It would seem to me that there are certain choices in our daily lives that go easily hand in hand. Want to be healthier? Eat healthier (as Michael Pollan says, “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.”), be more active, make conscious choices, find your balance. Want to lessen your impact on the planet? See above.
So, how is it that there are so many times at which being environmentally conscious is directly at odds with being vegan?
First, a little background. I have been vegetarian for almost ten years now. Growing up on a farm, I gained an appreciation for the sentient beings that share our planet, the food that nourishes our bodies, and the beautiful earth that supports our population. As I got older, I started transitioning to a more plant-based diet for health reasons. Along the way, my reasons for not eating meat evolved to include the (personal) moral implications as well as the health reasons.
Over the past six months or so, a transition to veganism just happened. Along with the other changes in my life, it just made sense to start cutting out other animal products. I’m not completely there yet, but I’m on my way. Healthier me; healthier, happier planet.
However, I wish it were that simple. Here’s where I have run into the dichotomy of my choices. Many environmentally sustainable options involve animal products, leather being a prime example. Want vegan shoes? Most of your options involve petroleum products. Using oil to produce substitutes for leather? Sad planet. *insert sad trombone here*
That being said, veganism has become more of a mainstream lifestyle choice, and our options are increasing. There are more people who have come to the realization that their eating habits are just as important as any other habits when it comes to the environment. Do I have all the answers? No – definitely not. Am I making the most conscious choices I can as I navigate this life, and am I hopeful that this will become less of an issue with the passage of time? Yes – definitely.
I would love to hear about any choices that you have in your life that on the outside appear to be straightforward, but are more difficult upon closer inspection!
There is a software developer in town who has become somewhat of a mentor to me over the past year and a half. He encouraged me to step outside my then-current worldview, and was one of the first to encourage me to start my own business. I had been hiding behind finishing school as a start date for doing anything, but he pushed me to believe that I didn’t have to wait for some magical event; he even brought me onto a team project as a designer – my first real client work. As work ebbed and flowed, we went our own ways, and it had been a while since the last time we had spoken. This past spring we ran into a small error on the site we had worked on together, and it gave us a chance to catch up. I was getting him up to speed on everything that had been going on in my life, and he said the following:
My divorce paperwork was filed this past Friday.
Unsurprisingly, as I have aged and grown, the definition of what is (my) “normal” has changed. If you are like me and are constantly pushing your boundaries, constantly moving and evolving, this happens. It’s when this process gets unexpectedly accelerated that it becomes tricky to find balance.
On Saturday, August 20, 2011, I was arrested.
I was the 6th woman to be arrested, the 6th in a line of sixty five brave individuals who were arrested on the first day, the 6th in a line of 1252 other courageous souls to be arrested over the course of the action. We were put into handcuffs, bodily walked across the square to a processing tent where they took our IDs and some of our belongings, and then transferred to other officers who walked us to the paddy wagon. We sat in the sweltering van, locked four to a cell, until there were sixteen of us – we asked the officers if they would allow us to squish in and wait for the last of the women, but to no avail. During the time that we sat, we started talking. Introductions were made, personal stories of who we were and why we were there were shared.