833:
For everyone, life’s hard enough. But for vegans it’s even
harder, in one important way. We seem to bear almost the sole responsibility
for persuading people of the wrongness of enslaving animals and the rightness
of not using them at all.
On one
level that’s enlightening enough for us but on another level it’s a pit within
a pit. We have to deal with our own everyday-participation (in this society)
but we're forced to lead a double life, being in it but not of it; we’re true
outsiders. But at least we don’t have the food baggage most people carry (which
ends up looking bad on the scales and even worse in the mirror).
The
omnivore’s mental conditioning traps them into the habits of their childhood,
the most dangerous of which is a fondness for Nursery Teas. We like to use
certain combinations of junk foods, remembered from our earlier days, usually
in the form of sweetened confections, cheesy concoctions and milky drinks.
They’re tempting but they’ve lost their original impact as treats. No longer
are they anything special since they’re indulged in so regularly. And every day
too, most people eat a meaty meal, again something very addictive and harmful
to the body.
As
dangerous as these foods are, we indulge in them. On top of the junk food we
indulge in a whole range of intoxicants which fuzz up the mind and probably
also fuzz-up a grumbling conscience, helping us to enjoy a thoroughly
indiscriminate eating experience.
Science has
been recruited to ensure that animal foods (or as main ingredients of processed
foods) are ‘rich’ to the taste as well as being stomach-filling. It’s their
addictiveness which denies us any chance of easily escaping them, even for a
short while. Their daily use keeps us umbilically-tied to the most damaging
norms of our society.
Veganism
takes us past that point. Once we’re vegan we usually never look back to that
old self-harming world again. We get so used to looking ahead that we take for
granted a world of daily-discipline and boycotting.
The ‘little habits’ of an
omnivore’s diet are hard to let go, especially when the alternatives don’t seem
attractive (veganism would be perceived as extreme and a vegan diet therefore
unattractive). Perhaps the big lesson here is that perceptions can be
deceptive, and they can be changed almost in a flash. But ‘going vegan’ isn’t
necessarily simple.
Immediately,
as soon as the brain says “give it a go”, we face a Catch 22, where
herbivorous-eating means limiting our choices. Our society is so heavily geared
to the animal eaters’ interests that there’s not very much in the way of
immediately attractive plant-based savoury food on the market; there are still
relatively few products out there which can replace the addictive-products made
with animal ingredients, unless we’re willing to pay high prices for imported
goods. Mostly we have to do without.
On the face
of it, this puts people off vegan lifestyles … but ironically, just in that
‘limitation’, with so much being off-limits to us, we benefit greatly. Avoiding
animal-based food prevents our being poisoned by it. And nor are we likely to
put on weight, grow a paunch, slow our metabolism or develop diabetes. That’s
the big advantage of this particular food discipline.
Look at it
this way. Going vegan helps us pass by certain shops; we just get used to never
going into them. For example, nothing in a cake shop is ‘clean’ (of animal
by-products), so commercial cakes are no longer something a vegan would indulge
in. Now, all this ‘doing-without’ might seem like a big sacrifice to omnivores,
but to vegans it’s a blessing in disguise. We can’t be tempted by the
‘delights’ of edible or wearable or usable animal products, so we can’t be
tainted by them or, in the case of food, made fat or ill by them. And that’s
the ultimate advantage. We don’t have to spend our later years in the grip of
ill-health, at least not because we have, in previous years, indulged in second
rate taste-trips.
1 comment:
This is exactly how I feel about my veganism. Love your blog.
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