Are People Who Were Bullied More Likely To Become Vegans?

I wanted to share an article I found on my favorite vegan blog Girliegirlarmy today.

I just feel this article was really well written, and contains something I believe to be very true about vegans and vegetarians.

The author, who now owns a successful vegan candle company A Scent of Scandal, says because when he was younger he was bullied for being gay, he intuitively understood how animals in the meat (and leather and fur and dairy) industries must feel.

It makes me wonder whether people who were bullied or who are misunderstood have more empathy for animals.

I just feel there is so much truth to that.

I think being bullied or picked on gives you so much more empathy for suffering in people, but especially in animals.

I was picked on in junior high too, and I always felt my dogs could really understand me. Maybe it goes along with that. Animals are the ones who would never judge or bully anyone. It’s so sad that we would want to hurt and abuse such sensitive loving creatures. Like Ari says, anyone with a dog or a cat can see that.

I’m only vegetarian at this point, so I also sympathise with people who aren’t vegan or vegetarian. It’s hard to change your eating habits totally, but anyway.

Here is the article, and check out the great blog from whence it came. It has so much up to date vegan news and resources.

By Ari Solomon:

I’m gay. I’m also vegan. To most people, these two things would seem to have nothing to do with one another. To me, the connection is as clear as day.

Growing up, I was bullied in middle school because of who I was. I didn’t know exactly why I was different, but it seems everyone else did. I can still remember the fear and the sadness I felt walking down the hallway to assembly every Friday, being tormented by the dickheads in the class above me. I never told a soul — not my parents, not my teachers, no one. I was too ashamed. And consequently, no one ever came to my defense, because I never gave them a chance.

Flash forward twenty years: I’m out of the closet, married, and living with my husband in Hollywood. I’m involved in gay rights and feel passionately about equality for everyone. Well, humans to be exact. Then one day, I’m sitting on my couch watching The View. Alicia Silverstone is on. She says that she’s vegan. A conversation ensues that piques my interest: Alicia says she’s vegan because she loves her dogs. I love dogs… cats too. So, I go to my computer after the show, and Google “Alicia Silverstone” and “veganism”. What I find changes my life.

That day, for nearly two hours, I sat at my computer and poured over undercover footage from inside factory farms. How could it be that in 30 years, no one had told me that this is how animals we eat become our food? I saw the terrified looks on the animals’ faces, the cruel beatings and torment they endured. I heard the desensitized farm-workers screaming in their faces. And inside, I felt hollow because I knew what this felt like. I knew it from growing up. I knew what it’s like to be bullied.

I went vegan that day because I couldn’t stand knowing that I was paying other people to do to those animals what had been done, on a much smaller scale, to me. How could I say that I believed everyone deserved to be equal and have a chance to be happy when I was eating the remains of lives that had been wrought with misery and mercilessness.

To me, the parallel was simple and plain: oppression is oppression. We can rationalize all we want about how animals and humans are different, but at the heart of the quandary are certain undeniable truths: that animals really do suffer; that they have rich emotional and physical lives not so different from our own. If you’ve lived with a dog or cat, you already know this.

So it saddens me to see so many social progressives — gays included — who scoff at the idea of animal rights and veganism. In the fall of 2008, my husband and I volunteered feverishly for the NO on 8 campaign here in California. During a phone bank shift, one of the higher-ups, a gay man, approached me. He wanted to know why I wore an animal rights t-shirt every time I showed up to volunteer. “We get it,” he said. “You’re vegan.” “You don’t get it at all,” I replied. “Because if you did, you’d be vegan yourself.”

Here’s the article.

 

My thoughts about Vegetarianism

Sometimes it’s hard to remember why veganism, vegetarianism, and refusing to buy leather and fur is important. Having a blog about fashion, even vegan fashion, can seem so frivolous and shallow.

Sometimes I feel like vegetarianism is a choice I made so long ago that I don’t even know why I do it anymore. When I was younger I read a lot of books about animal rights and the descriptions of the conditions on factory farms, etc… made me very sure I was doing a good thing by not eating meat. I also had seen footage of factory farms, fur farms, lab animals, etc.

Once you see that stuff, you don’t relish seeing it again… Ironically, I think, I purposefully avoided learning anymore about animal rights.

Yet I realize, if you stop looking at the images, then there is the possibility you could forget why you are a vegetarian in the first place.

Today I watched this 45 minute documentary film called The Witness: A Tribe of Heart Documentary

which you can watch online for free hereIt was about this unlikely animal rights activist, Eddie Lama, who has such a likable watchable inspiring personality, who is doing so many inspiring things to educate people about fur farms.  I was so engrossed in the movie that when the graphic footage of the conditions at fur farms came on I was still watching.

Wow. Horrible and sad. Why does this go on? It really makes you feel that there is evil in the world. Seeing foxes that look just like my old dogs die by anal electrocution is something I will never forget.

The movie is so important, and the guy it profiles has such a soft heart that you know he is showing you this footage because it’s the truth and important. The movie 100% reaffirmed my views that not buying leather, never ever buying fur, and being a vegetarian and even vegan (which I am not right now) is the right thing to do.

I was so inspired by how this guy did whatever he could to spread the word. He owned a construction company and he posted images of what goes on in fur farms on his trucks. He also wired up a truck with tvs that showed footage of animals being trapped and killed on fur farms and drove it around new york, handing out pamphlets, to educate the public about what actually happens. He said something like “remember all fur is necessarily from tortured and abused animals”…

It made me realize that this blog is not totally frivolous, but in a small small way doing something good in the world. Vegan fashion is at it’s heart about trying to do something to make people aware of the horrible things that happen to animals all over the world, and how by refusing to buy any products made with fur or leather, you are taking a stand against these extremely cruel industries.

I found this documentary through a really great vegan blog, girlygirlarmy, written by someone who is truly passionate about veganism. It’s really good.

I’d love to hear from any commenters. What are your thoughts? Have you seen The Witness? How strongly do you feel about your veganism or vegetarianism? Do you ever wish you could do more to make people understand the cruelty of the leather and fur industries? I’d love to know.