As
a vegetarian, I have to walk a fine line.
Really,
I’m not judging you. But I often find it necessary to establish myself as “not
a threat” to meat eaters. I also occasionally bump up against militant vegans.
Consider
this collision I had the other day with a devout vegangelical. While at a
potluck among an omnivorous group that included a woman who raises and
slaughters chickens and turkeys for meat, I tried to politely excuse myself for
not partaking in most of the food.“I’m
vegetarian,” I said. “Well, mostly vegetarian.”
Then
I tried to crack a bad joke. “I’m vegetarian except for when I eat bacon.”
Big
mistake. Vegangelicals have no sense of humor.
The
truth is that an awful lot of thought goes into my diet, as it does for much of
my lifestyle. I care about the world around me and I care about my health. I
don’t want to buy products that were produced via human or animal suffering,
and I don’t want to consume or use anything that will harm my health or the
planet.
There
are, of course, limits to this way of life because nobody in modern society can
be absolutely perfect. I’m sure there are clothes in my closet that were made
in sweatshops. I can’t afford solar panels and I drive a car. While my Prius
gets good mileage, like most cars it requires occasional trips to the pump.
But
I try. Hard.
And
I try to be a mindful consumer in a way that is manageable and affordable, not
crazy-making. I make one change at a time and gradually adjust my lifestyle.
I
gave up meat in 2005, and even went vegan for a year. Then I became friends
with farmers and ranchers who raise animals for food on sustainable, organic
farms. Last summer, I even spent a week on a farm, caring for pigs, chickens,
cows, and lambs that were all heading for someone’s plate. It tempered my view
of eating animal products.
These
animals lived a good life. They grazed on grass, had plenty of room to roam
around, and they were cared for by humans who loved them.
To
a vegan, that’s still not good enough. To me, that’s pretty damn good. I ate
meat from that farm while I was there. Then I went back to abstaining after I
left.
But
complicated explanations can’t be communicated quickly. And emotions can run
high at mealtime. Meat eaters wonder if I think they are murderers while vegans
get ticked because I fall short of their standards.
Even
when meat isn’t the issue, something else can become a touchstone.
Why
won’t I eat processed food? Why do I prefer to eat organic? And, do my choices
imply that others around me are trashing the environment, torturing animals, or
poisoning themselves and their kids every time they sit down to enjoy a meal?
Here are my answers: no, no, and no.
I
usually diffuse tensions by laughing at myself, excusing my strange diet by
saying, “I’m weird.” Becoming a Californian helps. Everyone knows all
Californians are weird.
I
wish strident vegetarians and vegans would chill out too. This tension erects a
barrier to discussion, learning, and changing. Would you want to learn anything
from a vegetarian you think is judging you for eating a hamburger? And maybe a
vegan can learn something from a rancher who raises animals for meat.
Everyone
should become more open to honest conversations about our food without judging
one another or becoming defensive about being judged.
OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is
the author of Recipe for America:
Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It.
OtherWords.org