I’ve had my periods of experimenting diets and healthy alimentary life styles, and for a good period of time I’ve even tried the complete vegetarian weight loss diet. Even if it has shown good results, and it promised a lot on the long run, this program is not for me. Seems a lot more like something fit for a woman. Compared to the anorexic diets women take and surprisingly appreciate, this is a heaven sent, as it’s basically all natural and is not missing lots of stuff…well except proteins, but that can be adjusted by eating fish and easy meat products, if you are willing to make a compromise. Since I’ve been there, let me tell a bit about how it feels being a vegetarian, including goods and bads. Not everything is so peachy as convinced vegetarians claim, but it’s not by far as bad as meat-eaters tend to believe. A vegetarian weigh loss diet basically means that you will be exclusively eating aliments that are not animal based. There are variations here, some people are taking a mild vegetarian diet, and choose to eat eggs and diary products (just like I did), while others will only use it for religious reasons in different periods of the year. In the USA, vegetarians are divided in two. The vegans are those eating exclusively vegetal products, and the vegetarians are eating fish, milk and egg along with those vegetal things. Even if the weight loss would have been more pronounced if I would’ve eaten only vegetables, it seemed like too much to me, so I choose to be a vegetarian for a while, not a vegan. But I’ve encountered many people telling me that milk form animals and eggs are not good for healthy, that they are new alimentary products (by this they mean they weren’t eaten in prehistoric times, I’m sure…) and they have been proven to have inconvenient effects on health…and so on. Others, and here I must include doctors, say that there’s no healthy diet without some milk and some eggs…opinions are as always divided. There are obvious advantages and disadvantages to the vegetarian weight loss diet. Some pople in my vegetarian group (I’ve joined one at the time) were considering this diet out of medical reasons. Their doctors were saying that animal products have many more toxins and that there are lots of factors which target diseases in these products, including cancer triggering factors. Also, a vegetarian diet permits the consumption of aliments unprocessed, which is quite benefic to health. Other advantages I’ve clearly felt by an increased level of energy and well being are the vitamins and minerals I was eating daily. Because I didn’t take the diet for more than 6 months, I didn’t get to suffer from any of the possible disadvantages related to it. From what others have told me, these are related to vitamin lacks, like the lack of vitamin B12, D and A and others are related to an excessive amount of carbs that we eat, coming from cereals, flour products, potatoes and sugar. The first thing that drew me to this diet was not the vegetarian weight loss results others had but the fact that I’ve heard that vegetarians have a lowered risk of developing chronic affections. In time, I’ve realized this is just something vegetarians believe themselves, even if it’s backed by some scientific research. The

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Vegetarian Weight Loss: Is Vegetarianism For Me?






