Read Crazy Sexy Diet: Eat Your Veggies, Ignite Your Spark, and Live Like You Mean It! Online

Authors: Kris Carr,Rory Freedman (Preface),Dean Ornish M.D. (Foreword)

Tags: #Nutrition, #Motivational & Inspirational, #Health & Fitness, #Diets, #Medical, #General, #Women - Health and hygiene, #Health, #Diet Therapy, #Self-Help, #Vegetarianism, #Women

Crazy Sexy Diet: Eat Your Veggies, Ignite Your Spark, and Live Like You Mean It! (47 page)

BOOK: Crazy Sexy Diet: Eat Your Veggies, Ignite Your Spark, and Live Like You Mean It!
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EATING OUT
with
Kathy Freston
 

 

If you’re eating out,
there are countless restaurants that cater to vegetarians and vegans.
Vegcooking.com
features regional vegetarian restaurants, restaurant chains that offer vegetarian options, and links to other Web sites that list vegetarian-friendly eateries. Ethnic restaurants, especially Thai, Indian, Ethiopian, Chinese, and Mexican, are always a good choice, as they offer a variety of vegetarian and vegan options.

If you’re still looking for a burger and fries, many chain restaurants, including Johnny Rockets, Denny’s, and Ruby Tuesday’s serve veggie burgers. Just don’t drive yourself—and your dining companions—crazy worrying that your veggie burger was prepared on the same surface as the hamburgers. It might be a bit aesthetically troublesome, but it won’t harm animals (or the planet) if your food is cooked on the same grill as meat. Unless you absolutely can’t stomach it, let it pass.

Vegans and vegan wannabes, I believe that when you’re eating out, you also shouldn’t be too concerned about ingredients that make up less than 2 percent of your meal. You’ll obviously want to avoid dishes served with meat, cheese, or eggs, but it doesn’t really matter if there’s a modicum of butter or whey or other animal product in the bun that your veggie burger is served on.

You won’t stop animal suffering by avoiding such minuscule amounts of animal ingredients. But you may give your nonvegan friends—not to mention the restaurant wait staff—the idea that vegans are difficult to please. The goal is to show others how easy it is to eat in an animal-friendly manner and that restaurants can satisfy vegan customers without having to do cartwheels. I understand the desire to eliminate every last bit of animal ingredients from your diet, but let’s face it: Even vegan foods cause some small animals to be tilled during farming. (Note: Since more than 70 percent of all grain, soybeans, and other crops are fed to farmed animals, not to humans, there is a lot more tiller death in chicken, turkey, pork, and beef than in plant foods, but the point should still give vegetarians a bit of humility.)

Vegetarianism is not a personal purity test. Our positive and reasonable influence on others is just as important as our own commitment to a conscious and compassionate diet.

Consider your choices: heart disease, colon cancer, plus-size pants, melting ice caps, gale-force storms, and animal suffering versus good health, energy, a trim physique, a livable planet, compassion, and tasty, diverse foods. It’s clear that going vegetarian or vegan is an excellent choice as we move toward living a more conscious life.

 

Kathy Freston
is a health and wellness expert and best-selling author of
Quantum Wellness
.

 

EATING SANELY
 

If every dazzling person
would make just a few changes, just think how much healthier we could be. Our planet would thank us; the animals would lick us. That’s the goal, my friend. Do the best you can and if you stumble, don’t marinate in guilt. Get back on the shiny wagon and start anew. Also, don’t break your bank trying to get healthy. Slowly upgrade and add as finances allow. Life is too sweet to be bitter, so just do your best. No beating, anxiety, or neurosis, por favor.

 

 

testimonial
:
Michelle D.

 

Recently I went to a naturopath out of desperation because I had been living with tummy trouble for five years, since my diagnosis of juvenile diabetes, and no MD seemed able to help me. I soon realized that although what I was eating was healthy by SAD standards, I had changes to make. Evolution, not revolution: It has been a gradual process. In the last year I’ve been almost vegan. The support and information I have received from Kris’s Web site, crazysexylife.com, has helped me to solidify that commitment. I feel like veganism is necessary for my physical as well as spiritual and emotional health. During her cleanse I gave up the occasional chicken and fish I had continued to consume every week or so, added in more salads and other raw food, stopped making (and craving) sweets, and finally began to use my juicer.

Although I had already been doing green smoothies every morning, and eating a plant-based diet, this fine-tuning led to some detoxing. I was surprised to get symptoms like headaches and pimples, since I thought my diet was already so clean! It just goes to show how sensitive our systems are, and how they need all the help they can get. The Crazy Sexy Diet has helped me to better understand the importance of being alkaline, fighting disease with nutrition, and living the very best, most vibrant life I can.

 

CHAPTER
IN REVIEW
REMEMBER:

Clean the crap from your cupboards and learn to shop smart. Even a 60/40 diet means high-quality food!

Get to know your Crazy Sexy shopping list, crammed full of produce, grains, beans, nuts, seeds, seasonings, fermented goodies, great fats, and much more.

Stock your kitchen with the right tools to make meal prep a snap—and fun, too.

Get cozy with your greengrocer, farmers’ market, and local food co-op.

Grow your own grub—at least an herb garden or a patio tomato. Even city girls can raise wheatgrass and basil.

Familiarize yourself with the Dirty Dozen and Clean Fifteen.

Eat out with ease—don’t be a bore, but do make the right choices without fanfare.

BOOK: Crazy Sexy Diet: Eat Your Veggies, Ignite Your Spark, and Live Like You Mean It!
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