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Knee Deep In Waste

Three bags of garbage today and it’s the third time this week I’ve taken at least two, 35 litre bags of rubbish to the communal bins – and the week’s not over yet. I didn’t analyse what was in the bags but my guess is that about 50% was packaging and most of the rest was food. I’m feeling ashamed to admit it but this was food I’d either bought and not used in time or I’d cooked and not eaten.

Partly a post-Christmas phenomena but mainly it’s because I’ve built far too much waste into how I live my life and I want to change it.

I don’t think I’m unusual. Most of us are unaware just how much food we throw out. I read that, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, around 50% of all food production is wasted. It’s hard to find comprehensive data on this but the financial cost alone amounts to, not millions, but billions of dollars every year.

The Food We Buy

Mona just came back from the local bread store. It’s a holiday tomorrow and the store will be closed. She said the store was crazy – full of people buying 10 loaves of bread as though they wouldn’t be able to buy anymore for weeks.

I know myself that whenever I go to the supermarket I’m always tempted to buy things I hadn’t intended. Supermarkets are in the business of selling as much as possible as fast as possible. It’s not good business to throw out food and it’s not good business to take up large areas of costly storage space. They make more money the faster they can move product so they want to entice me to buy a trolley full.

Money is reasonably tight in our household, but still I rarely know how much I’m spending on food until I reach the check-out.

Displays, positioning of product, pricing, special offers, selection and store design are all aimed at one thing – to make it easy and attractive for me to buy as much as possible.

They’re doing their job very well.

What are some of the things I buy I don’t need?

  • Snacks – I enjoy eating chocolate and cookies but I couldn’t say I need them
  • Vegetables and fruit – I often throw out things that looked great in the store but start decaying once I get them home
  • Baked products – things that go stale before I have a chance to consume them
  • Dairy – we eat a lot of dairy and don’t throw so much away but even so the odd carton still goes in the bin
  • Jars and bottles – jams go mouldy, sauces go off before they’re finished
  • One off items – ingredients for a particular dish and, even buying the smallest quantity possible, the rest goes to waste
  • Meat – no longer an issue as I don’t eat it anymore – but when I did I often threw it out when it went it’s use by date was up.

None of these things are unavoidable!

From a simple economics point of view, the less I buy, the less will be produced – or it may be diverted to other places where it’s more needed. Waste is waste – not just the food itself but everything that’s gone into getting it into my kitchen. The less I buy, the more resources available for other things.

Cutting back may be a small drop in the ocean – but every ocean is made up of small drops.

The Food I Prepare

I was brought up as a child, as were many in the developed world, to eat everything on my plate. I’ve lost count of the number of times I heard,

Think of the starving children in Africa!

as I pushed aside an uneaten mouthful.

With more than 1 billion people estimated to be short of food that’s a lot of starving people to be thinking about.

I’ve heard people say,

Better to throw it away in the garbage than throw it away in your stomach.

Well, this is probably true. It’s even more true that it’s better not to throw it away at all!

I had a friend once who always left some food at the side of the plate. I asked her why and she told me that it was a habit – it was her way of making sure that she didn’t overeat. If she left some food then it was some kind of check that she hadn’t eaten as much as she could have done.

There must be better habits we can develop!

Why do I throw away food after I’ve made it:

  • Misjudging how much to cook – I often cook more rice or pasta than I need, for example
  • Misjudging how much I want to eat – often I’m not as hungry as I thought I was when I started cooking
  • Overeating – yes! I eat more than I need to
  • Variety – especially when entertaining guests I tend to overcomplicate and make different dishes
  • Bad cooking – sometimes I over-cook something or just mess it up.

All of these are avoidable.

Of course, this food is also stuff I’ve over bought – so there’s a kind of double waste.

How To Waste Less?

Here are 10 ideas that have worked for me or that I’m going to try:

  1. Never shop when hungry
  2. Have a shopping budget (take exactly the amount of cash I need and leave the plastic at home)
  3. Prepare a list of what to buy and stick to it
  4. Only buy things with a clear idea of which meal they’ll go into
  5. Don’t allow myself to be tempted by special offers – especially those products I know I tend to throw out
  6. Buy fewer things with a short shelf life – more often if needed
  7. When cooking, weigh things rather than guess
  8. Freeze leftovers
  9. Recycle waste food for compost
  10. Get more creative with cooking and use of leftovers (great ideas on this site).

This starts to deal with 50% of my waste. Now what about the packaging …. watch this space!

I’d love to hear your ideas in the comments about how to cut out food waste!

Living in denial – but for how long?

I hate Steve Pavlina!

No! Steve Pavlina?” I hear the incredulous cries go up around the blogosphere.

You mean the same Steve Pavlina who almost single handedly created the self development blog?

Hate him?

How can that be???!!!

Pavlina thinks I’m a Nazi

Last Thursday morning, I was minding my own business getting ready for a couple of days trip to the mountains in central Romania. I had a couple of hours to kill before leaving Bucharest – a city where you really need to time your journey well or risk sitting in traffic for hours and hours.

“I know,” I foolishly thought to myself. “I’ll read a few blogs while I’m waiting.”

A word of advice – never read blogs while waiting to leave for a vacation.

Modern-day Nazis‘ caught my eye and I wish it hadn’t. Before you follow the link you might want to read the rest of this post first or you might end up hating Pavlina as well.

If you’ve not read it yet, the post is based around a video of some very ugly behaviour in a chicken hatchery for egg production (not for meat). It’s pretty horrific viewing by itself, but then Pavlina rubs salt into the wound by accusing anyone who eats eggs of being a Nazi. There’s also some stuff in the article about living consciously and taking responsibility.

The smug guy even has the audacity at the end of the article to say that if you have a strong reaction then that proves you must be a Nazi. I don’t think he did actually write that, but that’s what I understood.

I eat eggs AND I had a strong reaction.

Pavlina thinks I’m a Nazi.

It’s not wise to ignore reactions

I know from many past experiences that when I react to something, there’s some important business for me to have a look at. Why would I get triggered if there was nothing there?

I calmed down a little on the journey and talking it through with Mona helped a lot – always a calming influence at these moments.

A few things were immediately clear.

My reaction was NOT about what Steve Pavlina thinks about me, nor was it about eggs. Nor was it about being called a Nazi because although I don’t like it much, I’ve been called worse.

What emerged over the course of the weekend were very important questions (and a few answers) about my lifestyle and the extent to which it’s become out of harmony with some of my core values, in particular nonviolence and respect for life.

Aligning values and lifestyle

There are several dimensions to our lives and whenever some of the elements are not aligned there’s an inner conflict. For example when I say something I know to be untrue then I’ll probably experience some inner conflict because it’s not aligned with my value for honesty.

When I can catch the signs of inner conflict then I can take action. Some of these conflicts, though, are not so obvious and they lurk under the surface of my awareness. They may appear from time to time and if I don’t listen then I deny or ignore them. As long as things are not aligned and the conflict unresolved, I carry the tension with me.

Who knows what unhealed physical, emotional or psychological wounds they then create?

The strength of my reaction to Steve’s article was a clear signal of some unexamined stuff within me and Steve’s words were simply a catalyst.

I could have chosen to blame Steve and continue to exclaim ‘How dare he call me a Nazi… ‘. Not a particularly useful approach in my quest to get continually less stupid as I get older. Instead, I did the intelligent thing and took it as sign that some things I’m not aware of are not aligned as I’d like them to be.

What I buy and consume

I choose not to eat meat of any kind but I do eat eggs. I buy most of my food from the supermarket and that includes a range of dairy products. I rarely pay much attention to the source of the food I buy. I rarely pay much attention to the source of ANYTHING I buy or consume.

Until now, that is.

EVERYTHING I buy or consume comes from somewhere. It has a history.

Not a factory farm

Not a factory farm

I can’t get away from the fact that much of the animal-source produce in the supermarket comes from factory farms. I’ve never been in factory farm but I’m guessing they’re not idyllic places full of fluffy, contented animals and rosy faced young milk maids.

I’m also assuming, judging from the chick video, that they are violent places with little respect for the life of the animals.

Eggs are just one small example. Chickens are hatched and immediately examined. Male chicks are fed directly into the meat grinder and female chicks are kept alive to become living egg factories.

Can anyone tell me this is respectful of life and nonviolent?

What I can no longer avoid is that whenever I eat food from this source I take some of that violence and disrespect into my body. I support the system that produces food in this way – both the factory farms and the supermarkets by voting with my stomach and my wallet.

Lifestyle revolution

We all draw the boundaries of our lifestyle differently and it is not for me to judge anyone else for their choices.

If I’m genuinely committed to nonviolence and respect for life then I have to live my whole life on this foundation, and not pick and choose according to what’s most convenient.  I can’t continue to stick my head in the sand and pretend it’s OK for me to be part of these systems.

I’m on the verge of a lifestyle revolution where the boundaries of what I can accept for myself have shifted. For my own well being I want to align all the decisions I make against my core values.

And this means paying attention to the sources of the things I buy and consume. It affects, among other things, the food I eat, the clothes I wear, the places I visit and how I get around.

I don’t yet have a clear picture of what this all means but I do know that shopping is not going to be the same again.

I’m guessing many things will start to change now.

Why do I hate Steve Pavlina?

He single handedly destroyed a whole set of delusions and has thrown into disarray my nice convenient way of life where I could get everything I needed at low cost at my local supermarket.

If I try this now I’m going to be haunted by an image of newly born chicks being thrown into a meat grinder.

Thanks a lot Steve!

Music

If music be the food of love, play on;
Give me excess of it …

William Shakespeare

I really have no regrets in life, but if there was one thing I wish I could do that I can’t it would be to play an instrument or to sing.

Music works with the rythms, the harmonies, the vibrations of life. Music has the power to touch our bodies, our hearts and our souls. The beating of the heart, the grinding of the hips, tears of joy or sadness or the soaring of the spirit in flight.

I acknowledge YouTube is not a great medium for sharing music, but I’m going to do it anyway. I found it hard to limit the music I wanted to share as there is just so much.

Music that touches me

For this week’s ‘Something For The Weekend’ I’ve picked 4 very different pieces -- all of which touch me in one way or another.

Music related posts

And here are a few music related posts from some of my favourite blogs:

Kim at Perfectly Cursed Life asks what music would you want at your funeral

David at Raptitude writing a great post about The Beatles

Postively Present on the lessons learned from a Kings Of Leon concert

Have a wonderful weekend!

6 reasons eating vegetarian food is best

I’d been playing with the idea of only eating vegetarian food for some time but the enjoyment of flesh eating was just too strong.

4 months ago, if I’d been faced with this array of meat sticks, I’d have been salivating and fighting to get my teeth sunk in. Now I look at the picture and just feel nauseous.

What happened to me?

I really don’t know how it happened but I do know I stopped eating meat in the middle of January.

I started the year with a week long Zen retreat in the Netherlands where the food was entirely vegetarian. It was good, wholesome food, lovingly prepared and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I haven’t had any desire to eat meat since coming back. In fact, the opposite; I simply haven’t been able to entertain the idea of putting dead animal parts in my mouth.

There was no moral imperative, no health reason, no nonviolent conviction.

I’d like to claim it was an example of my superior will-power finally overcoming my resistance, but that’s not the truth.

I suspect brain-washing!

Do yourself a favour – switch to vegetarian food!

After 3 months without meat I’ve noticed some surprising things; advantages I’d not considered  before.

I’m not in the business of persuading people to change. I prefer to tell my own experience and trust everyone to make their own choices in life. My experience would not, of course, be the same as yours. In any case I’ve been a meat eater for 45 years with no problem, so if you want to carry on, all credit to you.

So these are some of the things I noticed:

1     Getting more done

I need, on average, one sleep cycle less than I did on a meat diet – about 90 minutes. That’s an extra 23 days to spend annually doing fun stuff, meaningful stuff or just to take an extra long breakfast (vegetarian of course). That’s a lot of gained time! Typically I wake up at 6.00am with no assistance from alarms or external aids.

What would you do with an extra 23 days of waking time every year?

2     More money

I spend less on food.

Vegetables, rice, pulses, pasta and most of the other stuff I buy are cheaper than meat. I eat out more than I should and in restaurants the vegetarian options are cheaper 95% of the time. I haven’t tracked exact numbers (I know I used to be an accountant, but that’s going too far). A very rough estimate is that I save around €15 ($20) a week, which is €780 ($1,040) a year – more during festive holidays!

What would you do with an extra €780 a year?

3     Faster decision making

I eat out quite a lot, mainly from laziness and a lack of enjoyment in day to day cooking. Most meaty eateries have a limited selection of veggie options so choosing what to eat is much faster. The downside is I miss out on variety but the upside is I’ve got more time for chatting.

This might not seem like a big advantage, but personally I never much enjoyed having to choose from a range of delicious sounding meals. I always thought I was missing out on what I didn’t choose and other people always made better choices than I did.

Now I don’t even look at the meat pages in a menu.

4     Better health

My digestion system is cleaner and I feel better physically.

I don’t buy much organic food mainly, for practical reasons, so I do still put chemicals in my body from mass produced veggies. I’m pretty sure, however, that the amount and harmfulness is less than with meat.

5   Moral superiority

I’ve included this point in the interest of honesty, and I’m not at all proud of it.

I have an ego. There, I’ve admitted it.

Becoming vegetarian might not feed my body with everything it needs (I’ve not paid much attention to the nutrition side yet) but it sure does feed my ego. I (as in my ego!) have this idea that being vegetarian is spiritually and morally superior.

Of course, it’s complete bullshit, but I can think of more damaging ways to massage my ego!

There’s also the environmental benefits as apparently meat production is a huge contributor to greenhouse gasses (see this article). Not sure if my ego is getting the massage or my higher self, but it has a feeling of ‘rightness’ about it that eating meat never gave me.

6     Exploring new taste sensations

I’ve been a meat eater for 45 years. I said that already, didn’t I?

For the first half my life I’ve tasted pretty much all the usual meats on offer plus some strange ones (crocodile, tapir, bear). I reckon I’ve worked my way through a fair selection of the meat dishes known to mankind. Some I like and some I even adore.

But there’s a time to stay and a time to move on and there’s a whole new world opening in front of me exploring creative ways to cook veggies and other stuff.

Any other benefits you would add to this list?

And finally …

I’ve been looking for an opportunity to include somewhere a delicious recipe from my dear friend Nadia , over at Happy Lotus. I don’t imagine a better opportunity so I present you with (fanfare!) …

Vegan Bigos

2600881002_3c54671a56This an adaptation of a traditional Polish dish, not usually associated with a vegetarian diet. Nadia insisted I give credit to her husband for the recipe so if you do try it, drop over to her site to say ‘thanks’. Even if you don’t get your apron out and start splashing sauerkraut around, still take a look over there – it’s a great site!

For a serving of 2:

  • 1 jar of Sauerkraut (about 1L or 1 Kg)
  • few Bay Leaves – larger ones are easier to pick out after cooking
  • Italian Seasoning mix (tablespoon)
  • Marjoram (tablespoon)
  • Vegan Hotdogs or Sausages (about 0,5 kg, cut up into 2cm long pieces)
  • Shittake Mushrooms – but can be any kind (couple handfuls if dry or about double that if fresh – soak dry ones in water for about 15 minutes to make them soft)
  • Black Pepper – freshly ground has best flavour (to your taste)
  1. Put the Sauerkraut, Bay Leaves, Italian Seasoning, Marjoram and Black Pepper into a medium or large pot and depending on how wet it is, you may need to add a bit of water (1 cup should do for now). Stir around gently so that the Bay Leaves don’t break up.
  2. Cover the pot and keep it at a low boiling point. Keep an eye on it so that it doesn’t stick to the bottom of the pot and add little water if needed. Stir every few minutes.
  3. While the Sauerkraut is on the stove, cut up the Vegan Hotdogs / Sausages and Mushrooms.
  4. When the Sauerkraut has been on the stove for about 15 minutes, stir in the cut up bits, cover the pot and cook about 10 more minutes on medium, stirring every couple minutes.

NOTES:

Try to get the most simple Sauerkraut you can find – the one we use only contains cabbage and salt with no other ingredients like vinegar etc … If you don’t want a lot of salt, the Sauerkraut can be rinsed in a colander before cooking. Also, this recipe assumes that the Vegan Hotdogs or Sausages are pre-cooked and not frozen. Pick out the Bay Leaves before enjoying :)

Additional suggestion from me (Ian) – you can consider adding around 8 roughly chopped dried plums (take out the stones before chopping!) and half a glass of red wine.

Meat or not?

After nearly 45 of years of happy meat-eating, I’m considering becoming vegetarian. My sister has been vegetarian for most of her life and I’ve teased her a lot about it. She’s now a bit shocked I’m debating it – and so am I.

I’ve been thinking about it for some time now and I’m pretty sure I’ve made up my mind. I reached a point where I realise I need a bit of a push or some encouragement to take the final step. Maybe ‘going public’ is just the boost I need because the more I sit on the fence between ‘meat’ or ‘no-meat’, the more confused I become and the more I continue munching away on bits of dead animal.

I appreciate that you and I might reach the same decision about this (whichever way), and yet have completely different reasons. Let me explain my own reasons, and to say right from the start that I’m approaching this from a personal lifestyle choice, and not a moral choice. Any animal lovers our there -please accept my apologies. You won’t find any of that ‘let’s save cute cuddly farm animals’ here!

The case for ‘NO-MEAT’

  • Nonviolence

Given the theme of this blog, I guess this has to come first. I’m pretty clear that my own approach to nonviolent living is firmly in the realm of human beings and not animals. I have no qualms about killing animals for food or clothing. If I was starving and a live animal crossed my path, I’d be the first to get out a knife and start chasing!

The truth is – I’m not hungry, my survival isn’t threatened and I do have other choices not directly involving animals dying.

There’s another reason. I think it’s not such a huge step to take from killing animals to hurting or killing people. If I focus my attention on all aspects of my life, I hope to have a constant reminder, through my diet, of the wider choice I make in living nonviolently. After all, eating is a daily activity – or in my case somewhere 2 to 4 times daily.

  • Evolution

I’m quite persuaded by something I heard from a clip of Ken Wilber (I forget exactly where). He argued that where he had a choice between eating a more evolved or complex life form (an animal) or a less evolved one (a plant) … he considered it more ‘healthy’ (from a holistic point of view) to eat the lesser life form. I may not have expressed this quite as well as he does but it does hit a nerve.

Before anyone writes to me to argue that a potato could be more evolved than a chicken … let me say that I have no proof about this! I concede that there is a small chance that potatoes are more advanced in ways that I can only guess at. The evidence so far indicates it’s unlikely, but I can’t be 100% sure. This lack of complete certainty is no reason for me to avoid the issue!

  • Environment

Now this is a new idea for me to link meat production with global warming. I’m a bit slow and I guess this idea has been around for a long time. I read this article on the BBC website (so it must be true!) – ‘Shun Meat, says UN climate chief’. It claims that meat production contributes a greater proportion of greenhouse gasses than human transportation. This surprises me … and I’m definitely interested in making my contribution to slowing climate change. I have this sneaky ‘weird logic’ argument that if I choose a life as a vegetarian then I can still fly the same amount and not feel too guilty about it.

  • Health

As I learn to pay more attention to my body, I notice how it reacts when I eat flesh versus those times I’ve eaten no-meat. Especially when I eat pig (no idea why) I feel heavier in my stomach and, frankly, it’s not a great sensation. I suspect it applies to all meat .. just it’s more pronounced with pork, ham and bacon. On those frequent days where I choose ‘no-meat’ already I do notice I feel much better in body and I’d like to have that all the time.

The case for ‘MEAT’

I like the taste.

Hmmmmm!!!!!! Now which path should I choose?

Update January 2009

It finally happened. I’ve ‘come out’ and now am officially – VEGETARIAN.

Read about it here!