Vegetarian food is easy to digest Consider making this healthy choice as
one of your new year's resolutions. .. Stacks of studies
confirm that a diet full of fresh fruits and vegetables and
grains is your best bet for living a longer, healthier and
more enjoyable life. There are literally hundreds of great
reasons to switch to a plant-based diet; here are 22 of the
best:
1 You'll live a lot
longer. Vegetarians live about seven years longer, and
vegans (who eat no animal products) about 15 years longer than
meat eaters, according to a study from Loma Linda University.
These findings are backed up by the China Health Project (the
largest population study on diet and health to date), which
found that Chinese people who eat the least amount of fat and
animal products have the lowest risks of cancer, heart attack
and other chronic degenerative diseases.
2 You'll
save your heart. Cardiovascular disease is still
the number one killer in the United States, and the
standard American diet (SAD) that's laden with saturated fat
and cholesterol from meat and dairy is largely to blame. Plus,
produce contains no saturated fat or cholesterol.
Incidentally, cholesterol levels for vegetarians are 14
percent lower than meat eaters.
3 You can put more
money in your mutual fund. Replacing meat, chicken and
fish with vegetables and fruits is estimated to cut food
bills.
4 You'll reduce your risk of
cancer. Studies done at the German Cancer Research
Center in Heidelberg suggest that this is because vegetarians'
immune systems are more effective in killing off tumour cells
than meat eaters'. Studies have also found a plantbased diet
helps protect against prostate, colon and skin
cancers.
5 You'll add color to your
plate. Meat, chicken and fish tend to come in boring
shades of brown and beige, but fruits and vegetables come in
all colours of the rainbow. Diseasefighting phytochemicals are
responsible for giving produce their rich, varied hues. So
cooking by colour is a good way to ensure you re eating a
variety of naturally occurring substances that boost immunity
and prevent a range of illnesses.
6 You'll fit into
your old jeans. On average, vegetarians are slimmer
than meat eaters, and when we diet, we keep the weight off up
to seven years longer. That's because diets that are higher in
vegetable proteins are much lower in fat and calories than the
SAD. Vegetarians are also less likely to fall victim to
weight-related disorders like heart disease, stroke and
diabetes.
7 You'll give your body a spring
cleaning. Giving up meat helps purge the body of toxins
(pesticides, environmental pollutants, preservatives) that
overload our systems and cause illness. When people begin
formal detoxification programs, their first step is to replace
meats and dairy products with fruits and vegetables and
juices.
8 You'll make a strong political
statement. It's a wonderful thing to be able to finish
a delicious meal, knowing that no beings have suffered to make
it..
9 Your meals will taste
delicious. Vegetables are endlessly interesting to cook
and a joy to eat. It's an ever-changing parade of flavours and
colors and textures and tastes.
10 You'll help
reduce waste and air pollution. Livestock farms creates
phenomenal amounts of waste. The tons of manure, a substance
that's rated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a
top pollutants. And that's not even counting the methane gas
released by goats, pigs and poultry (which contributes to the
greenhouse effect); the ammonia gases from urine; poison gases
that emanate from manure lagoons; toxic chemicals from
pesticides; and exhaust from farm equipment used to raise feed
for animals.
11 Your bones will last
longer. The average bone loss for a vegetarian woman at
age 65 is 18 percent; for non-vegetarian women, it's double
that. Researchers attribute this to the consumption of excess
protein. Excess protein interferes with the absorption and
retention of calcium and actually prompts the body to excrete
calcium, laying the ground for the brittle bone disease
osteoporosis. Animal proteins, including milk, make the blood
acidic, and to balance that condition, the body pulls calcium
from bones. So rather than rely on milk for calcium,
vegetarians turn to dark green leafy vegetables, such as
broccoli and legumes, which, calorie for calorie, are superior
sources.
12 You'll help reduce famine. It
takes 15 pounds of feed to get one pound of meat. But if the
grain were given directly to people, there'd be enough food to
feed the entire planet. In addition, using land for animal
agriculture is inefficient in terms of maximizing food
production. According to the journal Soil and Water, one acre
of land could produce 50,000 pounds of tomatoes, 40,000 pounds
of potatoes, 30,000 pounds of carrots or just 250 pounds of
beef.
13 You'll avoid toxic chemicals. The
EPA estimates that nearly 95 per cent of pesticide residue in
our diet comes from meat, fish and dairy products. Fish, in
particular, contain carcinogens (PCBs, DDT) and heavy metals
(mercury, arsenic; lead, cadmium) that cannot be removed
through cooking or freezing. Meat and dairy products are also
laced with steroids and hormones.
14 You'll protect
yourself from foodborne illnesses. According to
the
Center for Science in the Public Interest in the US,
which has
stringent food standards, 25 per cent of all chicken
sold in
the United States carries salmonella bacteria and, the
CDC
estimates, 70 percent to 90 percent of chickens
contain the
bacteria campy-lobacter (some strains of which are
antibiotic-resistan t), approximately 5 percent of cows carry
the lethal strain of E. coli O157:H7 (which causes
virulent
diseases and death), and 30 percent of pigs
slaughtered each
year for food are infected with toxoplasmosis (caused
by
parasites).
15 You may get rid of your back
problems. Back pain appears to begin, not in the back,
but in the arteries. The degeneration of discs, for instance,
which leads to nerves being pinched, starts with the arteries
leading to the back. Eating a plant-based diet keeps these
arteries clear of cholesterol- causing blockages to help
maintain a healthy back.
16 You'll be more
'regular.' Eating a lot of vegetables necessarily means
consuming fiber, which pushes waste out of the body. Meat
contains no fibre. Studies done at Harvard and Brigham Women's
Hospital found that people who ate a high-fiber diet had a 42
percent lower risk of diverticulitis. People who eat lower on
the food chain also tend to have fewer incidences of
constipation, hemorrhoids and spastic colon.
17
You'll cool those hot flashes. Plants, grains and
legumes contain phytoestrogens that are believed to balance
fluctuating hormones, so vegetarian women tend to go through
menopause with fewer complaints of sleep problems, hot
flashes, fatigue, mood swings, weight gain, depression and a
diminished sex drive.
18 You'll help to bring down
the national debt. We spend large amounts annually to
treat the heart disease, cancer, obesity, and food poisoning
that are byproducts of a diet heavy on animal
products.
19 You'll preserve our fish
population. Because of our voracious appetite for fish,
39 per cent of the oceans' fish species are overharvested, and
the Food & Agriculture Organization reports that 11 of 15
of the world's major fishing grounds have become
depleted.
20 You'll help protect the purity of
water. It takes 2,500 gallons of water to produce one
pound of mutton, but just 25 gallons of water to produce a
pound of wheat. Not only is this wasteful, but it contributes
to rampant water pollution.
21 You'll provide a
great role model for your kids. If you set a good
example and feed your children good food, chances are they'll
live a longer and healthier life. You're also providing a
market for vegetarian products and making it more likely that
they'll be available for the children.
22 Going
vegetarian is easy! Vegetarian cooking has never been
so simple. We live in a country that has been vegetarian by
default. Our traditional dishes are loaded with the goodness
of vegetarian food. Switching over it very simple
indeed.
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