I can't tell you the number of times I've walked passed the collard greens to get to the kale and spinach. I'm not sure why I never thought to pick up a bunch. I guess I wasn't quite sure what to do with it.
After a weekend at Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn's Farm in Catskill, New York, everyone left there knowing what to do with just about every green.
Courtesy of the Esselstyn matriarch, Ann, here's a recipe for quick, easy, healthful and wonderfully delicious Collard Green Wraps. I hope you enjoy them as much as we did (well, "are" -- I'm still picking).
Ingredients
Bunch of collard greens
8 oz. mushrooms, diced
Various vegetables shredded (we used broccoli, red cabbage, cauliflower and carrots)
15 ounce can of black beans, drained
2-3 cups of short grain brown rice
Hummus (about 8 ounces)
Avocado, diced (if you're plant-perfect, omit #lowfat)
Procedure
Cook the brown rice according to package directions. When it's done, mix in the drained beans.
Gently break off the collard greens. Choose the nicest and wash each individually, placing carefully on paper towels. Remove the thick stem at the point where the leaf begins.
Heat a large saute pan on medium heat until nice and hot. One at a time, heat the greens -- about 10 seconds on each side. (Hint: I placed a collard green in the pan and then put our tea kettle on top of it; flipped and did the same. This step will wilt the greens a bit, which will allow you to roll them like little burritos.)
When all the greens have been heated, you can start stuffing.
Lay a collard green on a flat surface. Down the center spine, add two tablespoons of hummus, followed by a spoonful of the rice and bean mixture. Sprinkle mushrooms, vegetables and a few dices of avocado. Roll. For a quick tutorial on how to roll it poifectly, click here.
Bake rolled wraps on a parchment-lined cookie sheet at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Friday, May 17, 2013
Live Plant Strong by Dylan Walenciak
Our son may not be following in our footsteps but he definitely buys into the path we're on. Below is his 7th grade year-end term paper. A chip off the old block, if I do say so myself. Now we just have to get him to eat our way and really live plant strong!
As healthcare costs continue to rise in
the United States and diseases such as cancer, type II diabetes and heart
disease claim more and more lives each year, medical research is spending tons
of money trying to identify the root cause, and the fact is the answer may be
as simple as looking at the ends of people’s forks. “Genetics loads the gun, lifestyle pulls the trigger,” said cardiothoracic surgeon, author, and television personality
Dr. Mehmet Oz. His statement is supported by decades of scientific and
clinical studies -- chronicled in such films as Vegucated and Forks Over
Knives, and documented in books like Dr. T. Colin Campbell’s The China Study -- that show the
Standard America Diet is the trigger for that which ails Americans and that the
cure can be found in adopting a whole-food, plant-based diet. There are other
reasons for leaving the Standard American Diet behind. As author Michael Pollan
noted in Microsoft founder Bill Gates’ blog post The Future of Food, “There are three principal motivators [for
adopting a whole-food, plant-based diet]: health, because we know high
consumption of red meat correlates with higher chances of certain cancers; and
the environment, because we know that conventional meat production is one of
the biggest drivers of climate change, as well as water and pollution; and
ethics, since the animal factories that produce most of our meat and milk are
brutal places where animals suffer needlessly.”
The Standard American Diet, also known
as SAD, is made up of refined and processed
foods, sugar and lots of meat and high-fat dairy. It is also severely lacking
in vegetables. The results of this lifestyle are not positive. According to the
Harvard Health Letter, in 2011 more
than thirty-two million Americans were taking statins for high cholesterol. In
2012, a report by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found that nearly half
of all Americans use some kind of prescription drug on a regular basis. The CDC
also reported in 2005 that 133 million Americas -- nearly one out of every two
adults -- had at least one chronic illness. Additionally, the percentage of
middle-aged Americans suffering from three or more ailments almost doubled in
the last fifteen years. Obesity is also on the rise among adults and children.
In 2011, The New York Times shared a
timeline of the evolution of the Standard American Diet showing that no state
in that same year had a prevalence of obesity less than twenty percent, and thirty-six
states had a prevalence of twenty-five percent or more. Additionally, one-third
of American adults were obese and seventeen percent of children and adolescents
ages two- through nineteen-years old were obese and twenty-six million adults
suffered from diabetes. In 2012, America was ranked number one in obesity worldwide.
The numbers are staggering yet growing even though more and more scientific and
clinical studies show that a diet rich in vegetables, whole grains, fruits and
legumes can prevent and even reverse most diseases.
In The China Study,
Dr. T. Colin Campbell, Professor Emeritus at Cornell University, detailed the
connection between nutrition and heart disease, diabetes and cancer. His work
is widely recognized as the most comprehensive nutritional study ever conducted
on the relationship between diet and the risk of developing disease. Campbell’s
study examined mortality rates from forty-eight forms of cancer and other
chronic diseases from 1973 to 1975 in sixty-five counties in China, and
correlated them with 1983 to 1984 dietary surveys and blood work from 6,500
people, one hundred from each county. His study concluded that counties with a
high consumption of animal-based foods were more likely to have had higher
death rates from “western” diseases, while the opposite was true for counties
that ate more plant foods. He, therefore, concludes that people who eat a
whole-food, plant-based diet -- avoiding all
animal products (including fish and dairy) and reducing their intake of
processed foods and refined carbohydrates
-- will prevent, reduce or reverse the development of chronic diseases.
In another study, Dr. Dean Ornish of the Preventative
Medicine Research Institute brought together forty-eight patients suffering
from severe heart disease. Twenty participants continued to indulge in the
Standard American Diet. Twenty-eight adopted a strict whole-food, plant-based
diet and incorporated mild exercise. The results showed that eighty-two percent
of those on the plant-based diet experienced a reduction in their arterial
blockage. Those on the Standard American Diet did not get better and in most
cases experienced a worsening of their arterial blockage.
In a separate study, Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn, former surgeon, researcher and clinician at the Cleveland
Clinic, began a twelve year cardiac disease
arrest and reversal trial in 1985. His program, described in his book Prevent
and Reverse Heart Disease, called for avoiding oils, meat, fish, fowl and dairy
products. His trial involved eighteen patients who in the eight years prior to
the trial had experienced forty-nine coronary events. After twelve years on his
program, these eighteen patients experienced only one coronary event, and that
particular patient went rogue for two years. When he came back and resumed the plant-based
diet he had no further cardiovascular disease occurrence. Like Ornish,
Esselstyn’s trial showed conclusively that heart disease can be prevented and
reversed though a whole-food, plant-based diet.
Detractors of a whole-food, plant-based diet like to cite a
lack of protein and the vitamin B12 as reasons for not eliminating or reducing
meat and dairy from their diets. There are plenty of whole-food, vegan athletes
who dispel the protein myth, like tennis stars Serena and Venus Williams,
ultramarathon runners Scott Jurek and Rich Roll, NFL running back Arian Foster and
triathlete Brendan Brazier. All of these athletes and many others choose
healthful plant-based protein sources like beans, almonds, lentils, hemp seeds,
spirulina, quinoa, spinach and broccoli and go on to enjoy greatness within
their disciplines. Insofar as B12, those who follow a plant-based diet can get
that vitamin source from fortified non-dairy milk products and a rotating
variety of plants.
Another significant piece of a
whole-food, plant-based lifestyle that continues to emerge is the impact that
it has on the country and the planet. The book Healthy Eating, Healthy
World: Unleashing the Power of Plant-Based Nutrition by J. Morris Hicks, crystallizes the
interrelation between healthcare and energy/environment and animal treatment.
Countless studies, some of which are
cited above, show how transitioning to a whole-food, plant-based diet can
prevent, treat and even reverse diseases. Healthcare costs continue to rise and
that is directly related to the deterioration of the overall health of
Americans. Making more healthful dietary choices would significantly lower
healthcare costs. Eating better results in healthier people, which results in
less medical intervention, saving America billions of dollars.
The practice of raising animals for
human consumption is very taxing on the environment. Raising livestock uses seventy-eight
percent of agricultural land and thirty percent of the land surface of the
planet. With the world population rising, there simply is not enough land to
support everyone if people continue to eat so much meat and dairy. In addition,
raising livestock produces more greenhouse gases than all transportation
combined. Climate Change must not be taken lightly or misused for
political gain. It will have a serious impact on the earth (lessening the area
of land for starters because of rising ocean levels).
It takes 5,200 gallons to raise one pound
of beef. Meanwhile, there are one billion people who lack safe drinking water.
This should be a cause for concern for everyone. The amount of water to raise a
ten pound steak requires the amount of water that a typical family uses each
year in their household.
Bringing the Standard American Diet to dinner
plates requires 1.2 gallons of oil per day. If Americans collectively cut meat
consumption by just twenty percent, it would have the energy impact of everyone
switching from a gas powered car to a Prius. Oil supply is not infinite. Peak
oil production has already happened in the United States. Peak worldwide oil
production will happen eventually. When the oil production peaks, the price of
oil will sky-rocket. There is not enough oil in the earth to sustain everyone.
Intervention on a global scale is necessary.
In addition to the health and
environmental gains that will be incurred by consuming fewer animals, there is
the grave issue of animal suffering and cruelty. It is ironic that people will rescue
stray dogs, save seals and deride Michael
Vicks for dog fighting while at the same time passively engaging in the
slaughter of countless animals each year. In fact, in a recent survey,
ninety-six percent of Americans said animals deserve legal protection,
seventy-six percent said they believe animal welfare is more important to them
than low meat process and sixty-five percent said they believe in strict laws
that govern animal treatment. Given those numbers, it’s baffling that ten
billion animals are slaughtered annually in the United States. Some would argue
it is the circle of life, but when people do not require animal flesh for
survival that is simply not true. It is nothing more than a selfish desire to
eat meat. As the Vegan Society stated, “Much has been made of the ethical
considerations of animals and at the end of the day it is potentially obvious
-- every hamburger, every pint of milk, every egg -- is the result of suffering
and the assertion and dominion by humankind over the animal kingdom.” Musician Paul
McCartney also contends that if slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone
would be vegetarian. It is easy to ignore how animal meat gets to dinner plates
when the slaughter takes place behind closed doors. It is the old adage, “out
of sight, out of mind.” The film Earthlings
should be required viewing for everyone who eats animal products. The movie
graphically depicts the needless and brutal suffering of animals by humankind
for food, clothing and entertainment.
Change is hard, especially when it comes
to diet. But if taking steps towards a whole-food, plant-based diet brings with
it profound effects on physical health, the country, the earth and animals, it
is worth it.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Tofu Steaks
I think this is the longest I've gone without sharing a blog post! Today I'm back (finally!) with a new recipe I hope you all enjoy.
I've had my eye on The Engine 2 Diet's Tofu Steaks for a while. For those of you unfamiliar with E2, it's written by Rip Esselstyn. Rip is a former triathlete and firefighter, and the son of Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn (think Forks Over Knives). While Rip grew up eating the Standard American Diet, he switched to a whole food, plant-based lifestyle in 1987, inspired by his father's research and the change in diet his parents made as a result of it. His best-selling book The Engine 2 Diet lays out a plant-strong 28-day plan that will transform your body and optimize your health. The book is a must-have for anyone interested in making "heroic strides in health, weight and well-being."
Tonight I made his Tofu Steaks and Mushrooms with Mashed Potatoes and Asparagus It's slightly different from the E2 book, in part because I LOVE garlic. This recipe calls for none; I minced six cloves. It was the right decision. : ) It also suggests using green beans instead of asparagus, but I prefer the latter.
What I love most about the dish (aside from the taste, which is out of this world) is how easy it all came together. I love preparing fantastically delicious meals that get me in and out of the kitchen in record time.
Without further ado, here's the recipe ... inspired by E2 and just in time for Meatless Monday!
16 oz. extra-firm tofu
16 oz. sliced mushrooms
6 cloves of garlic (minced)
Cracked pepper
Bragg's Liquid Aminos or Low-Sodium Soy Sauce
5 ounces of baby spinach
15 red baby potatoes
1/2 cup non-dairy milk
1 tablespoon rosemary
bunch asparagus, cut small
Drain, press well and then cut the tofu in six slices. Place the tofu, mushrooms and asparagus into a bowl.
In a separate bowl, mix about 1/2 cup Bragg's or soy sauce, cracked pepper and minced garlic.
Pour the marinade over tofu and vegetables. Swirl around carefully so that everything is covered. If necessary, add more Bragg's or soy sauce.
Heat a sauté pan. Add the marinated tofu, mushrooms and asparagus. Cook on medium heat for 15 minutes, turning the tofu once to ensure even browning. (The last 5 minutes, I covered the pan.) Place the cooked steaks and vegetables over the spinach.
For Mashed Potatoes:
Wash and then slice the potatoes in half. Steam until fork tender (about 15-20 minutes). Place in a Vitamix or high-speed blender. Add non-dairy milk rosemary and cracked pepper. Blend until creamy.
I've had my eye on The Engine 2 Diet's Tofu Steaks for a while. For those of you unfamiliar with E2, it's written by Rip Esselstyn. Rip is a former triathlete and firefighter, and the son of Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn (think Forks Over Knives). While Rip grew up eating the Standard American Diet, he switched to a whole food, plant-based lifestyle in 1987, inspired by his father's research and the change in diet his parents made as a result of it. His best-selling book The Engine 2 Diet lays out a plant-strong 28-day plan that will transform your body and optimize your health. The book is a must-have for anyone interested in making "heroic strides in health, weight and well-being."
Rip Esselstyn ... does this man look 50 to you?
What I love most about the dish (aside from the taste, which is out of this world) is how easy it all came together. I love preparing fantastically delicious meals that get me in and out of the kitchen in record time.
Without further ado, here's the recipe ... inspired by E2 and just in time for Meatless Monday!
16 oz. extra-firm tofu
16 oz. sliced mushrooms
6 cloves of garlic (minced)
Cracked pepper
Bragg's Liquid Aminos or Low-Sodium Soy Sauce
5 ounces of baby spinach
15 red baby potatoes
1/2 cup non-dairy milk
1 tablespoon rosemary
bunch asparagus, cut small
Drain, press well and then cut the tofu in six slices. Place the tofu, mushrooms and asparagus into a bowl.
In a separate bowl, mix about 1/2 cup Bragg's or soy sauce, cracked pepper and minced garlic.
Pour the marinade over tofu and vegetables. Swirl around carefully so that everything is covered. If necessary, add more Bragg's or soy sauce.
Heat a sauté pan. Add the marinated tofu, mushrooms and asparagus. Cook on medium heat for 15 minutes, turning the tofu once to ensure even browning. (The last 5 minutes, I covered the pan.) Place the cooked steaks and vegetables over the spinach.
For Mashed Potatoes:
Wash and then slice the potatoes in half. Steam until fork tender (about 15-20 minutes). Place in a Vitamix or high-speed blender. Add non-dairy milk rosemary and cracked pepper. Blend until creamy.
Bon appétit!
Buy your copy of The Engine 2 Diet today!
Learn more about whole-food, plant-strong living. Like us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Making Our Dinners KALE'a licious!
Matt suggested we start to “KALE’ify” all our dinners. It’s no secret we both love the dark green leafy vegetable so it was a no-brainer to begin adding it to absolutely everything. And there was no better time than St. Paddy’s Day to start getting our green on (and in!)
The following recipes are perfect for Meatless Mondays and Whole Food
Wednesdays ... any night of the week, really. They are easy to make, fantastically healthful and plant-strong. Best of all, they are both kale'a licious and taste great!
Cuban Black Beans, Rice and Kale,
inspired by Three Guys from Miami
(Seriously, the best black beans and rice we’ve ever had.)
Ingredients
1 ½ cups black beans, dried
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 white onion, diced
2 green peppers, seeded and diced
6 cloves garlic, crushed and chopped
1 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 bay leaf
3 tablespoons white vinegar
2 tablespoons tomato paste
2 teaspoons salt
½ teaspoon pepper
4 ½ vegetable broth
3 cups black rice (or brown)
2 green peppers, seeded and diced
6 cloves garlic, crushed and chopped
1 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 bay leaf
3 tablespoons white vinegar
2 tablespoons tomato paste
2 teaspoons salt
½ teaspoon pepper
4 ½ vegetable broth
3 cups black rice (or brown)
Kale (about 5 cups or more), torn
into bite-sized pieces
Cover the dry beans
with about four cups water in a two-quart saucepan. Bring to a boil, and boil for
three minutes. Remove from the heat and let it stand, covered for one hour.
Drain
and rinse the beans. Add enough water to cover once again and bring to a boil;
reduce heat to low, cover and cook until tender, about 40 to 50 minutes. Drain.
Rinse
the rice with cold water until the water runs clear.
Use
a large covered stockpot, sauté the onion and green pepper in olive oil until
tender.
Add the garlic and sauté another minute or two. Add the tomato paste,
black beans, oregano, cumin, bay leaf and vinegar. Cook for about five minutes,
stirring gently.
Add
the vegetable broth and the rinsed rice. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low,
cover and cook for about 20-30 minutes, or until the rice is fully cooked.
Add
kale. Stir gently until wilted.
Remove
the bay leaf. Serve hot.
Chef Roberto Martin’s Black Bean Soup (<-- love his cookbook)
1 teaspoon canola oil
1 large white onion
2 garlic cloves
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 tablespoon of ground cumin
3 plum tomatoes, dices
3 15 ounce cans of black beans,
rinsed
5 cups vegetable broth
Bunch of kale, torn into bite-sized
pieces
Garnish
Avocado, diced
Pico De Gallo (recipe follows)
Heat a large stockpot over high
heat, add oil and wait until it shimmers. Add the onion and cook until
translucent. Add the garlic, oregano and cumin and cook 2 minutes more. Add the
tomatoes, beans and broth and simmer gently for 15-20 minutes.
While the soup simmers, make the
Pico De Gallo (recipe below).
Purée half the soup in a Vitamix or high
speed blender until smooth. Return the puréed mixture to the remaining soup in the pot and stir to combine. Add kale,
stir until wilted.
Ladle into bowls, garnish with
pico and diced avocado.
Pico De Gallo
1 bunch of cilantro, minced
½ red onion, diced small
8 firm plum tomatoes, centers
removed, diced medium
Juice of 1 lime
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 jalapeño pepper, seeded,
membrane removed, dice (optional)
Salt and pepper (optional)
Mix the first 6 ingredients in a
medium bowl. Season with salt and pepper, if you like.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Eff You Cancer
Do you like the headline? I got it
from Tracy Krulik’s blog, I Have Cancer. And I’ve Never Felt Better. I
knew I loved her the minute I read it. No matter how good I think I’m doing at
any point in my life, there are always people I'm fortunate to connect with
who inspire me to push harder, learn more and live better. Tracy is one of these
people. Her journey is an incredible testament to the healing power of food.
Tracy is a writer, speaker, cancer
survivor, Pilates instructor, recreational cyclist, animal lover, nutritarian
and author of the new book, I Have Cancer.And I’ve Never Felt Better. I’m so happy she was willing to guest blog for us
today and share her story. I know you’ll adore her as much as I do.
Without further ado, here’s Tracy.
Without further ado, here’s Tracy.
_______________________________________________________________________
Doc: “Tracy, the mass that was on your
pancreas two and a half years ago is still there.”
Me: “What mass?”
Doc: “It was on the CT scan back in
2004, but don’t worry. The mass is smaller now than it was back then, so I
don’t think it’s cancer.”
That was a startling conversation that
I had with my gastroenterologist in 2007. As it turns out, I did have cancer:
pancreatic neuroendocrine cancer, to be exact. But why did the mass shrink?
I have a theory: food.
In 2005 my husband and I became vegetarians.
We loved animals so much that we said goodbye to the beef and chicken in our
fridge and said hello to quinoa, kale and couscous instead.
I had been sick for nine years
before that doctor found the tumor growing on my pancreas. After a biopsy two
weeks later I found out that I did have cancer, and a few weeks after that I learned that the tumor had metastasized to my liver and chest. My doctor
explained to me that once a neuroendocrine tumor spreads outside the primary
organ, there is no known cure. (This is the same cancer that Steve Jobs had.)
That was when I realized I
could depend on no one but myself to keep me healthy. I would seek out the
finest services Western medicine could provide (read: get a top-notch surgeon
to remove the primary tumor from my pancreas), and then I would turn to
holistic practices to make my body as inhospitable as possible to cancer.
Guess what I learned? Animal-based
proteins can promote cancer growth.
I read the book The China Study and learned about children in the Philippines who developed liver tumors after exposure to the carcinogen Aflatoxin. Children from the wealthiest homes developed tumors, but poorer children -- whose families could not afford meats -- remained healthy.
I read the book The China Study and learned about children in the Philippines who developed liver tumors after exposure to the carcinogen Aflatoxin. Children from the wealthiest homes developed tumors, but poorer children -- whose families could not afford meats -- remained healthy.
After discovering this anomaly,
researcher T. Colin Campbell began
experimenting on rats to see if meat truly could have been the cause for the tumors.
He dosed two groups of rats with Aflatoxic but then fed one group the milk
protein casein and the other group only plant-based proteins.
The milk protein group developed
tumors; the plant-based protein group did not.
Next he tried this experiment: Group
A gets low amounts of Aflatoxin but high amount of milk protein; Group B gets
high amounts of Aflatoxin and only plant-based proteins.
The winner? The milk protein group
got liver tumors, and the plant-based protein group got none.
I could go on and on, but I think
you get the point.
I’ve since read a couple of other
books by a doctor named Joel Fuhrman.
Rather than focus on what not to put
into your body (i.e. I’m a vegan, so I don’t eat anything that once had a
momma.), Dr. Fuhrman focuses on what is good
to put into our body (nutrient dense foods such as kale and collard greens). He
promotes a nutritarian diet. That’s how I describe myself.
On top of the fact that I’m no
longer fueling my tumors with animal proteins, I’m flooding my body with powerful
phytochemicals and nutrients found in colorful vegetables, fruits, nuts and
whole grains. As one doctor at Johns Hopkins put it, my diet is helping to put
my body into balance so that my immune system can fight the disease on its own.
My approach appears to be working
quite well. It’s been five and a half years since my cancer diagnosis and
almost that long since the brilliant surgeon removed the primary tumor from my
pancreas. The metastases on my liver and chest have not grown since we found
them in 2007, and I’m in the best health of my life.
So is my food the reason the primary
tumor shrunk and the metastases stopped growing? I can’t prove it, but I can
tell you one thing for sure. I’m doing what that doc at Hopkins told me to do
when he learned about my diet: I’m not changing a thing.
_______________________________________________________________________
You can continue following Tracy’s journey on Facebook and Twitter. You can also order her new book, I Have Cancer. And I’ve Never Felt Better, on Amazon.
You can continue following Tracy’s journey on Facebook and Twitter. You can also order her new book, I Have Cancer. And I’ve Never Felt Better, on Amazon.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Vegan Is Love
That’s the
name of the children’s book we recently bought for our kids. It arrived just
yesterday. The book illustrates “how our daily choices ripple out locally and
globally, conveying what children can do today to protect animals, the
environment and people across the world.” You can learn more about it here.
I have great
admiration for people who challenge the status quo or who go against popular
opinion not for personal gain but to better the world around them. It has
always struck me as selfless because oftentimes these “rebels” aren't around to
see the results of their efforts.
My oldest
and dearest friend has a beautiful 14-year old daughter who I believe embodies
these character strengths. Since she was a small child, Katie has had a natural
tendency to protect not just people but all living things. It’s part of who she
is. As soon as she was able to really assert herself, she refused to eat meat
because it came from the killing of animals. The fact that a 7-year old could
connect those dots was mind-blowing. These weren’t views taught to her by her
parents. Other than the occasional rodent brought into the house by the kids over
the years, my girlfriend and her husband have never owned a pet, nor are they
members of PETA. In fact, they both enjoy eating meat pretty routinely. So
where does that pure and honest love for animal wellbeing come from in this
little lady? I wish I knew so I could get some for myself. I find her choices
even more special and admirable when I recall how challenging it can be to be
different and to think differently in childhood, especially during those dreadful
teen years. She’s quite remarkable.
My driver in adopting a whole-food,
plant-based lifestyle has never been the selfless “compassion” angle. It has
always been about optimizing my health and trying to prevent diseases,
especially those that run in my family. Looking at the two primary reasons that
compel people to give up meat and animal products (dairy and eggs), I chose the
selfish one.
When I
watched Food Inc. in the summer of 2010 (prior to adopting a whole-food, plant-strong diet), I didn’t like the cruelty I saw
inflicted on factory farm animals but once the movie ended I didn’t think much
more about it. In fact the only action I took -- again motivated by the health
component -- was to begin buying 100% organic grass-fed beef, organic chicken,
etc. (Though, I do recall "patting myself on the back" that we were
at least eating animals slaughtered “humanely” and by someone with a heart. Talk
about a warped justification!)
I don’t know
what our children’s takeaways will be from the book once we read it together,
but when I read it by myself I was reminded of how our clothing, food and
entertainment choices impact other living things, as well as the negative
consequences those same choices have on the health of our planet. Absent of a
life or death need, I don’t believe there’s any valid reason to harm another
being. To do so simply to fill a want or desire or to carry out a hobby or
interest feels unjustifiably wrong. I say this now but if history has taught me
anything, I will require constant reminders. I’m no Katie. Who knows, maybe my
children will end up being my conscious, in which case I’d welcome it.
Learn more about whole-food, plant-strong living. Like us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Musings from a "Homeopathic Quack-Job"
When I first launched my blog, I wondered how I would feel when
the day came that someone responded to a post by attacking me personally. Guess
what? I needn't wonder any longer. That day has finally arrived, thanks to my recent post, Why I Can't Sell Girl Scout Cookies.
I share my posts with my town’s local online news site, which means
they are accessible by a much wider audience. Before leaving for dinner last night, I checked my personal e-mail, observed I had a comment from the
Forks-Palmer Patch and excitedly opened to read. I have to admit seeing it for the first time
was a bit jarring. A woman attacked me for a misleading headline, called me a “homeopathic
quack-job” who wants to “change the world” and then wished me luck on my “bran
and sawdust fundraiser.” (I’ll have you know that I’ve never once considered mixing
bran with sawdust. Every vegan knows that sawdust only goes with spelt!)
I X'd out of the e-mail and paused for a moment. I reflected back on what
would have gone through my head reading my post five years ago. I probably would
have thought the same things about me (though I would have chosen to express my point of view differently). When we’re not in the “zone,” every health enthusiast
seems nutty (think Richard Simmons). This helped me put her comment immediately
in perspective -- “It’s a grain of sand in the Sahara,” I thought.
I replied positively to her and even shared a recipe so she could get a
glimpse into how a “homeopathic quack-job” enjoys a real dessert.
Nothing could have prepared me, though, for the comments I woke up to this morning -- one accusing me of being “politically-motivated,” and another labeling me a "liberal" and suggesting I be muzzled. My “agenda,” as it was called, had even been linked to gay rights.
In Friday night’s Real Time with Bill Maher, Maher wondered why absolutely
everything in our country is politicized. I thought about that as I read the
new comments.
Good health should be non-partisan. We should all want to achieve it. When
our health is thriving, we are free from hospital stays, doctors’ appointments
and prescription medication. We have more money in the bank because we aren’t
paying for regular healthcare services. We have more time because we aren’t tied up fighting with insurance companies over denied claims. We have more “oomph” in
our step and can enjoy more activities with our friends, children,
grandchildren and other family members. As my mom always says, “When you have
great health, you have everything.”
While I would love for everyone to be “in the know” as it relates to
the mounting scientific and clinical research supporting a whole-food,
plant-strong lifestyle, outside of my immediate family it’s not my “agenda” to
make sure my neighbor keeps his cholesterol under 150. If after my reading one of my posts, my
neighbor is inspired to learn more about alternatives to the Standard American
Diet and ultimately make more healthful dietary choices, that would be fantastic
and I would support him in any way I could, if asked. But the choice is his. I’m certainly
not looking to purge his house of Girl Scout cookies or anything else he may
enjoy eating.
I try to remember that change can be hard and that many of us fear the
unknown. As a result, we sometimes react defensively when we feel our lifestyle
is being threatened or attacked. I want to make it clear that my intention has
never been to assail anyone’s choices. I welcome all points of view. I simply
want to educate and motivate by sharing our experiences and lesson learned with
those willing to listen and have meaningful conversation.
Before I close I want to add that while this post focuses on the negative
comments I’ve received, by and large the responses have been positive, with many
simply thanking me for the information I’ve shared or asking me for more help
and guidance. I love the correspondence and what I’m learning from everyone who
takes the time to write. Keep your comments coming!
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