I became an almost-vegan about a year ago after reading The China Study. I gave giving up meat and dairy a try for 30 days, and I discovered to my surprise that I felt so much better all around that I needed to keep at it.
So I’ve been a not-so-strict vegan for the better part of a year now, eating a little fish and a bit of cheese every now and again, still trying to find my way. I’ve lost weight, I feel better, my cholesterol has dropped, and I’m enjoying myself.
The mini-rant is about salads.
Somehow the moment you say you’re not eating meat people thrust a salad at you. Not an eggplant or mushrooms or broccoli or pulses or grains or rice or pasta or rutabaga. A salad. A big pile of lettuce with some oil and vinegar on it.
Don’t get me wrong, I like salads, I eat plenty of them, I just don’t eat any more of them now than I did before I started this crazy food experiment.
I know it’s all very well-intentioned and done with love, but there’s gotta be more to this than salad. Please!
I’ve found that it takes TWO (not one) friends breathlessly recommending a book to get me to read it.
So six months ago, when a friend spent the better part of a week extolling The China Study(and telling me that humans weren’t meant to consume milk produced by non-humans), I filed it away under “someday.” And then in December when a colleague told me he was off of meat and dairy because of the book, I gave in.
The China Study is written by Dr. T. Colin Campbell and his son Thomas. Dr. Campbell is an emeritus professor of nutrition at Cornell, where he has taught since 1975 and where he holds an endowed chair. The book’s title is a reference to the China Study, one of the largest and longest (20 years) studies ever on the impact of nutrition on health. And this obscure book published by an obscure publisher has now sold more than 500,00 copies.
The book is plain-spoken, fact-based, and data-driven. It cites hundreds of peer reviewed articles and details the effects of diet on nearly every major disease. And it argues that consuming animal protein (from meat, fish, and diary) is killing us. Not just by causing heart disease, obesity and Type I diabetes, but cancer too. And by consuming a “whole foods, plant based diet,” one in which protein consumed from animal products (meat, poultry, fish and dairy) approaches 0% of calories consumed, we can dramatically decrease the risk of contracting all of these diseases.
A streetcart I saw today
The studies that bowled me over focus on cancer. Dr. Cambpell found that the risk of developing cancer in the presence of powerful carcinogens (specifically aflotoxin) can drop dramatically when people consume….a whole foods, plant-based diet. And after showing the effects of diet in stopping cancer he details eye-popping results in fighting diabetes, heart disease, obesity, even in people with high risks and existing conditions. All from changes in diet.
I had always assumed that since I generally eat “healthfully” and in moderation that I’m good to go. It never occurred to me that I could dramatically reduce my risk of disease by altering my diet. Sure, on some level i know that that I should be eating more fiber, more dark leafy greens, more vegetables, and less red meat and fat. But I figured that I’m generally doing OK since I don’t eat fast food or a lot of processed junk.
What really got my attention were Dr. Campbell’s studies that showed the risk of cancer and heart disease drop dramatically (really dramatically!) when people shift from getting 20% of their diet from animal protein to 0-5% (and 20% represents a moderate western diet – the US dietary guidelines say 30% is OK). The way Dr. Campbell writes, it makes me think that 50 years from now, the way we think about nutrition today will feel like the way people talked about smoking in the 1950s. His studies show that genetic predisposition and / or carcinogens are like seeds in a garden – they put you at risk, but if you don’t feed them with a high-protein diet (the equivalent of sun and water), cancers and heart disease don’t develop.
Now what?
I have to be honest and say that I don’t know, yet. I’m not ready to proclaim myself a vegetarian or a vegan today, but I’m taking Dr. Cambpell’s advice and giving it a 30 day trial. I know I won’t pull off strict rules (the tortilla I had yesterday at lunch apparently has some dairy), but I also know that skipping the turkey sandwich and the gyro for lunch on two consecutive days for a hummus sandwich and a falafel didn’t leave me any worse for the wear. And I’ve consumed two sweet potatoes this week.
This is a book you want to read, and then you can decide for yourself. If you like the book, I suspect that you might soon find yourself browsing great website like www.passionforpulses.com