Meet My Meat Dilemma

What are your feelings about eating meat?

I have always had mixed feelings about eating meat. I grew up with it and it has always been part of my culture, so enjoying meat feels completely normal and familiar to me, also I do think it can be part of a healthy balanced diet. However, I care a lot about how animals are treated and I hate knowing the environmental impact that large-scale farming has on our ecosystems and planet. So I often find myself caught between the comfort of the way I was raised and the guilt of knowing the bigger picture, especially around animal welfare and the planet.

16 thoughts on “Meet My Meat Dilemma

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  1. I do not actively avoid meat, per se. However, growing up around everyone enjoying that over the side dishes, I didn’t get why meat was everyone’s favorite.

    Take Thanksgiving for example. I would be perfectly content making a meal comprised completely of side dishes (of course, I would still put gravy on my mashed potatoes and stuffing.

    And, even under normal everyday circumstances, I would often opt for a breakfast of hot cereal with a scoop of peanut butter for protein.

    Likewise, a bean and cheese burrito for lunch with spicy carrots is one of my favorites.

    Vegetarians tell me they can still have fish, dairy and eggs.

    This exclusion and land animals and birds is something that I probably could get used to.

    That would still allow scrambled eggs for breakfast. Tuna fish sandwich for lunch. And Vegetarian chili topped with shredded cheese for dinner.

    That wouldn’t be so bad.

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  2. It’s a tough balance. I grew up spending a lot of my time on a family farm, so meat was always on the plate. But now I limit my intake and go for more healthy and humane choices as best I can.

    We do at least one meatless day every week, which has been a fun way to try new recipes and feel like we’re making a small difference.

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  3. I am a flexitarian; for the most part I’m vegetarian but I eat meat occasionally – about once or twice a month. I tried being a full vegetarian but developed a serious iron deficiency that became hard to manage so I had to adjust my diet.

    I think that vegetarianism/flexitarianism is better for the planet and certainly for our overall health. Most of us eat far too much meat and the factory farming we have developed as a result of that demand is terrible for our environment. Even if we go meatless only once a week our planet would benefit enormously and our health, too!

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