When I was 14 years old, I spent my time online blogging, chatting on MSN and secretly playing Neopets. This was before Facebook and I was too young to be cruising through random forums. The night before Thanksgiving, I had clicked on an MSN profile (remember those?) and saw a link to a website. Me, being nosy, clicked the link and it took me to a video. There was nothing flashy about the website so I had no idea what I was about to watch. The video was called Meet Your Meat. I remember watching men be violent with turkeys and throwing cinder blocks at piglets. Nobody was around. I started crying. The next day, I refused turkey at Thanksgiving dinner in front of my parents and grandparents.
| A turkey friend I met at my trip to Farm Sanctuary in 2013 |
I didn't know anything about vegetarianism when I made my decision to stop eating animals. I didn't know any vegetarians. I didn't know what the public thought about vegetarians. Since social media wasn't big, I wasn't bombarded by infographics or thrown into debates about vegetarianism. I was not exposed to it by television. There weren't any vegetarian cookbooks in our house. None of the meatless meals my mom cooked were called "vegetarian". I had no idea what I was getting myself into. All I know is that I didn't want to cause pain and suffering to animals anymore. Going meat-free was the first step to embracing a cruelty-free lifestyle. With no guidance, no knowledge and one accidental movie-viewing, I became a vegetarian.
Looking back, there were a few key events that made me perceive animals as beings who have the capacity to suffer. My dad is a fisherman. One of my favorite pastimes was to go fishing with him. He explained to me that fish suffocate when they are out of water so we always put the fish back after we caught them. When I was 13, I went fishing with someone else and we left all of our fish we caught to die in a bucket. I felt sad, guilty and anxious. I asked if there was something we could do to make their deaths go faster. I was told "Not unless you want to slam their heads into the side of the boat." I was torn. I really wanted to do something for those fish but I couldn't. That was the last time I went fishing.
My dad is still a catch-and-release fisherman and I learned something new about him tonight. He believes that fish can feel pain and stress, especially when a hook becomes embedded into a sensitive place like the tongue. He feels remorse when a fish he catches dies. He has come across a number of fisherman who abuse the quota system or kill their catch and let the bodies go to waste. He doesn't understand why people kill these beings for fun and destroy their habitat in the process. He's unknowingly taught me that even fish, which are often perceived as being unable to feel pain, and their habitat should be respected and protected.
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| Blacketts Lake outside of Sydney, Nova Scotia. This was one of my favourite places to fish as a kid. |
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| Look at these preachy, judgmental vegans who are trying to struggle you with hugs and choke you with candy. How dare they! Somebody call the po po! |
I don't know what happened to me to make me feel this way about animals. Somehow the brainwashing about meat being healthy, yummy and "humane" didn't fully stick.
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| SETA protesting the commercial seal hunt at the 2007 Juno Awards. |
In high school, I joined a student animal rights group called SETA.The organizer, Mr. C, was the first vegan I have ever met. We would watch documentaries, hold monthly demonstrations for the students and make trips up to Halifax to participate in protests. Once I started sharing my lifestyle with people, I became hated but I fought back. I had spent most of my life being bullied for being fat, ugly and geeky. I was no longer in the mood to sit back and let the hateful comments fly. I became somewhat alienated but I don't really care. I was not about to eat bacon again to "fit in".
About 2 years ago, I decided to go vegan. Some people who tolerated me as a vegetarian suddenly couldn't deal with me any longer. But for every "friend" I lost, I found a new one who understands me. I'm happier now because I am doing all that I can to reduce animal suffering and I love being part of a growing movement. I can walk into a grocery store now and get a cruelty-free version of anything I am craving. Three vegan restaurants have opened up in Halifax since I moved here and the people who run them are amazing. I've gotten involved in the vegan bodybuilding community which is full of compassionate, supportive people.
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| Why kill animals when you have access to this awesome veggie meat and cheese? Bonus feature: it won't cause heart attacks! |
Now what would have happened if the video I had clicked on was porn instead?
Happy Thanksgiving!
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| Franny and I at Farm Sanctuary. |




