Go vegan and save the planet? What’s your excuse?
Our TV here in Australia has just had advertisements urging everyone to go vegetarian. That may not sound so strange but we, like the US, are a meat producing nation. It’s deeply ingrained in the Australian culture and identity with meat on the ‘barbie‘ and advertisements urging people to eat red meat daily. I’ve even recently heard a butcher’s advertisement using a media personality claiming that it’s un-Australian to not eat meat. Of course we could eat kangaroos instead of culling them… at least they aren’t farmed and graze on bushland not kept in fields. Indigenous Australians have been cooking kangaroo and sustainable bush tucker for millenia.
Who knows why… maybe it’s part of being a descendant of two generations of first cousins on one side, alcoholics on the other, but I have a strange body on a cellular and metabolic level and one which would make it hard to be a vegan even vegetarian.
I’m gluten intolerant (unable to digest many grains leading to significant bowel disorder and it’s developmental consequences). I’m allergic to casein (milk protein). I’m salicylate intolerant (high in most fruits, in honey, in almonds and some nuts, in some vegetables and most herbs) and have blood sugar problems meaning I have to have a low sugar diet and complex (not simple carbs). To top it all off, I’ve had Epstein Barr Virus (related to CFS) and the cold sore virus (many kids get in childhood)… both herpes viruses which are kept in check by low levels of Arginine (high in nuts) and supplementary Lysine. Raise the Arginine too high through nut intake, and this dormant virus has a party including ugly old brain odema (brain swelling) because I have a tetchy inflammatory state that has had up to 5 times the level of inflammatory cytokines that most people have (means if I get the flu the aches most people would get are myalgic, grinding leg ‘migraines’ so painful they’ve had wish I was dead until they pass. They don’t respond to pain killers and they make it hard to think or do anything until they go.
I spent 35 years with two primary immune deficiencies before recovery from them, and have a mild functional B12 deficiency (wheat, milk, eggs and meat are the main dietary sources of B12). Given that the livestock industry contributes to over 60% of greenhouse emissions and far more than all forms of transport combined, I know there’s no such thing as a meat eating environmentalist, so what can someone like me do? By design I’m poisoned by the wonderful salicylates in plant foods, and my immune system, gut function and brain function would be impaired without the B12 that I can only get from meat and eggs because I’m gluten intolerant and allergic to casein).
So recently we have wonderful advertising informing society of the terrifying forecasts if we don’t ALL reduce greenhouse emissions and that one of the biggest ways we can do that is to go vegetarian. Hmm. OK, so I’ve got to keep a diet low in nuts and seeds, got to have B12 which I can’t get from wheat or other glutinous grains and can’t have from milk products, go to avoid the fruits and veg high in salicylates and can’t take honey. Hmm. Do I need to face that some of us, for whatever metabolic chaos that may be, just aren’t designed to survive as vegetarians?
Nevertheless, I’m at least snubbing the beef industry and limiting meats and fish to every second day, not every day. If only meat eaters did THIS much, we could help change so much. Yes, Mc Donalds, Burger King and the like would have to alter their perceived wicked ways, but wow, all the rights would could unwrong. Sometimes we hypocrits have to think of starting somewhere. We may not be able to go the whole way, but maybe we can go further than we self-indulgently do.
As for those of you without my physiological challenges, what’s your excuse?
Donna Williams *)
author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter
UPDATE:
Since this article a few weeks ago, I’ve reduced all red meat intake to around once a week (lamb, not beef, I’m not doing beef at all if I can avoid it). I have no health concerns to report, which surprised me re the functional B12 issue but seems my B12 1000mcg supplements are doing their job (usual B12 intake is 10mcg but SOME people with functional B12 problem can flood the cut with 100 times this level and end up metabolising that 10mcg of it and thereby avoid injections).
But I’ve been eating plenty of pulses (lentils, beans… and no, not farty π and we’ve been using wonderful GF grains like Amaranth and Quinoa is stir fries and bakes and buckwheat pasta with low salicylate GF/CF vegie pesto.
We are about 3/4 vegetarian now, if there’s such a thing, or just less carnivorous. We’re having fish or chicken every 3 days or so and the rest is meat free. The part I’m liking best is the low salicylate roast veggies and lots more beetroot (really good to get the bowel moving and don’t be surprised if you have the gene that means you pee red because you can’t metabolise the pigment of the beetroot). I don’t look or feel ill, quite the opposite, I’m healthy, have lots of energy and my bowel is happier than it’s ever been at a rate of one healthy bowel movement a day… wow!
Hi Donna, I’m an Aspie and I’m vegan even though I can’t eat gluten or sugar. But I guess it wouldn’t be easy going veg with being salicylate intolerant.
Btw wheat doesn’t contain any B12. What keeps you from taking a B12 supplement?
I do take B12 1000mcg to avoid needing B12 shots. Most people only need 10mcg of B12 to maintain normal levels. I have to flood the gut with it to get that 10mcg from the 1000mcg because I can’t metabolise it like those without functional B12 deficiency. Wheat is high in all the B vits, hence those who go GF have to consider how they are going to get their B vits.
I don’t think whether you eat meat or not makes a difference. It’s driving everywhere in single-occupant cars that’s the problem.
Hi, I am a vegan Aspie also. I had a B12 deficiency when I was vegetarian and had injections every few
months but I have not had to have any since I became vegan, which is the opposite of what the doctor said should happen. I also avoid gluten because i can feel it slowing down my brain and making me feel anxious and foggy, though no detectable intolerance or allergy could be found. I’m lucky though, that my ‘major’ intolerances are caffeine and alcohol which are fairly easy to avoid.
I think it’s great that you manage to cut down on environmentally damaging foods despite your dietary limitations.
Some people would be satisfied with an excuse and not give it a second thought.
Lauren
P.S. I recently read your book about exposure anxiety and it helped me with a lot of things, so thank you.
Before, I would not have been able to post this comment.
yes, people without Exposure Anxiety have no idea how disabling it can be on so many levels.
Half the battle is certainly knowing the IT is not the YOU.
I’m glad the book has helped make the space between the bars wider.
of all my autism related challenges in my ‘fruit salad’, EA was certainly the biggest contributor
and the battle to put it back into a smaller space has been real work.
if you ever want to have an e-interview and chat through the EA book so it can help others
you’re most welcome to email me. It can be anon.
Donna *)
I’m sure that contributes, but the stats are that the meat industry accounts for over 60% and all transport combined to only 40%, so contributing to the meat industry is really something each of us should consider our role in.
I would love to go vegetarian. My issue is that I haven’t money of my own, and no one else has any interest in this. So I’m kinda at the mercy of my family. Nonetheless, there are a lot of good vegetarian foods out there, so I wouldn’t mind doing that. You just have to shop around. Boca makes good veggie burgers.:) Silk makes great yogurt and milk from soy.
And I agree that while producing meat can contribute to unsustainable living and global warming, there are a lot of other factors to consider. So even if we all just cut out red meat, walked or used public transportation, etc., that would help so much.
P.S. I am not a big fan of eating meat anyway, especially red meat. I just am not crazy about the taste/texture. So I can make the sacrifice.:)
I low in iron and don’t metabolise it well from plants so I am a regular meat eater, but not necessarily a daily meat eater.
I don’t see anything wrong with cutting down meat eating to a sustainable level.
Do I need to face that some of us, for whatever metabolic chaos that may be, just arenΓ’β¬β’t designed to survive as vegetarians?
Maybe it’s finally something you, me, and Temple Grandin can all agree on. π
I don’t have as restricted a diet as yours, but I still can’t handle vegetarian or vegan. I’ve tried both. The moment I started eating meat, I started feeling better.
I don’t like a lot of meat. I’m an incredibly picky eater when it comes to meat, I gag on many kinds of it if they’re not made to my own idosyncratic specifications.
I’ve also had a chronic illness that fluctuates in severity (whatever it is seems to run in my family). It involves, at its worst, muscles that just plain give out. It seems (and I know how dangerous it is to trust ‘seems’ in something that fluctuates to begin with) to respond really well to meat, and to some meat-based supplements. If it does work, it doesn’t make me get over it, it just makes it less severe. But given what the most severe form of it is like, I’ll take any less severe I can get.
I used to know a woman who became non-verbal if she didn’t eat enough red meat.
And Temple Grandin can’t function without meat either. (She tried vegetarianism too.)
I always hear from vegetarians that I didn’t do vegetarianism ‘right’ or I would have been fine. But I did do it right, I toko all the supplements and everything. I just can’t seem to stay healthy (or as healthy as I get) without meat, and I think the conflict there is a matter of reality (the reality of my life) conflicting with ideology (the belief that eating no meat is healthy for everyone, and/or the only ethical way to be).
We’re 3/4 vegitarian now, with red meat (lamb) once a week, chicken or fish once every 3 days. I’m doing really well with it, yay!
If someone had a severe functional B12 deficiency and went off meat, they might experience enough cognitive difficulty and anxiety to become non-verbal, yeah. And those with iron deficiency (one problem I haven’t had – yay!) would also have to be careful they got enough iron off meat.
π
Donna,
Eli has been off the cow products (He has soy products) for the past 5 years. Also B12 injections were given for 3 years. He now takes B12 supplements. I did notice the improvement in the areas of defiance, bowel problems, attention span and all around general health. His speech is still 1-3 word sentences. He has his own language though and I can understand him. Since he lives with his autistic roommate (5 yrs. now) my hopes were he would progress on speech as his roommate never is quiet. Thanks for the info on gluten, I will try to delete that from his diet as a 30 day experiment. Is that enough time for results? He is severely limited on sugar and eats very tiny amounts of red meat. Problem, he does not chew his food, we cut it up into small bites. He growls at us if we speak to him while he eats. He shovels the food into his mouth very fast. His teeth are in great shape. He appears not to like food in his mouth but he likes to eat. What’s up with that?
I’d be worried about daily soy as soy reduces gut IgA (gut immunity) so essentially would reduce digestion at that level. The other pulses don’t do this, so they’d be a better plan.
chewing is essential to production of IgA in saliva which is the gut’s first message of which foods are on the way with which enzyme production is triggered to fully digest those foods… no chewing = very poorly digested foods and that can mean progressive functional malnutrition, high toxicity, oxidative stress, a systemic inflammatory state and associated imbalanced brain chemistry when undigested proteins cross and inflamed blood brain barrier and and a degree of brain starvation with reduced digestion meaning poorer nutrition reaching the brain… all in all bad news, chewing is essential…
the docs taught me that in my 20s, they were appalled that I would barely chew food, swallowed most whole or drank it or at mushy things… I felt everything was getting stuck in my throat… I have poor movement down there… it’s not constricted, it’s a muscle feedback thing… I have a degree of hypotonia and I just get hiccups easy or food just sits there back logging… so I used to regurgitate things like bread, meat, anything that required chewing.
But that doesn’t change that LEARNING to chew is essential. A good low salicylate toxin free chewing gum is a good start. There’s one here called Sweet Life Dental Gum which isn’t as scary as most gum.
Donna,
Problem, he does not chew gum. I have given it to him and he immedetly swallows it. He is lactose intolerant, therefore the soy stuff. I have asked him to chew the food, and he ignores me. What you did in your 20’s with food and drink, he has done for the past 15 years. When he awoken from the catatonia, 8 full months, this is when the eating/chewing problem began. Before catatonia, he chewed the food and did not growl when spoken to during eating. I will try the non-gluten approach. Thanks once again for the info, you are great.
I’d start with the one-two-three approach
so it’s clearly defined all food is subject to the one two three chews
then he knows the minimum expected
and work out what his rewards are for that
so he comes to feel he gets something for this ‘sacrifice’.
π
Thanks once again. The problem, he does not care about objects..his reward is food, that he has to chew.