Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh gimme a break. There are plenty of vegetarians who ocassionaly eat meat, or cook with chicken broth etc. No need to be all holier-than thou about it.
They are not vegetarians. You seem confused.
Many of them call themselves vegetarians and I’m not going to police that. Just like I don’t police people who call themselves kosher who occasionally eat shrimp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh gimme a break. There are plenty of vegetarians who ocassionaly eat meat, or cook with chicken broth etc. No need to be all holier-than thou about it.
They are not vegetarians. You seem confused.
Anonymous wrote:Oh gimme a break. There are plenty of vegetarians who ocassionaly eat meat, or cook with chicken broth etc. No need to be all holier-than thou about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strict are you about it, and how far in are you? Do you find that cheating a bit here or there makes you fall off the wagon?
There are definitely people who "get sober from meat" by choosing a vegetarian diet. Almost everyone I know who fits that description is a vegetarian for ethical reasons, and those people, while they eat dairy products and eggs, are strict in that they do not eat the flesh of animals, including fish, but not so strict that they do not wear leather, silk, use honey, and other stuff along those lines that some stricter vegetarians observe.
That said, there are also a lot of vegetarians who are not vegetarians specifically for ethical reasons. I've been vegetarian most of my life because my mom was, starting well before I was born. That's just what food was in my hippie household. We ate a lot of tofu, and I didn't have "a hamburger" until I was in middle school. There have been times in my life when I've eaten some meat, but it's just not something I have an attachment to that would result in "falling off the wagon" or "cheating."
It's not AA, OP.
Wordnik:
fall off the wagon
verb
To cease or fail at a regimen of self-improvement or reform; to lapse back into an old habit or addiction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strict are you about it, and how far in are you? Do you find that cheating a bit here or there makes you fall off the wagon?
There are definitely people who "get sober from meat" by choosing a vegetarian diet. Almost everyone I know who fits that description is a vegetarian for ethical reasons, and those people, while they eat dairy products and eggs, are strict in that they do not eat the flesh of animals, including fish, but not so strict that they do not wear leather, silk, use honey, and other stuff along those lines that some stricter vegetarians observe.
That said, there are also a lot of vegetarians who are not vegetarians specifically for ethical reasons. I've been vegetarian most of my life because my mom was, starting well before I was born. That's just what food was in my hippie household. We ate a lot of tofu, and I didn't have "a hamburger" until I was in middle school. There have been times in my life when I've eaten some meat, but it's just not something I have an attachment to that would result in "falling off the wagon" or "cheating."
It's not AA, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Oh gimme a break. There are plenty of vegetarians who ocassionaly eat meat, or cook with chicken broth etc. No need to be all holier-than thou about it.
Anonymous wrote:How strict are you about it, and how far in are you? Do you find that cheating a bit here or there makes you fall off the wagon?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get the question. Either you’re vegetarian or not.