Guest guest Posted April 28, 2005 Report Share Posted April 28, 2005 I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) Here's a typical comment: "I’ve tried to be a vegetarian and feel as if I am starving all the time. I get skinny. I have metabolism that burns and burns, and soy and all that just doesn’t do it for me." What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in addition to being health-related. Thanks for your suggestions! Carla Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 28, 2005 Report Share Posted April 28, 2005 Carla, did you suggest that they eat soy, as it's an excellent source of protein? It's even supposed to have more of certain amino acids that protein in meat. If you haven't already, I would try suggesting that they eat soy and take vitamin B12 supplements, since meat and not soy does have B12. Hope this helps, - Rosalind On Apr 28, 2005, at 10:01 AM, Carla Din wrote: > I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere > who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they > felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their > diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) > > Here's a typical comment: " I’ve tried to be a vegetarian and feel as > if I am starving all the time. I get skinny. I have metabolism that > burns and burns, and soy and all that just doesn’t do it for me. " > > What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those > that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in > addition to being health-related. > > Thanks for your suggestions! > Carla > > > > > > > ____ > BAY AREA VEGETARIANS (BAV) is a non-profit community group > for veggies to network, find support and promote veganism. > > Events Calendar - http://bayareaveg.org/events.php > Newsletter - http://bayareaveg.org/news > Veg Mentor Program - http://bayareaveg.org/mentor > Charter & Post Guidelines - http://bayareaveg.org/charter.htm > ____ > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 28, 2005 Report Share Posted April 28, 2005 Hey Carla I would add a couple of things… In my experience, ex-veggies often-times were not very committed to start with and have a hard time with the pro-meat peer pressure they get. Let’s face it, it’s easier to be a meat-eater in this culture. You have to be comfortable with being something of a nonconformist to pull it off, more-so in some regions of the country than others. Also, ex-veggies, again in my experience, tend not to have done it “for the animals,” rather for personal health reasons (sometimes environmental), and they tend to be more of the fad diet types, having tried other diets they did not stick to either. While that’s not very constructive to your query here looking for scientific answers, I do think this gets to motivation which is a key factor. Vanity, being “cool,” or weight-loss, vegetarianism just can’t hold a candle to compassionate vegetarianism in the personal commitment made. As for the “feeling better”-type comments, it sounds like a lot of it is related to the meat “bloat” as I like to call it. I would remind them that part of why they feel so much more full after eating a large amount of meat is that their body is having a hard time digesting it. Vegetable matter can pass through us in a day or so, while meat slogs along in our bowels for more like 3 days, hence the large amounts of colon cancer in our society. Our digestive track is much, much longer than straight up carnivores who pass meat rather rapidly, suggesting we are not built to consume large amounts of flesh. Also, Americans tend to consume aout twice as much protein as their body needs leading to multiple health problems down the road, such as osteoporosis and other ailments. So that sense of fulfillment that heavy meat-eaters are used to might temporarily feel “good” it leads to numerous long-term health problems. I would also turn around the “filling” comments by remarking that rather than being weighted down, a vegetarian usually is lighter and better able to be more active after a meal. www.pcrm.org and www.veganhealth.org are a couple of good sources for info on being and staying veggie and the adverse effects of meat-based diets. The last thing I have noticed in ex-veggies is that they tended not to eat enough. They didn’t know what to eat or their tastebuds were so selective after living on meat and cheese for so long that they limited their diets to almost nothing. You can’t stop eating meat and just eat less of everything else. You will indeed lose too much weight and not be healthy. A vegetarian diet, like any other, including meat-based diets, needs to be well-balanced with the right kinds and right amounts of foods to be healthy. Just stopping eating meat is not automatically healthier in and off itself. If you do it right, it very much is healthier, and the great body of science at least hints at that. While I am just shooting from the hip here, I hope I have offered some food for thought for future conversations with ex-veggies Peace, David On Behalf Of Rosalind Lord Thursday, April 28, 2005 2:15 PM SFBAV Re: Former Vegetarians Carla, did you suggest that they eat soy, as it's an excellent source of protein? It's even supposed to have more of certain amino acids that protein in meat. If you haven't already, I would try suggesting that they eat soy and take vitamin B12 supplements, since meat and not soy does have B12. Hope this helps, - Rosalind On Apr 28, 2005, at 10:01 AM, Carla Din wrote: I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) Here's a typical comment: " I’ve tried to be a vegetarian and feel as if I am starving all the time. I get skinny. I have metabolism that burns and burns, and soy and all that just doesn’t do it for me. " What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in addition to being health-related. Thanks for your suggestions! Carla ____ BAY AREA VEGETARIANS (BAV) is a non-profit community group for veggies to network, find support and promote veganism. Events Calendar - http://bayareaveg.org/events.php Newsletter - http://bayareaveg.org/news Veg Mentor Program - http://bayareaveg.org/mentor Charter & Post Guidelines - http://bayareaveg.org/charter.htm ____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 Carla wrote: "I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) ... What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in addition to being health-related." Well.... When we tabled at We the Planet a couple of years ago in SF, I met a few ex-vegetarians that day; they had been veg for several years, but switched. Typical comments were as you said, how they felt or 'my acupuncturist recommended...'. Personally, I agree with what David said about motivations. I have found that folks who switch to a veg diet from an ethical perspective are more motivated to remain veg than those who were became veg for health or other reasons. As someone who is not really trained in nutrition (or interested in that topic), I find it easier (and personally more convincing) to try and help people understand vegetarianism from an ethical / compassionate perspective. After all, I think even meat-eaters realize that animals suffer and feel pain; they've just blocked that. But, if anyone has any good responses from a health-perspective, please share as I would love to know some good comebacks as well. Or, Carla, maybe you can post a summary of responses you received privately. I recently heard Dr Colin Campbell speak about his new book about the China Study. This is supposed to the greatest, latest scientific research supporting a plant-based diet. I haven't read the book, but it sounds like it might give you the answers you're looking for: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=bayareavegeta-20 & path=ASIN/1932100385 (Has anyone read the book??) There is also Dr. McDougall's website. He has a lot of health related info, and has a free monthly newsletter that you can to. http://www.drmcdougall.com Cheers, Tammy Join Team BAVeg and volunteer to make a difference..Free Restaurant Guide or Create Your Own - Monthly Event Calendar - Veggie Mentor ProgramCurrent Newsletter Bay Area Vegetarians * www.BayAreaVeg.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 I have an ongoing discussion from time to time with my co-workers (we're nurses working on an hiv research study, so we're all medical workers, though none of us are nutritional specialists). Two of my co-workers are very influenced by that book or set of books about blood types dictating best diets. Can't remember the name of the book/s right now. Says A+, the most common (at least in the northern hemisphere, I beleive) do best as vegetarians, and I think O 'needs' to eat flesh. For those of us who have read Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs and Steel, the history of the evolution of the different tribes and societies on the planet kind of ties in, in a loose way, with the 'diet by blood type' author's review of the ancestral history of the four main blood types on the planet. Not having read the book (the blood type book), I almost feel as if I should read it, just to see how he arrives at the conclusions he does. But I don't have biochem and other scientific background to be able to grasp some of the finer points, maybe Jack Norris, you could comment on this? It's been discussed here before, I believe, so forgive if I'm dredging up an old topic, but I'm wondering how any of you have dealth with folks telling you they 'tried' going veg but 'found out' they were the wrong blood type. Thanks all, Janice Message: 7 Mon, 2 May 2005 20:30:28 -0700 " Tammy, Bay Area Vegetarians " <t RE: Former Vegetarians Carla wrote: " I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) ... What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in addition to being health-related. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2005 Report Share Posted May 6, 2005 Hi Carla, Sorry for the delayed post - I was out of town. I don’t necessarily have “scientific” info for you, which I know is what you are looking for, but I have had similar problems in becoming vegetarian. For about a 9 months to a year I tried to go vegetarian, and after several weeks of not eating meat I would start to get very sick (feeling weak, tired, cranky, nauseous, feeling hungry but not being able to eat much), and as soon as I ate some meat again it went away. Some people told me that maybe I was just the kind of person who “needed” meat. Well, I refused to believe that, so I kept trying and I asked every vegetarian I came across if they had any knowledge of this. Almost everyone I talked to said that they never had any problems, they just “did it.” I even had blood tests done to see if I was anemic (which I wasn’t). Finally I talked to someone who was knowledgeable about food, and he suggested that maybe it had to do with the yin/yang philosophy of balance. He suggested that maybe when I suddenly cut out the meat from my diet (which wasn’t that much to begin with) that I disrupted the yin/yang balance of food. He told me to try cutting out refined sugar from my diet to see if that would help. Well, frustrated but determined (especially since I didn’t have any other ideas), I decided to cut out all refined sugar, dairy, and meat...basically I went completely vegan and also cut out the sugar and much of the wheat products I was eating. After some experimentation, I came to realize that it really was the sugar that was causing the imbalance. I am still vegan and feel better than ever, and I haven’t felt that “sickness” since then. I still eat cookies or things with sugar in them occasionally, but I know that for me (at least for the moment) I need to watch my sugar intake. I guess my suggestion for what you can say in response to your friends is that they need to find out what works best for them. I certainly think that intention or commitment has a lot to do with it, but I think that people (both vegetarians and meat eaters) tend to assume a one size fits all approach to diet and eating. Just because you get sick doesn’t necessarily mean that you aren’t meant to be vegetarian, but it may mean that your body needs a different balance of food. I don’t know how much experimenting your friends have done with their diets, but maybe they need to find the right balance of foods for them. Also, I find that my style of eating, like how much and how often I eat, changed when I became vegan. I now need to eat more often throughout the day. I think it’s sometimes important to emphasize to people that they can’t necessarily just remove meat and insert soy - they might need to make sure to incorporate a variety of foods to help their bodies make that switch. On another note, I am new to the list and wanted to say hello! Kristy On Apr 28, 2005, at 10:01 AM, Carla Din wrote: > I keep meeting people working in the environmental field and elsewhere > who used to be vegetarians but started eating meat again because they > felt weak or sick and their doctor told them to add it back into their > diets. (Naturally, they immediately felt better afterwards!) > > Here's a typical comment: " I’ve tried to be a vegetarian and feel as > if I am starving all the time. I get skinny. I have metabolism that > burns and burns, and soy and all that just doesn’t do it for me. " > > What are some good responses that I could use? I'm looking for those > that are informative, scientific, and technical, if possible, in > addition to being health-related. > > Thanks for your suggestions! > Carla Mail Mobile Take Mail with you! Check email on your mobile phone. http://mobile./learn/mail Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2005 Report Share Posted May 6, 2005 Kristy's recent post (re: learning of a sugar imbalance) reminded me of some things I learned when I first became vegetarian in the 70s. As most of us here already know, the mainstream diet in the U.S. is not only heavy in meat, eggs and dairy, but filled with processed foods and sugars, plus chemical additives of all kinds. As vegetarians and vegans, we know that the chemicals and refined sugars aren't even food and, that the human system is not designed to digest large amounts of flesh in a timely manner. This clogs the intestines and bowels and keeps them lined with decaying matter for years at a time. The sickness many people in this country feel when trying vegetarianism for the first time is three things: First, it is the system disposing of all this excess matter, releasing all manner of toxins into the bloodstream. Understanding that this will pass, and learning of some herbal teas and things that will speed and relieve the process could help there. Second, the now cleaner system can take in more of the processed foods, chemicals and sugars that may still be a part of the new vegetarian's diet. People sometimes stop eating meat, but retain the rest of their unhealthy diet. It may still be heavy in preservatives and processed carbs and trans fats. Only the coating that used to prevent them from feeling some of the effects has been removed. Third, the newly cleaned system may now sense the food allergies that were there all along but somewhat suppressed by the unnatural clogging of the system that is part of eating meat and processed foods. In general, I've found that people who were veg'n and reverted to eating meat feel a sense of relief at being able to eat with their friends and families once again and just generally not being considered weird. Only a few have ever said to me that they wished they could have found a way to remain veg'n. So, all this information might not even be welcome by them. But, for those who are open to trying again and wanting to understand why they felt less well as veg'ns, this might help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2005 Report Share Posted May 6, 2005 This may be getting repetitive, but it says something I think that a few of us have spoken up about similar experiences. After several years of being vegan (so it's not just a recent change to my system), I noticed that I would feel weak, sleepy, a bit nauseous, and very hungry in the afternoon even though my stomach was full. I changed my diet from high-sugar, processed foods (e.g., a bagel, spaghetti) to whole grain foods (e.g., oatmeal), and I make sure I get protein at lunch, and the problem seems to be solved. For protein, I wanted to remind everyone of beans! For others who work downtown, http://www.specialtys.com/specials.html lists Specialty's daily soup specials & whether they're vegetarian or vegan (their lentil soups are wonderful!) and http://www.sfsoupco.com/specials.html lists the San Francisco Soup Co.'s daily soup specials -- they have vegan split pea everyday. BTW, have you tried Double Rainbow's new soy cream? The mint chocolate chip tastes just like I remember Bryers. Thea Mail Mobile Take Mail with you! Check email on your mobile phone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2005 Report Share Posted May 8, 2005 Thea Langsam wrote: > For protein, I wanted to remind everyone of beans! For others who > work downtown, http://www.specialtys.com/specials.html lists > Specialty's daily soup specials & whether they're vegetarian or > vegan (their lentil soups are wonderful!) and > http://www.sfsoupco.com/specials.html lists the San Francisco Soup > Co.'s daily soup specials -- they have vegan split pea everyday. Oh boy, have I had a lot of that split pea soup... :-) There is also a new soup kid on the block: Soup Freaks, on Pine at Battery. http://www.soupfreaks.com They always have a vegan black bean chili (decent) on the menu every day, and the occasional vegetarian or vegan special. Plus they use biodegradable containers (instead of those horrid styrofoam ones at SF Soup - I swear, I'm going to organize a protest one of these days) and all of their ingredients are fresh and organic. -Kim -- Kim Flournoy Website Development 415-235-2986 kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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