Guest guest Posted August 20, 2004 Report Share Posted August 20, 2004 That's exactly what I tell people, well, I say I hate vegetables! DIE VEGETABLES DIE! I just got back from he most spiritual retreat. Has anyone every experienced something like that while they were only in high school? Coco Sherri [sherria] Friday, August 20, 2004 1:13 AM Veg for health reasons (was Re: hey Coco) " Rebecca " <squinkabink@b...> wrote: > And new topic if anyone hasn't already answered this: If you became > vegetarian for health reasons, what were those health reasons? (if not to > personal or anything) I’m a vegetarian for health reasons (I tell people that I’m not vegetarian because I love animals; I’m vegetarian because I hate plants!), not moral ones. My family has a history of heart disease and stroke, and extremely high cholesterol (on both sides of the family). The easiest way for me to avoid that is by limiting the cholesterol and animal fats in my diet, so I choose to eliminate meat, though I do still eat some cheese, eggs, etc. My cholesterol is quite low, and I intend to keep it that way. Also, I’ve never been a big meat eater, just never much liked the taste of any animal flesh except fish. When I wasn’t practicing a vegetarian diet I’d often end up iron deficient and/or protein deficient because I would just skip the meat portion of meals and not replace those foods with vegetarian alternatives. Actively replacing animal proteins with vegetable sources has made a big difference in these areas for me. What’s really weird is that after so many years of having iron levels that were too low, my most recent blood work indicates that I have too much iron right now. My iron, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and red blood cell count are all elevated. It’s more than can be blamed on dietary choices, according to my doctor, but he found it rather interesting given my history in the other direction. (Now if we can just figure out what’s causing me to store excess iron and deal with it, then we can get on to changing my medication regimes to deal with another new diagnosis (FMS). Ugh.) If you know anything about the meat industry, you know that it’s incredibly dirty and unhealthy, and it’s a wonder more people don’t get sick from eating what comes out of it. That alone would be reason enough for me to stop eating meat for health reasons, even without the family history and past health problems. I also think it’s more environmentally responsible to reduce meat consumption. Raising livestock is much harder on the environment, and not particularly efficient in terms of getting the most nutrition from the land use. -- Sherri My wild oats have turned to shredded wheat. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.740 / Virus Database: 494 - Release 8/16/2004 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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