The Rules For Being A Vegetarian
When you make a decision to get a vegetarian, it is a personal commitment and just a personal commitment. No one will ever give you a rule book, a set of principles to sign up to or a set of guidelines to follow. It is entirely up to you what you mean by being a ‘vegetarian’. There are no rules for being a vegetarian.
There are, however, different levels of vegetarianism but some vegetarians may well debate and even argue that their personal point of view is correct. The strictest kind of vegetarianism that you are likely to come across is the macrobiotic diet; then there are the vegans, who do not consume any animal products including fish, eggs and dairy products.
Then there is the majority of vegetarians who will consume fish, dairy and eggs but there are those who do not take fish, some who will drink milk and eat cheese but will not consume eggs and some who do. I even knew a vegetarian who allowed himself one bacon sandwich a month and turkey on Christmas Day (my father) and he thought of himself a vegetarian.
You could adopt a mild kind or vegetarianism at first yet then gradually stop fish but dairy products later as your craving for animal protein assuages. Or you could jump in at the deep end by going vegan and add fish back in if you find it as well difficult. You can do whatever your conscience allows you to do.
Let us suppose that you take the mild approach to vegetarianism for a year or two and then decide to quit dairy products yet eggs. You have now be a lacto-vegetarian. It depicts a sympathy for the animals in the dairy but egg industries. Numerous hens live in appalling battery conditions. In general, cows fare somewhat better, yet they still live an unnatural life.
Ovo-vegetarianism is the name give to the diet by which you can keep eating eggs after you have given up meat, fish and dairy products. Ovo-vegetarianism is convenient if you find it difficult to get enough protein into your diet, because you can have an egg for breakfast and be vegetarian for the rest of the day.
Veganism is just about as strict as most people would like to go. Strict vegans do not eat any animal products including honey. Most people find that this is going too far and that it puts unnecessary stress on the vegetarian doing it. After all, a vegan has to know what is in everything he or she eats: each dish, loaf of bread, cake, biscuit and even slushie, in case someone has used honey as a sweetener or animal fat instead or margarine.
Most vegetarians would recommend the slow but steady approach to becoming a vegetarian, because it can become difficult at first and you do not want to put yourself off before you have even given it a chance to benefit you. Keep in mind that lifestyle alterations are always difficult, so go easy on yourself and take your conversion into a vegetarian slowly.
Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a number of topics, and is now involved with low carb vegetarian recipes. If you would like to know more, please go to our site at http://vegetariancasserolerecipes.com
