Mine is not to exhibit my beliefs, but to inhabit them.

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I am participating in #Trust30, an online initiative and 30-day writing challenge that encourages you to look within and trust yourself.

Prompt #3: It is easy in the world to live after the world’s opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude. – Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance

The world is powered by passionate people, powerful ideas, and fearless action. What’s one strong belief you possess that isn’t shared by your closest friends or family? What inspires this belief, and what have you done to actively live it?

(Prompt by Buster Benson)

_____

Katina gave birth in a closet, then tried to hide her babies to keep them safe. She mourned their leaving for weeks when that time came.

Lasso opened kitchen cabinet doors after my father died, looking for him.

Mason was swept up in a tornado last month in Alabama and crawled home three weeks later with two broken legs to be reunited with his family. He found them.

SimSim sits next to Emma every time she is sick. She uncharacteristically leapt from the front porch into Emma's arms this past weekend after Emma's horse, Matty, died.

Matty was an individual being with a personality.

Animals know. They know their young, they know when we are sick. They know who their family is. They know when tsunamis are about to hit. They save each other and when they can't, they sit quietly near their dead partners, mourning them. They know fear.

I believe animals have feelings, love their young, and hurt greatly when we murder them for food. And not just domesticated animals, but all animals.

That is why I’ve been a vegetarian since 1976. I wouldn't eat my dog, Blue, and I won't eat a pig whose name I don't know, who doesn't have a name. I worry about cows who have to live outside in the cold.

My decision not to eat meat was a moral decision–would I murder another living being to eat the veins, the tendons, the flesh of that animal? Would I support an industry that tortures animals and kills them in unthinkably inhumane circumstances? Would I support an industry that is enviromentally devastating? Would I hold myself so far above animals that I was guilty of speciesism?

No, no, no, and no.

Many of my friends and family don't share this belief, though I have raised my two children to be vegetarian in a world that is far more tolerant to this choice than it was in 1976. I am clear about my choice, and yet cognizant that everyone makes their own decisions, the ones that are right for them at that moment in time.

Mine is not to exhibit my choices and impose them, but to inhabit my beliefs. I write about them, I talk about them, and I live by them.

I still demonstrate some vestiges of speciesism, being not yet 100% vegan. That will come.

I don't intentionally kill bugs. I don't kill animals and eat them. I don't kill.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

3 comments to " Mine is not to exhibit my beliefs, but to inhabit them. "
  • Kat

    Applause, applause!! As one with a vegan daughter (and son-in-law), I am in awe of those who can make that work. As one who is dairy allergic, I’m frustrated that it’s not easier for me. I guess it’s one of those things you should work harder for. Food for thought.

  • Wonderful post. I still eat fish but gave up land animals in 1985 – I can’t tell you how happy I was when Morningstar went main stream! I’ve been vegan on and off (most memorably while working in Southern Louisiana one year – thank goodness for baked potatos!). Fish are getting crossed off my okay to eat list one at a time. It is a long process. I am grateful to them for their sustenance. I have even cut waaaaaaaaay back on blue crabs and never, ever ever eat the females. A bit at a time. And I so understand the thinking behind it all!

  • last night my partner and I attended a feast for vegetarians at a colleagues home, where they used their recently completed wood-fired pizza oven to create a bounty of delicious veggie pizzas

    those invited were all vegetarian and it was an interesting conversation about how or why each person became one

    health
    animal rights
    religious beliefs
    sustainability
    partners or kids choices

    it always astounds me when carnivores say, “but what do you eat?”

    last night was a treat, being able to eat everything, not just a limited selection, or what I brought myself

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