Showing posts with label compassionate diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compassionate diet. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2011

A Buddhist-Vegetarian Debate Resource

David N. Snyder, Ph.D. (veggiebuddhists.com)
Not eating animal products for a day beats buying and releasing animals (peta.org)

Buddhist vegetarian vs. meat-based diet debate resource

Q: Didn’t the Buddha eat meat?

A: The Buddha may have eaten some meat, following the threefold rule. But his diet was more like a vegetarian diet who ate meat "out of pity" (Numerical Discourses III.49) on rare occasions.

Are lamb chops actually made of lambs, killed and bloody, crying and clinging to life?

Q: What about the famous threefold rule the Buddha allowed meat eating if one did not hear, see, or [suspect] that the animal was killed for one’s consumption.

A: The main premise behind the threefold rule is to accept what one receives in one's bowl when on alms round. This rule was meant for and given to monks and nuns, not lay people. “Beggars can’t be choosers” in modern terms. So for the vast majority of Buddhists who are lay people, a conscious decision must be made.

Q: What about evolution? Doesn't evolution show that all animals must kill and eat as members of the food chain?

A: Some people argue that we as humans should be eating at the top of the food chain, like other large animals or because of our “superiority.” However, if we are truly superior to other animals we do not need to show it by being the greatest inflicters of violence.

Chinese Buddhist cuisine in Taiwan (knowledgerush.com)

Rather, it is better to show moral superiority by being the most compassionate. Not all large or intelligent animals eat at the top of the food chain. [The largest and strongest are vegetarian -- as an intelligent way to support their mass.] For example, elephants, rhinos, whales, and gorillas are all very large, very strong, and very intelligent animals that eat at the bottom of the food chain where food is most abundant. The largest whales use a filter in their mouths to catch the tiniest green plankton in the sea as their meals. A microscope is necessary to view plankton.

Because of our close connection to animals biologically (evolutionarily) and spiritually in the rebirth process, the Buddha was opposed to violence toward animals. An understanding and acceptance of the theory of evolution is important because without that acceptance there is a perception of a great separation between humans and animals which simply does not exist.

Somehow some of us love some animals but do not give a second thought to other animals.

As time goes on, people will realize that it is not just a biological connection. If we are animals, as evolution shows us, then animals also evolve with the same Buddha-nature (capacity for enlightenment, or whatever spiritual terminology one wishes to use). We all evolved from the same source.

Q: Devadatta, who was a Buddhist monk and a cousin of the Buddha, made a list of new rules he wanted implemented. The Buddha refused to make them mandatory. The list included ascetic practices, including strict vegetarianism: Since the Buddha refused to accept this list, isn’t he saying that meat eating is allowed?

A: No, Devadatta made this list not out of compassion for monastics or animals but as a ploy to cause a schism in the Sangha and take the Buddha's place. See Devadatta

Q: How does vegetarianism fit with the middle way? Isn’t vegetarianism an “extreme” view?

A: See Vegetarianism and the Middle Way

Q: In first world countries only about 3 to 5% are vegetarian. What good is one person becoming a vegetarian?

A: See Nutrition and environment

Q: What do the Buddhist Theravada and Mahayana scriptures say about vegetarianism?
A: See Numerical D
iscourses 3.16

Monday, September 12, 2011

Cancer Can Be Cured! But Chemo Kills (video)

Wisdom Quarterly
Almost no one dies from cancer anymore; chemotherapy kills us. Of course, doing nothing other than those customary things that created the condition will eventually kill. But that is not what most are dying from.

Cancer takes years to develop (usually seven before there was a visible tumor, which is in fact the body's attempt to save the organism's life by storing away the toxins that would otherwise kill a person). The American Cancer Society, our government, Big Pharma (the pharmaceutical-industrial complex including profit-based researchers) are all guilty of withholding the truth of cures.

What is the secret? First, the worst secret is that the Cancer Industry is not interested in curing patients. Their rate of recovery (not due to their interventions) is 2 percent. Others, like Dr. Coldwell, have a better than 92 percent rate -- according to the Institute for Statistical Medicine in Europe.

(LINK) "The Beautiful Truth" (Gerson Therapy documentary)
The Cancer Industry does not even offer a "cure." That is illegal to offer. They offer "treatments," deadly carcinogenic toxins, carcinogenic ionizing radiation, deadly invasive therapies. It is money-making insanity.

Doctors are wonderful people. But they have an average life span of 56, according to Dr. Leonard Coldwell. They have a suicide rate second only to psychiatrists/therapists, he added. Why? It is because they realize they are not healing as they originally wished to do when they entered the field.

Corporations make money by providing us cheap, toxic food and habits (fast food, fried food, denatured food, sugar, toxic food, acidifying food and body care products, worry, fear, coffee, sadness, guilt, alcohol, anger, stress...) Then we compound the problem by living in ignorance and fear, far removed from knowing anything about our bodies, our pasts, our possibilities.

Second, an alkalizing diet would go a long way to mitigating the damage being done. Breathe deeply from the belly. Eat only natural (untreated) sea salt or pink Himalayan salt. Use bases like pure baking soda (free of aluminum).


(LINK) Opinion

Avoid fermented, moldy, yeasty (which contributes to candida), addictive starches (like bread which also has gluten and sugar hazards), fungal things. Eat greens, leaves, fruits, raw/soaked nuts, beans, Quinoa, Amaranth, sprouts of all kinds, green juices, superfoods (spirulina, chlorella, blueberries, hemp oil, hemp seeds, not-too-sweet fruits, berries of all kinds.

The third secret sounds simple but seems impossible for us: Be happy whatever you do. Be happy. Do it if you want to do it (whatever it is), but be happy doing it. If you can't, then change to something you can be happy about. There is no way to happiness; happiness is the way!

The goal is proper PH, and a higher PH while healing. Drink a gallon of water a day with a a teaspoon of Himalayan salt.

Learn serenity meditation. Nothing is worth worrying about. It may be worth doing something about, but not worrying. All cancers are curable. Education -- not funded by the Cancer Industry -- is fundamental.

Wait until you are dying and the doctors have given up -- then try a cure that works because there will be nothing to lose. Or trust and do it sooner. You are never too old or too young to live well.

Advice and Care

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Bang Your Own Head, Save a Seal

Take a stand against the cruel seal slaughter by writing to the Canadian government today!



The Agonist Speaks Up for Seals

Chelsi Schriver (PETA2)
One of the strongest drives for a musician is for their voice to be heard. Lyrics provide an undeniable platform to say whatever needs to be said, whether that's about a long lost love, recent heartache, or the current state of the world.



The Agonist is a fiery metal band from Montréal, Canada known for beautiful vocals juxtaposed with deep metal growls [and scathing music]. Lead siren and vocal vixen Alissa White-Gluz isn't afraid to use her voice, and now she's speaking out for seals all across Canada.







Alissa is so adamantly opposed to the annual Canadian seal slaughter that she lent herself -- and her voice -- to PETA for a new ad, insistently stating, "Bang your own head, not a seal's."



The Agonist (Alissa) speaks up for peta2 and compassion

It's time to put Canada's great shame -- the annual seal slaughter, during which hundreds of thousands of harp seals are clubbed and beaten to death -- in the spotlight. Every year at this time, sealers take to the ice to bludgeon migrating seals and their babies, all for the sake of selling fur pelts on the international market.

If there were no demand for fur [thank you, dog fur salesman P Diddy Sean Puff Daddy Combs], there would be no seal slaughter.



Did Puff Daddy really sell dog fur?

We don't understand why people would want to wear a dead animal (and contribute to the devastating environmental effects of fur production), and neither does Alissa.

Watch our exclusive video with Alissa -- a lifelong vegetarian -- to learn why she is so passionate (and compassionate) that she is willing to stick up for seals and why she will always take a stand against animal cruelty. Then take a stand by writing to the Canadian government!

Friday, August 26, 2011

Sexism, Racism...Meat Eating (Carnism)



Why We Love Do
gs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows: An Introduction to Carnism

Prof. Melanie Joy, Ph.D.

In “Why We Love Dogs…” social psychologist Melanie Joy explains carnism, the invisible belief system that shapes our perception of the meat we eat, so that we love some animals and eat others without knowing why.



Prof. Joy, a longtime activist for social and environmental justice and animal welfare, explains how "carnism," like other unjust ideologies, is sustained by complex, hidden, sociopsychological mechanisms. It is most harmful when unrecognized.



Using powerful imagery, thought-provoking analyses, and a compelling narrative, Joy elucidates how, although unjust ideologies all are unique, the mentality that enables such interlocking systems is strikingly similar. When unnoticed, these ideologies can cause us to act against our core values and interests, to sustain socially and ecologically unjust systems.



By illuminating the invisible mechanisms of carnism, Joy seeks to help viewers become more empowered citizens, informed consumers, and active social witnesses. More

  • Live at CVUU, 7:30 PM, Friday, Aug. 26, 2011
  • Dr. Joy is a Harvard-educated psychologist, personal/relationship coach, and professor of psychology and sociology at the Univ. of Mass., Boston. She is the author of numerous articles on psychology, animal protection, and social justice, which have been published in a variety of journals and magazines. She is the leading researcher on carnism, the psychology of eating meat. She has been interviewed for numerous magazines, books, and radio on her work, including the BBC, NPR, PBS, and ABC Australia. She is also the author of Strategic Action for Animals. Though much of Dr. Joy’s writing focuses on animal protection, she is also a longtime human rights advocate, feminist psychology, domestic violence, and psychological trauma.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Slaughter-Free Milk



If you must drink milk (or consume dairy products like cheese, whey, lactose sugar, ice cream, or other things that do more to leach calcium from bones -- due to their acidifying of body chemistry and the ammonia produced from the break down of protein -- than they provide in any assimilable form), use slaughter-free. It's the least we could do to give thanks for what is taken from moo cows.

PRODUCTION:
The Lotus Trust has finally found a suitable farm to produce slaughter-free milk after two years of searching. Working in partnership with OMSCo (Organic Milk Suppliers Cooperative), an organic dairy in SE England has agreed to pilot the production of Ahimsa [nonviolent, harm-free] milk with a select herd of cows.

Commonwork is an environmental charity, study center and an organic dairy near Sevenoaks in Kent [England]. It has a well established educational program that explores local and global sustainability. The thrust of its work is towards a just and sustainable world.

Due to parallels in its vision with The Lotus Trust for a fairer world, one where there is collaboration and connection with nature, it has agreed to run this first pilot.

Ahimsa milk will be produced to the following minimal standards:
  • No cows, calves, or bulls will be slaughtered
  • Cows can graze freely on open pasture
  • Cows will be protected for life
Commonwork Organic Dairy is fully responsible for all milking cows. The Lotus Trust has set up a new not-for-profit organization -- the Ahimsa Dairy Foundation (ADF), which will be responsible for ongoing care of all non-milking cows, specifically calves, bulls, and retired milking cows.


Meat and milk as commodities -- cash cow

Cows at Commonwork are looked after to Soil Association organic standards, which means:
  • they are not injected with hormones or steroids;
  • they are on a diet of non-GM forage (mainly plant leaves, stems, legumes, and grass) primarily grown on the farm;
  • they graze in open fields during spring, summer, and autumn.
Winter housing is spacious and they have areas where they can walk around with access to food 24 hours a day. The health and welfare of the cows is foremost, they are treated with homeopathy and alternative treatments when possible. Antibiotics are used only when no other approaches work. More

Living beings treated like unfeeling factories

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Eating Pigs = Eating Worms? (video)

Wisdom Quarterly


It is rumored that the Buddha's last meal, which brought about a sharp decline in his health, was either pork or tender food loved by pigs (Mahaparinirvana Sutra). Mushrooms would fit this description and could have easily and unintentionally been toxic. Surely the blacksmith was trying to provide the best gift he could to a famous teacher and his renunciate disciples.

The Buddha saw that there was no other being, seen or unseen, who could possibly digest the food offered to him by the blacksmith Cunda. He had already relinquished the will to keep his body going, and this meal made it possible to bring the material basis of his dependently-originated becoming on Earth.

Most Buddhists (Chinese Mahayanists) have been vegetarian in consideration of developing compassion. No particular diet is a Buddhist requirement (although many types of meat, such as bear, are specifically excluded). But as the world has moved toward Western ideals of luxury, affluence, and poor health, meat eating has increased.

Hygienic practices have not kept up, even in America which seems to do the most to promote the cruel practice of not only slaughtering and eating animals (more than a million a day being killed for consumption in the US alone). For all the improvement in sanitation, we have not managed to eradicate trichinosis, salmonella, food poisoning, or worms. This easy vermifuge test may be performed to check the status of slaughtered pigs ingested by careless human carnivores.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Eating Well, Preventing Cancer

Gary Null, Ph.D. (garynull.com)

The Peoples' Food Pyramid

When determining the perfect diet, it is important to remember that no two people have the same dietary needs. [One has to be responsible for oneself because entrusting it to someone else often results in S.A.D., the Standard American Diet.] It is best to consult with [not necessarily listen to] a dietitian to determine what best suits a particularly body and lifestyle.

Active individuals may need more calories and protein. Petite people may need fewer calories. For some, gaining weight may be an issue. For others, it is a goal. So there is not one magic diet to will fit everyone. [Body types, blood types, type of environment, season, and current state of health also changes what is "best" for health.]

The People's Pyramid is meant to be a guideline. None of the quantities or numbers are hard and fast rules. Rather, they are a general basis to establish healthy dietary choices. For a chart with samples of foods, dietary facts, and basic foods that are easily accessible, click here.

Remember, when picking produce, eat organic and choose local foods. Avoid processed foods. For many vegans, getting high quality protein is a priority. This is easily achievable by eating a balanced diet of greens, complex carbohydrates, legumes of all kinds, vibrant vegetables, and vibrant fruits.

There are many cures! (mccain.com)

Cancer Can't Kill...Unless We Let It
Powerful new cancer treatments are not taught in U.S. medical schools. But they are saving millions of lives in England, France, Germany, and more than 180 countries throughout the world (Gary Null “Advance News” Medical Report).

Cancer is projected to be the number one cause of death worldwide by the year 2010. This frightening disease can affect anyone at any. The terror, confusion, and physiological deterioration that cancer causes devastates not only those who are afflicted by it, but everyone in their lives as well.

[Most of its scary appearance actually results from invasive treatments like making the body toxic, killing cells and wiping out the immune system; cancer does not do that, oncology-industry insanity -- toxic chemicals, corrosive radiation, and invasive surgery -- does that.]

We need to arm ourselves with useful information to help to protect ourselves against this naturally-occurring and dreaded disease. [If we are causing it by taking in toxins, the cure is easy and prevention is even easier! Remove the toxins, and supply the body with good nourishment.]

Gary Null, Ph.D. and the world’s leading alternative cancer experts show powerful strategies to prevent cancer from ever forming or reversing it even if it has gotten to an advanced stage. [Your doctor will not like it and will not listen because that's not the business she's in, so use these scientifically-backed and industry-ignored protocols do the natural healing.] More

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The Beautiful Vegan

Wisdom Quarterly (SPOTLIGHT)

() How to make vegan pizza (including crust) video tutorial

Spotlight: In our irregular series on Wisdom Quarterly readers, we focus on one of our remarkable followers.
THE VEGAN (Lyn Rose)
Beautiful vegans are nade not born. It's never too early to become compassionate and steward for the environment. The Judeo-Christian Bible never really gave us "dominion" over animals and nature, so much as entrusted us with stewardship over them, which means that humans in line with their divine potential are caretakers of this planet. The Buddhist attitude towards nature is even clearer: We are not simply a part of nature, and we are never apart from it, but at every moment we are interdependent with everything around us. The sooner we recognize it, the closer we approach the mystical state of non-duality, perceiving only the interconnectedness of all life, animate and inanimate. "When I change, the world changes." Buddhist need not join the World Vegan Society or grow vegan kids, because caring enough to at least go vegetarian on lunar observance days (quarter, new, and full moon days) is a great thing. Observing "Meatless Mondays" is enough. Going halfitarian, simply eating twice as much healthy animal-free foods than we do now, is enough.

One answer comes from famous JuBu (Jewish-Buddhist) and all around scientist Albert Einstein:

"A human being is a part of the whole called the 'universe,' a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts, and feelings, as something separated from the rest, a kind of optical delusion of... consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in all its beauty. Nobody is able to achieve this completely, but the striving for such achievement is in itself part of the liberation and foundation for inner security."



Wednesday, April 27, 2011

"Karma to Nirvana" premiers at NY filmfest



Karma: The New Revolution
A new film titled Karma: The New Revolution explains the role of Karma in golfer Tiger Woods’ apology. It explains the role karma played in the death of entertainment icon Michael Jackson and highlights how Karma Yoga has helped individuals overcome the credit crunch, cancer, and crime. Filmed in over a dozen countries, it is presented by Acharya Zen, who was reportedly quoted as saying: Karma and redemption go hand in hand and in Verse 173 of The Dhammapada, the Buddha states that "a person who makes amends for mistakes can light up the world like the Moon emerging from clouds." This suggests that Tiger Woods can redeem himself by following the Buddha’s last words "Be lamps unto yourselves" (Appo deepo bhava) or, as the film's tagline runs, “Take Charge of your Destiny!”

SETI will survive, claims astronomer