I am currently a Vegan and have been for a few months now. I used to be a Vegetarian and was one for five years. I am currently flirting with the idea of going raw.
I went Vegetarian (at 16) <snip>
Well, after nearly a decade of being one form of vegetarian or another, it caught up with me:
Around April/May of this past year, I felt like
complete and
total shit. When the feelings persisted for longer than a week, I made an appointment to see the doctor--Which of course was another week away. Saw the doctor, explained the extreme feelings of lethargy, no appetite, etc. She ordered numerous blood tests to be run... Came back fine. Ran some more blood tests... Came back Vit. D deficient and nearing B12 deficiency... Started supplementing both (pills and shots respectively)...
Early-/Mid-July, I still wasn't feeling any better. Primary care physician suggested psychotherapy as I was undergoing a lot of stress and perhaps that was the "real problem" or at least the "root of the problem." Made a few phone calls and couldn't find a psychotherapist who would take cash (I have health insurance but really can't use it for anything other than physical ailments. Long story.).
Got to thinking that maybe, just
maybe there was something missing in my diet. Evaluated it, reevaluated it. Could not find anything missing. Not to sound smug, but I had a pretty good/complete ovo-vegetarian diet. Then the one day at work it hit me, that maybe I should add a source of protein that was of "high biological availability." I contemplated it, then decided to give having a serving (4oz) of chicken each day for a few days a chance, see if it made any difference... Lo and behold, I started to feel better...
Could've been psychosomatic or coincidental. Who knows. All I know is that now, overall, I feel absolutely amazing compared to how I have in a
long time. My sex drive is incredible (before, more than once or twice a week was
unheard of), my mood is far more stable, and I just
feel better.
Perhaps long-term (5+ year) vegetarian/vegan diets work for some. I am not against that way of eating. It just wasn't ideal for my body, apparently.
It was an interesting journey to say the least. I do not regret it. And, I have no plans on converting to the so-called SAD ("Standard American Diet"). I will still choose my foods ethically as I did as a vegetarian. Because, after all, how are things going to get better for the animals if those who care quit buying their products and don't who don't care are the only ones who do buy the products? Those who don't care won't buy the double-price chicken breast because it was "raised humanely." Those who do care can put their purchasing dollar to the "raised humanely" meat and in a way tell that farmer, "Hey, I care about where my food comes from!" /gets off soapbox