72:
The decision to ‘go vegan’ is the start to a whole lifestyle
change. When I first latched onto this idea it was the biggest idea I’d come
across. It said to me that I was heading towards becoming non-violent, animal
friendly, green and therefore in the best position to help transform the world.
As an ideal it’s pretty much indisputable! “Great”, I thought, but how will I
keep it up? I knew that once I started something this big I must continue with
it. If I gave up I’d hate myself.
So what couldn’t
I fail with? Certainly, I wanted to leave the violence of all that animal
killing behind me, but how would I deal with all the food temptations and more
particularly the violence of the society in which I was brought up?
As I was heading into all this
the one thing I feared most was becoming overwhelmed by it all and backtracking.
When I took on a vegan diet and threw out my leather shoes I was still inspired,
but after a while I felt the loss of things. I could see that it was a good
idea in theory, but was it really making me feel better? I had my doubts but
not over principles, only practice. Would I be making a rod for my own back? Shouldn’t
I toss the idea around and let it settle into my life, let my mates know what I
was doing, make sure I was comfortable with it?
What happened
was that I stopped eating animal stuff. I found plant-based foods weren’t bad
at all. Good in fact. That made me think, “So far so good”, and think well of
myself. But I wanted more. And that’s when I hit a hurdle.
I wanted everyone to be
supportive, and they weren’t. I faced social isolation. Being vegan was
starting to feel like a burden. I even started to think my friends didn’t like
me anymore. But that led me to think much more deeply about friendships and communication,
and that in turn led me to see the importance of maintaining strong
relationships. It got me thinking about non-violence, not just eating
cruelty-free food but interacting gently with my non-vegan friends.
So, I thought the diet change was
going to be a big problem, and it wasn’t
(although to this day I do miss Mars Bars - I can still remember how they
tasted and how the chocolate and caramel and toffee made for something special
confection-wise). With a few new products in the cupboard and by using a few
new recipes, I never looked back. I was so pleased that I didn’t miss animal-products
much at all.
My main worry
was my resolve, whether it would fade once the novelty had worn off. Would I be
able to give it a proper chance? I already knew people who’d gone half way and
never progressed beyond that, as vegetarians. I couldn’t help thinking it was a
great start. But why stop there? For my part, I would go in full bore. I would try
to use sheer will-power. I’d do just
about anything to get to the ‘other side’.
Some people
are gradual diet changers, some sudden. But that’s just food. There are other
issues to face, like being seen as going weird. True, I had stopped eating
foods everyone else ate but I didn’t worry about that - but had I gone weird in
another way? Could there be something disturbing in me - that by going vegan was
I setting myself above others? Was I positioning myself to lay value judgements
on people. Was I doing this to make me feel superior and protect myself from being
judged. Was I doing this to prevent my own self-judgement?
As a vegan
I was starting to experience all these changes, on many levels. And something
else was happening – a tension was growing between my passion and my impatience.
I wanted to drop all the addictions straight away so that I could become a true
animal advocate. Or did I mean an evangelist for veganism?
I mention all this as a lead up
to some important associated problems, concerning advocacy and getting others to
come on board. I wanted to lie and say, “It’s worth it. Go vegan. It’s not that
hard at all”. But in truth I knew it could, for someone like me, be quite a difficult
change to make. And yet the idea is strong enough, inspiring enough and
revolutionary enough to brave all pressures. It is, after all, one of the main
doors into the future.
1 comment:
No way you're wierd.
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