If you had asked me a year ago, hell,
even 4 months ago, if I ever saw myself becoming a vegetarian or vegan,
I would have laughed. I love meat! I grew up eating meat at
practically every meal - definitely dinner, almost always lunch, and
sometimes breakfast. My husband, Aaron, is super fit and ate a TON of chicken,
since it's packed with protein and we've always been told that in order
to be fit and healthy, you need protein! We even bought Whey Isolate
Protein Powder by the 10 lb bag! I'm talking a dog food-sized bag of
chocolate protein powder that we would go through in about 6 months.
For Hannukah this year, my parents bought a Sams-sized flat of chicken
breasts, grilled them, and packaged them in twos for our freezer.
In October, I even posted this photo on facebook of my meal prep for the month:
We ate a LOT of chicken.
That changed in February. A lot.
We've
always tried to be healthy - you can see our juicer in the photo behind
the mountain of raw meat. After watching the documentary Fat Sick and
Nearly Dead on Netflix December 2011, we got it and started juicing.
That waxed and waned, mostly because it was such a hassle to clean, and
you had to juice so much to get a full glass. My morning juice would
usually be a cucumber, 4-5 carrots, an apple, an inch chunk of ginger,
and 2-3 oranges. That would get me about 20 oz of juice. Not cheap,
right?
Well, this year we
got some money from Aaron's parents for Christmas and decided to use it
toward a Vitamix. This thing is amazing. I've always coveted one, but
they're pretty expensive, and I didn't have the last bit of information
about it that was the missing piece of the puzzle. It is the easiest
thing in the world to clean. You fill it up about halfway with water, 2
drops of soap, and turn it on for about 30 seconds. Then rinse, and
you're done! I was sold. Even after only having it a month I felt comfortable saying it's one of the best purchases I've ever made. Since
we got it, I've been making green smoothies for breakfast almost every day.
Remember all the fruit/veg I listed for the juicer? In the vitamix,
I'll use 1/2 cucumber, 1/2 banana, 1 orange and a bunch of spinach and
get as much or more juice than I got with the juicer! Incredible! Our
produce stand hauls last twice as long, plus we make our own peanut
butter (with JUST peanuts, no oil or salt or sugar!), we make soups,
sauces, hummus... you name it, this bad boy will make it easier!
So,
needless to say, I've been having much more veggies and less meat, just
by virtue of the Vitamix. Now let's take it another step:
I was discussing the virtues of the
vitamix with a coworker who also has one, and we got to talking about
food in general - preservatives, additives, etc. I'm a big fan of the
documentary "Food, Inc." (also on Netflix) and shared with my coworker
that after I watched that I definitely changed the way I look at meat
and eggs, and I've definitely changed my eating and purchasing habits.
For example, the doc goes into detail about how chickens in the
livestock industry are raised in complete darkness, growing from chick
to adult in about 9 weeks, thanks to all the hormones they're injected
with. They cram as many as will fit into a small barn, where many will
die from being trampled, not being able to get away because their bones
haven't caught up to their muscle growth and their legs can't hold up
their body weight. Egg-laying chickens are kept in very small cages,
just big enough for their bodies, and are also kept in darkness most of
the time, except for when they are stimulated to lay eggs, at which
point bright lights are shone in their eyes, causing them to stress out
and drop eggs. If they die in their little cages, it could be weeks
before someone comes around to remove the body.
So
once I saw this and learned more, I payed the extra for better eggs. I
knew that "free range" only meant that each chicken gets about 3 square
feet of space, instead of one, but I felt a little bit better about
that. I avoided Purdue or Tyson, knowing that they were forcing small
farmers to change the way they raised chickens to be more productive
instead of humane.
Food,
Inc also talks about beef - the unnatural ways cows are raised and the
amount of processing the meat goes through... after watching that, I
hardly ever bought beef anymore, especially ground beef (which is
processed with bleach and any red "blood" you see in the packaging is
food coloring to make you feel better about eating it."
I
felt like these small changes were making a difference. Maybe they
were... But I will admit I chose to be ignorant about a lot of it. We
didn't have a lot of disposable income, and the better stuff cost a lot
more! I was still buying into the protein story and believed I needed
meat every day, so I often chose was right for my wallet, instead of my
conscious.
While I
was talking to the coworker and I brought up "Food, Inc," she asked if I
had watched "Forks Over Knives." I hadn't, but I saw it in the Netflix queue
and had heard others talking about it. She said "watch it. watch it
tonight." So I did!
I now
highly recommend this documentary to everyone! It focuses on 2 Drs (one
PhD, one MD) who have spent their lives studying the same basic
principle - we are what we eat. One Dr noticed on a trip to the
Philippines that many of the poorer families had healthier children than
the affluent families, whose children had a shockingly high rate of
liver cancer. He suspected a link to their diet, since the affluent
families could afford to eat meat daily. He found a study that backed
him up, where they fed test rats diets of either 5% casein or 20%
casein, after being exposed to a known carcinogen. The rats who were in
the 5% group had a significantly lower amount of cancerous tumors.
They even did a test where they changed the rats diets and it showed
that when the rats went from 20% to 5% their cancer stopped growing and
in some cases went away! They then did a huge study in China, looking
at the rates of different types of cancer in all the different counties
and compared it to the diets of the locals in those counties. It was
pretty obvious that there was a link between diet and cancer, and a lot
of it had to do with the consumption of meat and dairy!
The
whole time I was watching I was captivated, but I knew I'd never be
able to convince Aaron... he was an athlete, he needed protein! He has
twice as much muscle mass as I do, and he got that way eating a high
protein diet. Then, the documentary showed an MMA fighter, Mac Danzig.
He looked pretty good - same body type as Aaron... and he was totally
vegan. Basically, the documentary explains that we've all been
programmed to believe animal protein is the only kind, or at least the
best kind. In reality, we don't need that much protein, but meat is
calorically dense when compared to vegetables, so our primitive minds
crave it. In the cave man days, we didn't know when our next meal was
going to be, so we ate whatever had the most calories to fuel us as long
as possible. Nowadays, we know when our next meal is, but our brain
still functions this way. Vegetables and fruits (a plant-based diet)
has more than enough protein than we need, as long as we eat a good
variety.
I immediately
told Aaron about what I had learned. As I expected, he was skeptical
but agreed to watch it. The next day, he was texting me every 10
minutes about the information he was finding that backed up the
documentary completely. He was worried about the increased amount of
soy in a vegan diet, so he did some research and found nothing wrong
with soy itself - only in highly processed soy isolates or
concentrates! Makes sense - you take a good thing and process it to the
high heavens, and guess what? It's now bad for you!!
The
next night we decided to look for more on Netflix, and we found a
documentary called "Vegucated." The description just said it was about 3
meat-eating New Yorkers who agreed to go vegan for 6 weeks for an
experiment. Sounded perfect!
The
beginning was fantastic - it was like they were reading our minds. Are
all vegans dirty hippies? Did we have to live on a commune and make
our own soap and clothes? No! The main character in the storyline
sounded a lot like us!
Then
it got into the details of how animals are treated in the livestock
industry. Like I said before, I knew a lot of it, but I chose to be
ignorant. The information and images in this documentary were not
things I could ignore anymore. I already had the beginnings of the
change in me and this was the nail in the coffin. I can't eat pork
anymore after seeing farmers castrating baby pigs with their bare hands,
kicking an injured piglet away after it got caught in the gate
mechanism and was dying, or shooting one between the eyes with a bolt
gun, as it tried to run away. I won't be able to drink milk without thinking of the cows who are
forced to be pregnant their entire lives so they produce milk, but as
soon as the baby is born they drag it away so it never gets to bond with
its mother, but instead will either be killed for veal or raised to
live the same fate. I cannot continue to eat chicken without thinking
of the baby chicks being sorted and thrown around like nothing - the
"lucky" females being put in boxes to be shipped to egg farms, and the
boys being killed because they can't lay eggs or be used for meat. They
either put them in plastic bags to suffocate and dump them with the
trash, or put them in the grinder to be used as feed for other
animals... alive. That image will never leave me.
What
really bothered me was the people doing these things. A few months
ago, there was a story on the local news about a man who put 4 kittens
in plastic bags and put them in the freezer to die. Thankfully, someone
found them and called the authorities - 3 survived and were adopted thanks to the local SPCA. But what I
couldn't get over and what puts a knot in my stomach even now, was the
thought that a human being was physically capable of doing that to a
helpless, defenseless baby kitten who just wanted to be loved. I cannot
imagine having those eyes looking back at me as I seal up the bag and
close the freezer door. Just like that, I cannot comprehend how so many
farmers around the country do these horrific things to these animals
every day. How you could treat the cutest baby piglets and chicks like
that makes me feel sick.
I thought it would be harder than it actually is... the only real hard part I've found is talking to people about it. Many of my friends have been pretty confused when I share the news with them, and I don't want to be that stereotype who pushes my beliefs on others. I chose to be ignorant for a while and I have to respect other people's decisions to do the same - especially if I'm going to continue my friendships with them!! I've always hated religious groups who try to push their beliefs on me, so I can't start doing that to my friends... but it's so tough because I feel so passionate about it and when you're excited about a new chapter in your life, what do you want to do? Share it with your friends!
I needed an outlet to share my thoughts and get my passion out, so I figured a blog would be a good way to go! I visit vegan blogs frequently to find tips and recipes, so why not start my own? I don't know if anyone will read it but me, but that's just fine...



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