Why Switch to
Vegetarianism
If you’ve eaten meat and animal
products your whole life, you might think, why switch to a
vegetarian diet? You’ve lived your whole life eating eggs,
hamburgers, hot dogs, poultry, so why switch now?
There
could be many reasons to switch. Start by looking in the mirror. Are you at a
healthy weight? Do you look and feel good most of the time? Do
you wake up energized? Or do you wake up tired and sluggish?
How is your general health? Is your
blood pressure within a healthy range? Are your cholesterol and
blood sugar ranges normal? If they’re not, consider what you’re
eating on a daily basis.
How do you feel after eating? Do you
feel energized, as if you’ve fed your body what it needs? Or are
you tired and dragged out? Do you often need a nap after eating?
Is that what food is supposed to do for us, make us tired and
sleepy? Not really.
Food should nourish and feed the body and leave us energized and
refreshed. The human body is a
machine and needs fuel that keeps it running in peak condition. When we’re fat, with high blood
pressure, Type II diabetes, high cholesterol and other unhealthy
conditions, it’s like a car engine that hasn’t been tuned or
isn’t running on the optimal type
of gasoline it needs to run efficiently.
Your body is the same way. It needs the
right kind of fuel to run at peak efficiency, and when you’re eating high-fat meat, or meat
that’s been fed antibiotics throughout its life, that’s simply
not the kind of fuel the human body evolved to run on.
Try eating vegetarian for a week or a
month. See if you don’t feel different, more mentally acute and
more physically fit and energized. At least reverse the portion sizes you’ve been eating, and make
meat more of a side dish, if you can’t stop eating meat
altogether. Even that change can make a big difference in your
overall health and well-being.