T
thinman
Guest
My wife and I did a 30 day challenge then kept at it for 6 month 100%, after that we slowly transitioned back to eating anything we wanted.
My wife and I did a 30 day challenge then kept at it for 6 month 100%, after that we slowly transitioned back to eating anything we wanted.
Went back to dairy and also my regular healthy diet, no more fake factory food.
I'm very healthy, fit and at almost 68 on zero medication. I don't think total vegan or vegetarian is for me, I've given it a go over my life-span.
.People over 60 are not my target audience, frankly. I know some of you are super cool, but it's an age where people have either settled into their own habits or will literally not be alive when the worst of climate change comes. I know that Baby Boomers are single-handedly the most environmentally destructive and greedy generation that has literally lived on planet Earth. In that light, my mother is one of the good ones. Ah, to be blessed with a flexitarian mother. It's something of a blessing, all things considered. Especially since I'm from the South. The dirty South. My mother also makes Jewish recipes my deceased grandma used to make. It's not gonna change.
I guess you're one of the better older people. Some people of your generation are so shockingly narcissistic and disappointing that I'll accept your flexitarian crumbs.
I'll save my rage for Millennial "ex-vegans."
Or direct it towards ex vegan Gen-x'ersYou sound a lot like my mom who is in her 60s. She's afraid to give up fish. But she eats plant-based meals several times a week, has been off dairy milk longer than I have (since I was literally in my teens, due to lactose intolerance) and is at least not actually abusive towards myself and my other sister who have had plant-based/vegan diets. I think some people are just never going to change. I have completely given up on my mother, she is going to make dead animal bodies on holidays, and nothing will ever stop her. Even after several members of my family (not me) were once sickened by an undercooked holiday roast.
People over 60 are not my target audience, frankly. I know some of you are super cool, but it's an age where people have either settled into their own habits or will literally not be alive when the worst of climate change comes. I know that Baby Boomers are single-handedly the most environmentally destructive and greedy generation that has literally lived on planet Earth. In that light, my mother is one of the good ones. Ah, to be blessed with a flexitarian mother. It's something of a blessing, all things considered. Especially since I'm from the South. The dirty South. My mother also makes Jewish recipes my deceased grandma used to make. It's not gonna change.
I guess you're one of the better older people. Some people of your generation are so shockingly narcissistic and disappointing that I'll accept your flexitarian crumbs.
I'll save my rage for Millennial "ex-vegans."
.interesting...you are and were vegan for health reasons...nothing wrong about that...just mention it as obviously vegan is healthier than eating animal products...but...not a word said about the health or lives of animals concerns...interesting...so you do not care about saving lives except your own...which is interesting.
.
A vegan saves animals' lives, whether or not that is their principal reason for being vegan.
.
I'm not sure if this is what you meant but you can read that as the person's intent is not what makes a person vegan and I don't believe that is true. In fact, i think the person's intent is the most important characteristic of being vegan.
.
A vegan saves animals' lives, whether or not that is their principal reason for being vegan.
.
.if you read thinman post...he stated he is not going to be vegan...a flexitarian in fact ..
.Vegetarians save farm animals. Flexatairans save farm animals. Pescatarians save farm animals.
How are they different from vegans?