Vegans: They survive on more than just air, sunshine
Erika Bonnell
Issue date: 2/4/10 Section: Life
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Despite having a vegetarian best friend and an eccentric vegan roommate during my first year of college, I held on tightly to my carnivorous ways. My two favorite herbivores never questioned me or made me feel bad for eating meat, and I didn't question their diets either.
Although I was always willing to try what they ate and even liked tofu, I swore I could never make the change. Like so many people, I gave the standard excuse … I couldn't give up eating meat because I liked it too much.
After one fateful night of conversation with a vegan friend, I began seeing my choice to consume animal products in a different light.
Afterward, I researched the slaughter industry, watched videos I had refused to watch before and re-evaluated how important meat was to my diet. It took two days for me to have a change of heart and mind.
I stopped eating meat ... along with dairy and eggs ... and became a vegan.
Since this change, I've met many people unsure of what veganism is and what vegans eat.
As defined by the nonprofit organization, Vegan Action, a vegan is someone who chooses not to consume any animal products. Unlike vegetarians, who only eliminate flesh products, vegans also remove all dairy and egg products from their diets.
Vegans have a wide variety of foods to choose from. We can eat fruits and vegetables, tofu, breads and pastas that don't contain egg, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
Junk foods are not necessarily off limits either. Bags of french fries regularly take up freezer space, and chips, salsa, cereals and Oreos fill the cupboards. Instead of milk, we drink soy milk.
Cooking often turns into an experiment, even with recipes, but in the end the things we eat are quite similar to anyone else's diet, just with a lot of substitutions.
People aren't aware of how many products are made strictly for vegans. Look in any organic section of a grocery store and you will not only find tofu but vegan veggie burgers, fake cheese, Tofutti cream cheese and even vegan ice cream. Veganism is in no way a sacrifice of tastes. It is different, but in the end the things we eat are guilt-free, made without any type of animal suffering.
The reason veganism rejects animal bi-products is the most misunderstood part of the diet. Vegans reject bi-products because the cows and chickens of the dairy and egg industries are subjected to horrible living conditions on mass factory farms. Vegans choose to remove themselves from consuming anything that is a product of unethical practices, including this sector of the industry.


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