Vegan lifestyle articles that discuss ways of living in peace with humans, animals, and the environment.
"I am deeply grateful that I discovered that the only reason I was eating animal foods for all the years that I did was because I was just following orders. Fortunately, I realized that those orders were not in my best interest, or in the interest of our world, and so I’m not doing it anymore, and it’s fantastic.”
[Satyagraha: pressure for social and political reform through friendly passive resistance practiced by M. K. Gandhi and his followers in India]
It seems that at a certain point, every vegan yearns to discover the
magic button that they can push that will light up the consciousness of
their non-vegan friends and family members, and transform them into vegans.
For vegans, it seems completely anti-rational, self-destructive and
untenable that their acquaintances—upon hearing of the devastating effects
of animal agriculture on innocent animals, as well as on ecosystems,
wildlife, hungry people, and human health—nevertheless continue to take out
their wallets and vote for animal-sourced foods and consume them and feed
them to their unsuspecting children. “I see it, why don’t they?” “I care,
why don’t they?” “I changed, why can’t I get them to see, to care, to
change?”
As vegans, we desperately yearn to find the magic phrase, or image, or set
of ideas, memes, gestures, and vocal intonations that would be able to
reliably pierce the armor of indoctrination and soften the hearts and open
the eyes and minds of the people with whom we share our world. We eventually
realize that the search for this magic button is like the search for the
fabled fountain of youth or the mythical wish-fulfilling jewel. The fountain
of youth and the wish-fulfilling jewel are actually within ourselves, and to
transform the world we are called to transform ourselves.
We understand gradually that we are all wounded by being born and raised in
a herding culture organized at its core around enslaving, mutilating,
raping, and killing billions of animals every day, and eating them and using
them as mere objects for products and other uses. As infants, we are all
born into this, and it wounds us on every level. Not only is our physical
health harmed, and our society and our Earth, but at a deeper level, we are
harmed psychologically and also spiritually and morally. This ethical harm
is perhaps the most serious wound. Relentlessly stealing the purposes as
well as the physical and mental integrity of billions of animals, we
collectively lose our purposes and our integrity, and co-create systems of
human exploitation, waste, and injustice that are destroying the web of life
and our basic cultural sanity. We begin to realize that the violence and
conflict we experience as humans is both a direct and secondary result of
the abuse that we perpetrate on animals. The animals and our violence toward
them are made invisible by our herding culture’s established traditions,
language, institutions, and assumptions. We are collectively wounded by our
indoctrination, and blinded to the devastating consequences of our daily
actions.
As vegans, we are healing these physical, psychological, and moral wounds
both in ourselves and in our world. Our task is to nurture and deepen this
healing in ourselves, and also to become increasingly adept as healers to
other people who have been similarly wounded and are still trapped in the
cages of conformism into which they were forced from infancy. As vegans, we
are healers and light-bearers.
To the degree that we are authentically healing our inner wounds and
opening to the light of inner truth, we are able to help others heal and to
awaken from the dark trance of violence that is the essence of our culture,
which is animal agriculture in all its forms. Liberating animals is the
direct path to human liberation, peace, and justice.
The light that heals and liberates is the light of truth. The truth that all
of us, vegans or not, know in our bones is that animals suffer as we do. We
also understand that our lives and our welfare are interconnected, and that
all life is interdependent.
The ancient Sanskrit word for truth is satya, and graha means insistence or
force. Satyagraha, or truth-force, was a central tenet of Gandhi’s approach
to social change. Satyagraha can be seen as the magic button that we can
discover within and that we can all use to help transform our world. When we
speak our truth with respect and kindness, we are fulfilling our mission as
light-bearers and healers, and as world-transformers. The hardest part is to
uncover this inner truth and to articulate it clearly and without judgment
or trying to manipulate others to change.
Sometimes people ask me what the most effective formulation of this
underlying truth might be. For example, if we’re in an elevator and only
have a half-minute or so, what words could we say to convey the essence of
healing truth to another person? What seeds of truth could we sow in their
mind and heart? The good news is that even though it’s counterproductive and
wrong-headed to try to change others, and reliably prompts them to resist,
defend, and fight back, we can nevertheless plant seeds of positive change
in others through our words, actions, creative expressions, and example. By
deeply and fully embodying vegan values of kindness and respect, our words,
gestures, and actions become congruent, and we can plant seeds of truth with
effectiveness. Congruence is the key, and with it, satyagraha, truth-force,
works through us.
So, in a nutshell, these are the words that we can speak and embody:
“I am deeply grateful that I discovered that the only reason I was eating
animal foods for all the years that I did was because I was just following
orders. Fortunately, I realized that those orders were not in my best
interest, or in the interest of our world, and so I’m not doing it anymore,
and it’s fantastic.”
That’s it. When we express this truth, in our own words of course as
befits the occasion, on an elevator or anywhere else, we are conveying a
simple and basic set of transformative ideas, which is our truth. Usually
it’s best not to say a lot more, and to let go and let the seed we have
planted germinate and grow organically.
Done with respect and without any underlying motivation to manipulate
others, we plant a depth-charge, as it were, a potent seed of light, truth,
and healing in the consciousness of the person. It will sprout and grow and
help them to heal as well, because that is what truth-power does. Basically,
our experience is all the same growing up in this herding culture, and our
personal truth is also a universal truth.
The only reason any of us eats animal foods is because we’re just following
orders, and we all know this deep down and also understand that it’s not in
our best interest. When any of us articulates and embodies this fundamental,
world-transforming truth, and then follows up with how fantastic it is to be
free of this indoctrination, we are essentially opening the door to the
invisible cage that keeps human beings imprisoned in destructive,
anti-rational behavior. At our core, none of us wants to be a mere automaton
blindly following toxic and destructive orders. We can point out that we
have discovered this for ourselves and how liberating it is, and this is
non-threatening to others and beckons them out of the prison into which
they’ve been born.
If we do it well, the person will forget us and the conversation, and yet
the seed we planted in a seemingly casual way is alive deep inside them,
growing every day, and propelling them to awakening and freedom. It is their
own wisdom and compassion that are actually growing, and when they go vegan,
it will not be because they are being shamed into it or pushed, but because
their own inner caring and basic intelligence is liberated and activated. An
inspired, creative, empowered vegan is born.
So even though there is no outer magic button, we do have within us the
capacity to be an instrument of satyagraha, and to speak our truth, which is
a universal truth, planting seeds that will positively transform our world:
“I am deeply grateful that I discovered that the only reason I was eating
animal foods for all the years that I did was because I was just following
orders. Fortunately, I realized that those orders were not in my best
interest, or in the interest of our world, and so I’m not doing it anymore,
and it’s fantastic.”
This embodied truth is an unstoppable force for awakening humanity, and each
of us can strive to ever more fully discover and express it, and to live and
celebrate it, for the benefit of all.
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