I'm a lacto-vegetarian for 20 years now (started in '91-92) and even before that I didn't eat meat as a normal people because we didn't have what meat to eat
. I'm leaving in a country who has been in communism all of my childhood and teen years and, with no exaggeration, I saw some meat only at the Sunday dinner table. And when meat products invaded the stores I started with vegetarianism.
I have many friends, acquaintances, who are vegetarians for the same period of time or even more, I was part of a very large spiritual movement where all are vegetarians.
Just only recently I tried eating meat for 1 year, fish and chicken only, I think in 2009.
Then renounce again and return to vegetarianism
Now, it's just a habit, I'm not sure if its any real benefit or not, I just hope the benefits are greater then the downsides.
What I observed and what I can say about vegetarianism through my experience and which is true only for me and some of my friends is:
1. is possible that being vegetarian to have a better health, I'm not sure, I cannot know that, I didn't had any health issues that solved renouncing to meat, was a decision taken in a spiritual context. Is possible vegetarians to have a healthier life in the long run but it's hard to scientifically/precisely determine that as the changes (determined by this diet) occur over big periods of times and this is difficult to quantize.
Plus, recent (last years) news from my fellow colleagues from the spiritual movement I've been with for almost 15 years do not support 100% the theory that vegetarians are free of diseases. I've heard about 8-9 peoples I knew (not personally, but I saw them at least several times when participating at different activities) died of cancer, yes cancer. They were all vegetarians for at least 15 years, some more, with ages between 35 to 55. When I heard about them I was thinking: WTF? How would be to be a vegetarian for half of his/her life and die of cancer? Is this vegetarianism good for health or what?
2. for me, without any doubt, eating without meat means less daily energy. I think this is one of the main reasons normal people find hard to renounce to meat (the other being the taste of the food).
When eating without meat you finish the meal and do not feel full, there is a constant hungry sensation somewhere in the background that accompanies you all the time. I got used to it but I can still feel it.
I ate a full/normal meal as the breakfast from high school, not just a slight snack most people do. When I go to work I eat a full meal in the morning and after 3h at the job I'm feeling a hungry again.
These all disappeared when I started eating meat again, it was a 1 year experiment. I ate less in quantity, I felt full and no hungry sensation for 4-5 hours till the next meal, AWESOME
Without meat I just fill my stomach but there isn't a true sensation that I indeed just eat something.
This of course depends on the organism/metabolism and age of the individual. For some of my friends this is all true, for others maybe not, others maybe do not have the attention exercised to notice it.
Yes, I know, elephants are big an strong, rhinos and other big herbivores the same BUT they eat ALL day long. Carnivores stays with their belly in the sun most of the time.
Regarding this I remember a part of a history lesson where the teacher said that early humanoids made a big progress in their evolution when they were able to hunt. Because now that can get the required food easily and in large quantities and were no longer forced to spend all day searching for food/eating, so more time remained for other activities for their own development.
3. It's hard for me keep my body weight under control as a vegetarian. As a vegetarian you eat mostly hydrocarbons and the protein sources have other undesired 'components': cheese has fats, soya has estrogen precursors (even so it's not satiable at all), beans... how often can you eat beans?, eggs have cholesterol.
In the 1 year of eating meat I managed to get my weight under control easily, with no effort (took down like 16 kg) and since then I'm struggling not to put them back.
As vegetarian you'll need to eat more to have the same level as energy as a meat eating guy, but if you eat more (mostly hydrocarbons) you'll get fat.
3. I've never been sensitive to cold temperatures, but in the last 10 years or so I've begun to. I'm the guy who wear a jacket when everyone else wear T shirts. And this is true also for some of my friends. Before I used to like winter now I cannot stand it because it's cold. Of course during the 1 year of meat I got big improvements in tolerating cold, go figure.
But again this can depend on the organism.
I know people who eat meat and are:
- thin or fat
- healthy or died of cancer (or other terminal illnesses)
- full of energy or more lazy then me
I know people who are vegetarians for at least 15 years (starting at early age like 18-20) and are:
- thin or fat
- healthy or died of cancer (or other terminal illnesses)
- full of energy or more lazy then me
So, if someone will ask me if they should eat meat or not I truly cannot advise them either way, because I don't know.