Vegetarianism ?'s

Vegetarianism
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This article refers to human nutrition and diet. For plant based diets in the animal kingdom see, herbivore

Vegetarianism is the practice of a diet that excludes all animal flesh, including poultry, game, fish, shellfish or crustacea, and slaughter by-products[1] [2]. The reasons for choosing vegetarianism may be related to morality, religion, culture, ethics, aesthetics, environment, society, economy, politics, taste, or health.

There are several variants of the diet, some of which also exclude eggs and/or some products produced from animal labor such as dairy products and honey. Veganism, for example, excludes all animal products from diet. By some strict definitions, animal products are not used for attire either, whether or not the production of clothing or items has directly involved the actual death of an animal (dairy, eggs, honey, wool, silk, down feathers, etc.) [3] A generic term for both vegetarianism and veganism, as well as for similar diets, is "Plant-based diets".[4]

Properly planned vegetarian diets have been found to satisfy the nutritional needs for all stages of life, and large-scale studies have shown vegetarianism to significantly lower risks of cancer, ischemic heart disease, and other diseases.[5][6][7][8]

1. What are the different types of vegetarians?

There are several different variations of the vegetarian diet. Strict vegetarians, called vegans, eat no animal products at all. The staples of their diets are fruits, vegetables, legumes (beans and peas), grains, seeds, and nuts. Lacto-vegetarians eat dairy products in addition to plant foods. Lacto-ovo vegetarians include dairy products and eggs as well as plant foods in their diets.

People who eat animal flesh (meat, fish, chicken) are not considered to be vegetarians. However, as the health benefits of a vegetarian diet become more widely known, many people reduce or eliminate animal products. For example, they may eat fish and chicken but no red meat, or they may eat meat in small portions only a few times a week. These people can most accurately be described as following a semi-vegetarian diet.

Omnivore-Your diet includes multiple animal sources
Pollotarian-You are almost vegetarian; but you consume chicken, fish; never beef.
Pescetarian-You are almost vegetarian; but you consume fish.
Vegetarian-You consume no meat, fish, nor fowl, but you consume eggs or dairy.
Vegan-You are vegetarian, and you consume no dairy nor eggs.
Raw Foodist-Most of the foods you eat are uncooked.
Macrobiotic-You avoid foods that are strongly yin or yang.

2. What are the health benefits of a vegetarian diet?

Vegetarian diets are lower in saturated fats, cholesterol, and animal protein. They're also high in folate, anti-oxidant vitamins like C and E, carotenoids, and phytochemicals. Overall, vegetarians have substantially reduced risks for obesity, heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, and some forms of cancer - particularly lung cancer and colon cancer. Vegetarian diets that are low in saturated fats have been successfully used to reverse severe coronary artery disease. (1)

3. Is it possible to get enough protein on a vegetarian diet?

Absolutely, it's actually difficult to become protein deficient unless you quit eating all together. Just about all unrefined foods contain significant amounts of protein. Potatoes are 11% protein, oranges 8%, beans 26%, and tofu 34%. In fact, people have been known to grow at astounding rates (doubling their body size in only six months) on a diet of only 5% protein. These people are infants and they do it during the first 6 months of life, fueled by breast milk, which contains just 5% protein. (2)

4. How much protein do I need, anyway?

The Recommended Dietary Allowance (R.D.A.) for protein is 0.8 grams a day per kilogram of bodyweight. (Divide your weight in pounds by 2.2 to get kilograms.) Athletes may require more protein, but the amount is small (1.0 to 1.5 grams per kilogram of bodyweight), an amount easily obtainable from a vegetarian diet.

Excess protein consumption can cause a variety of problems including bone mineral loss, kidney damage, and dehydration. Your body can only use so much protein, the excess is either broken down through oxidization, placing an enormous strain on the kidneys, or it is stored as body fat. Neither option is particularly desirable. (3)

5. What's the difference between complete and incomplete proteins?

Animal protein contains all nine of the essential amino acids, so it has been referred to as a "complete" protein. The nine essential amino acids can also be found in plant proteins, however no single plant source contains all nine of them. Therefore, plant protein has been referred to as "incomplete."

It was once widely believed that vegetarians had to carefully combine plant protein sources in each meal in order to obtain all nine essential amino acids. However, scientific studies have shown that the human body can store essential amino acids and combine them as necessary. So, while combining beans and rice, or peanut butter and bread produces a complete protein, it's not necessary to consciously do this at every meal. If you eat a varied diet and adequate calories, combining proteins is not an issue. (2)

6. Why do people become vegetarians?

There are a variety of reasons. Many people switch to a vegetarian diet for weight loss and improved health. Some are concerned about the safety of meat following recent outbreaks of salmonella and e. coli bacteria. Others feel that it is moral or spiritual issue. Some individuals deplore the suffering of animals in modern factory farms. Still others are concerned about the environment and world hunger. A few just don't like meat. For many vegetarians it is a combination of issues.

7. How does vegetarianism impact the environment?

Throughout the world, forests are being destroyed to support the meat-eating habits of the "developed" nations. Between 1960 and 1985, nearly 40 percent of all Central American rain forests were destroyed to create pasture for beef cattle. More than four million acres of cropland are lost to erosion in the United States every year. Of this staggering topsoil loss, 85 percent is directly associated with livestock raising, i.e., over-grazing. Much of the excrement from "food" animals (which amounts to 20 times as much fecal matter as human waste) flows unfiltered into our lakes and streams. (4)

8. What does vegetarianism have to do with world hunger?

Raising animals for food is an extremely inefficient way to feed a growing human population. The U.S. livestock population consumes enough grain and soybeans to feed more than five times the entire U.S. population. One acre of pasture produces an average of 165 pounds of beef; the same acre can produce 20,000 pounds of potatoes. If Americans reduced their meat consumption by only 10 percent, it would free 12 million tons of grain annually for human consumption. That alone would be enough to adequately feed each of the 60 million people who starve to death each year. (4)

9. What do vegetarians eat? Don't they miss their favorite foods?

Vegetarians have a variety of great food choices. Many of them are just slight variations on old favorites. Some popular dishes include: pasta with tomato sauce, bean burritos, tacos, tostadas, pizza, baked potatoes, vegetable soups, whole grain bread and muffins, sandwiches, macaroni, stir-fry, all types of salad, veggie burgers with french fries, beans and rice, bagels, breakfast cereals, pancakes, and waffles just to name a few. The freezer sections of most big grocery stores carry an assortment of vegetarian convenience foods such as veggie bacon, burgers, and breakfast sausages.

10. Are vegetarian diets always healthy?

Not always, if a vegetarian replaces the meat with high fat cheeses and oil, they're not helping matters much. It's also important to remember that there's no meat in ice cream, potato chips, and fudge brownies. It's certainly possible to be a vegetarian and still consume large quantities of high-fat empty calories. Vegetarian or not, a healthy diet is low in cholesterol and saturated fat and is based around fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and lean protein. Eliminating the meat doesn't automatically make for a healthy diet.

11. Is it hard to eat in a restaurant when you're a vegetarian?

It's actually surprisingly easy. You can always get beans, rice, and tortillas at a Mexican restaurant. Chinese restaurants offer all kinds of vegetable, rice, and tofu dishes. Italian restaurants are known for spaghetti, ravioli, vegetable lasagna, and minestrone soup. Even a steak restaurant is guaranteed to have big salads, baked potatoes and bread.

Fast food chains are surprisingly accommodating as well. Sandwich shops offer an assortment of vegetables and cheeses on a bun with mustard, mayo or whatever you prefer. Burger places are willing to leave the meat off of your sandwich. Many fast food places now offer salads, baked potatoes, or meatless pita sandwiches. The big pizza delivery companies have all kinds of delicious vegetable toppings. They'll even leave the cheese off if you ask.

12. Is a vegetarian diet safe for children and teenagers?

According to the American Dietetic Association, vegetarian diets satisfy the needs of infants, children, and adolescents and promote normal growth. Emphasis should be placed on foods rich in calcium, iron, and zinc. They also stress that growing children need frequent meals and snacks, and that it's okay for children to have some refined foods and foods that are higher in fat in order to meet their energy demands.

13. Aren't vegetarians frail and weak?

No, that one is a myth. Former champion bodybuilder, Bill Pearl is a vegetarian. So is the legendary 6'8, 320 pound wrestler, Killer Kowalski; fitness guru, Jack LaLanne; Olympic gold medalist, Edwin Moses; and 6-time Ironman Triathlon winner, Dave Scott, just to name a few. Burly vegetarians from the animal kingdom include bulls, elephants, rhinos, and gorillas. Try telling one of those guys that you can't get big and strong eating your leaves and twigs!

14. How do you make the transition to a vegetarian diet?

That depends on the individual. Some people just decide to do it and never look back. Others make gradual changes to their diets. They may start by having one or two meatless meals a day just to try it out. Some people set aside one or two days a week to go veggie, or even one day a week to eat meat. Some people start by eliminating red meat and work from there. Others just cut back on the amount of meat in their diet, using it as a condiment instead of the main course.

15. What if you live with a family of meat-eaters?

This isn't as tricky as it sounds. It's possible for vegetarians and meat-eaters to coexist peacefully at the same dinner table. Many dishes are a combination of vegetables, grains, and meat. The idea is to serve the various elements separately or to add the meat last.

Some suggestions include: a pizza that's half meat / half veggie, Mexican food like tacos or fajitas that everyone assembles themselves, pasta dishes like spaghetti and meatballs with the meat added after the vegetarian has been served, or cookouts where the meat-eaters grill hot dogs and hamburgers and the vegetarian grills veggie dogs and veggie burgers. Don't forget about meatless favorites like bread, beans, potatoes, pasta, rice, casseroles, and desserts that everyone can enjoy.

16. What do vegetarians do about travel, and social functions?

Major airlines have vegetarian meals available but you need to request it when you make your reservation. At catered events like weddings and parties, you may want to mention your dietary preferences to the host. Caterers can provide a vegetarian meal for you if they know about it ahead of time. For an important business lunch in an unfamiliar restaurant, a quick phone call to inquire about the menu options can help to put you at ease. If you're invited to dinner in someone's home, let the host know that you're a vegetarian. You can also offer to contribute a dish to a dinner party or family gathering. That way you're assured of having something good to eat.

In all of these cases, you can choose as much or as little advance preparation as you want. If you'd just as soon hang yourself with a dinner napkin than try to make special arrangements, it's perfectly acceptable to go with the flow and make the best of what's offered. I haven't encountered a dining situation yet that didn't include some variation of vegetables and bread.

17. Do vegetarians need special vitamins and supplements?

In most cases they don't. A well-rounded vegetarian diet that includes a variety of foods usually meets all nutritional requirements. One possible exception would be vitamin B-12 which is found only in animal products. Vegetarians who limit dairy products may also want to pay special attention to getting enough calcium. Good calcium sources for vegetarians include: tofu, beans, dried figs, collard greens, blackstrap molasses, and calcium fortified orange juice or soy milk.

18. Who are some famous vegetarians?

Leonardo Da Vinci, Charles Darwin, Socrates, Plato, Sir Isaac Newton, Thomas Edison, Clive Barker, David Duchovny, Drew Barrymore, Candice Bergen, Kim Basinger, Paul McCartney, Chelsea Clinton, Woody Harrelson, Steve Vai, Eddie Vedder, Lisa Simpson, Hank Aaron, Alec Baldwin, Bryan Adams, Peter Gabriel, Mary Tyler Moore, Leonard Nimoy, Alicia Silverstone, Liv Tyler, Jerry Seinfeld, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mark Twain, Henry David Thoreau. (5)

19. What do the experts say?

The American Dietetic Association says that appropriately planned vegetarian diets are healthful, are nutritionally adequate, and provide health benefits in the prevention and treatment of certain diseases. (1)

"Nothing can be more beneficial to human health while increasing the chances of survival of life on Earth, than the change to a vegetarian diet. " ~Albert Einstein~

"The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated."
~ Mahatma Gandhi ~

On Vegetarianism

The basis of morality, the recognition that we all are an intrisic part of Nature and that nothing is truly isolated from the rest of our cosmic ensemble is the fundemental beginning to the correct comprehension of many things in this great life.

If there is a domain in which this law of Unity is particularly important, it is that of nutrition. Even if we often consider that a meat diet is absolutely normal, there exists certain cultures and places on earth where it is unthinkable to not be a vegetarian. In India for exemple, above 70% of their population is vegetarian, and it's people have always been known for the great peace of it's inhabitants.

When we go to the supermarket, we only see packets of well-envelopped meat. Because of this, we sometimes forget its origin. When we follow a meat diet, we do not eat "meat" ( a word which has become a concept of it's own ) but really ..... animals ! The round of steak that we introduce within our systems is not simply a "steak", but really, a bull that as suffered greatly before finding itself in our plates. We cannot eat a steak as we would a cookie, the two are not "products" to the same degree at all.

A man who has greatly traveled once told me this story:

" When I was in India, I lived in many families who were all very generous. I followed a course of zither ( a typical Hindu music instrument ) absolutely freely from a very wise man there. Being accustomed to the vegetarian diet which is an absolutely common diet in these regions, I once had a random urge for chicken. I asked my host, who in this occasion was my zither teacher, if it was possible to find some in the region. He answered me that he knew of a place very closeby where chickens were raised for their eggs and that only very rarely, they were actually eaten. He accompanied me to that place, and, once there, gave me a machete simply saying to me:

"If you wish to eat this food, you must know what you are doing!"

He told me this without judging me, to make me think. Surprised, I fully realized what it meant, really meant to eat meat, and renounced it immediatly."

This is a story that made me think alot. If we knew the conditions in which meat comes to our plate, it would simply become unbearable for us to eat. It is impossible to understand why these creatures must endure so much needless violence. Everyday on earth, millions of animals are killed, when studies tell us very clearly : our body can very well live without this food, and it is even often much healthier in doing so.

How can we think that this attitude does not have negatives repercussions on people and on the harmony of the planet ?

References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetarianism

http://www.liveyourquest.com/1-E_vegetarisme.html

Reasons to become a vegetarian.
http://www.dietobio.com/dossiers/en/vegetarism/index.html

Its 4:21, time to eat!

Vegetarian Recipes:
http://allrecipes.com/recipes/everyday-cooking/Quick-and-Easy/Quick-and-...

Vegan Recipes:
http://www.google.com/search?q=Vegan+Recip...tf8&oe=utf8

Read more: http://www.myspace.com/kindglen/blog#ixzz0uLOLUL7m


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Great post! Well,that's how

Great post! Well,that's how life should go so that we'll have a healthy body.This is how our diet should be.Do you know Mark Williams?Many people said that he is indeed a vegetarian.But wait,are you familiar with Tea Party and the issue connected with it? Recent news headlines everywhere have been discussing the Tea Party's racism. A member of a group being racist doesn't mean the group is, and the Tea Party has said they don't tolerate racism. They have stated that they will not put up with racism and followed through kicking out Mark Williams from the movement. He is the leading voice behind any racist comments and the founder of a branch of the Tea Party called the Tea Party Express. I hope Mark Williams has to take out personal loans to live now after such derogatory comments, and I am glad to see the Tea Party follow through with their stance on racism.

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