and following the guidelines may result in the desired result.
However, Mageirocophobics might find those guidelines overwhelming, even though when they may seem simple to the next person, their anxiety kicks in because they are afraid that they might miss an important step and ruin everything.
Again, the sufferer may find the recipe volume too overwhelming to decide.
Fear of Nutrition Knowledge
We are more inclined to learn by practicing; therefore, when you cook your food, you may make mistakes and learn, and by continually doing so, you become aware of the condiments needed and how to prepare them.
However, sometimes, people read up, ask questions, and discuss the health benefits and risks of condiments, ingredients, and food.
But then, individuals with Mageirocophobia can become obsessed with these health benefits and risks, and this can significantly impact their cooking.
This will also make them so judgmental of other people’s food that they never get pleased. This affects their nutrition, social life, and perception.
Fear of Food Consumption
People with eating disorders such as Bulimia Nervosa and Anorexia Nervosa etc. may find cooking overwhelming due to its association with food.
The whole point of cooking is to be able to make food that is edible enough to eat; people with such disorders feel that they might lose control and start eating and might end up eating “too much.”
This form of fear surely fills the sufferer with worry, inadequacy, indiscipline, and guilt.
Symptoms
As in the case of almost all medical conditions, there are accompanying symptoms to tell you that you may have a particular health condition. In magierocophobia, the symptoms are:
- Light-headedness
- Difficulty in breathing
- Tingling sensation
- Numbness in some parts of the body
- Feeling of faint
- Weakness
- Dizziness
- Fear of losing control
- Excessive sweating
- Cold or hot flashes
- Chills
- Sharp chest pain
- Feeling of nervousness
- Constant feeling of dread
- A persistent sense of lurking doom about cooking
- Stubbornness and outright refusal to cook
Causes
Although there is no exact cause of Mageirocophobia, just like every other phobia, experts are led to believe that there are factors that contribute to the development of Mageirocophobia.
Those factors are as follows:
Preexisting Phobias
The presence of other phobias can cause a person to develop mageirocophobia.
Preexisting phobias such as fear of fear, fear of pain, fear of being cut, fear of water, etc., may cause you to develop mageirocophobia.
Because food is being prepared in the kitchen, it may follow some processes that a person with a fear of fire or any related phobia would not appreciate.
Past Pxperiences
Trauma caused by an unpleasant experience causes most phobias. For instance, someone who was a victim of an accident or knew someone who had an accident while cooking may acquire magierocophobia.
Heredity or Genetics
Fearful genes are also included in an individual’s genetic makeup once there is an ancestor who has had a particular phobia. These genes may be dominant or recessive; they are likely to manifest somewhere in the family tree.
Environment
The environment plays a crucial role in a person’s growth and well-being. This phobia may develop when a child grows up in an environment that encourages the fear of cooking or when they believe cooking is a strenuous task.
This can also occur when a child grows up with a family member suffering from magierocophobia or in an environment with some close relatives, neighbors, or friends suffering from this condition, which can make the child develop magierocophobia.
Experts believe that phobias are significant as a result of the combination of trauma and heredity. Severe Mageirocophobia can also cause some other phobias and social disorders to develop.
Treatment
This condition causes the sufferer to go through a lot of unpleasant symptoms, negatively affects a person’s social and personal well-being, and may lead to the development of other phobias and social anxiety disorders.
Therefore, mageirocophobia should be seen as a threat to an individual’s well-being and should be treated as soon as possible.
As limiting and detrimental as this condition is to the health and well-being of an individual, it is still manageable and treatable. There are effective treatments available for the treatment of magierocophobia.
- Medications
- Therapeutic approach
Medications
These are drugs that can be taken to control anxiety when the body is triggered. These substances are of three main types: antidepressants, tranquilizers, and beta-blockers. They should never be administered outside your doctor’s knowledge and, when prescribed, should be taken strictly on the doctor’s prescription.
However, it is not the cure for any phobia, and it may cause some side effects to some individuals. Worst still, they can cause dependency and addiction in many individuals; thus, they should only be used for a short period.
Therapeutic approach
This approach is applied with the professional help of a psychotherapist to help the client achieve the desired results, in this case, to help the client be free from the fear of cooking.
This approach includes the following:
Talking Therapy
This form of treatment involves you and your trained therapist working together to influence the line of thought that causes you to fear.
This may seem like small or deep talk, but it is highly effective. Having you talk about your fears lessens the fear you feel.
Cognitive-behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Fear is known to bend our perception despite our awareness of reality. Cognitive-behavioral therapy is a treatment aimed at helping you identify whether you have a real view of reality or your perception is distorted and to help you adopt coping strategies for facing and overcoming your fears.
For instance, if you are a magierocophobic, CBT can help you identify whether you have a real view of reality to justify your fears of cooking or a distorted view of what cooking entails, proving that your fear of cooking is irrational.
With the help of CBT, you will help you correct those bent perceptions.