September 28th, 2009

How to Be a Healthy Vegetarian

harvest: enormous cucumber
Creative Commons License Photo credit: woodleywonderworks

While certainly a topic of perennial and vehement debate, most nutritionists and studies agree that the human consumption of animal meat is part of a balanced diet. The proteins found in animal meat and fat contain all the essential amino acids the body needs to grow, and are often more easily assimilated by the body than proteins found in a vegetarian diet. Dr Weston Price, a leading researcher of traditional diets who conducted vast studies of indigenous tribes in the 1930s, found that animal meat and fat was the singular most important dietary component among the tribes he studied, inhabiting all extremes of conditions, from the coldest to the warmest regions on earth.

However, it is absolutely possible to obtain all the necessary nutritional elements the body needs from a vegetarian diet. The problem is that many people choose to become vegetarians without spending time studying how to be a healthy vegetarian. Because it is harder to obtain all the necessary vitamins, minerals and proteins the body needs from a non-meat diet, it is important that vegetarians have a strong grasp of the right foods they must eat, as well as the quantity and combination of foods, in order to maintain a healthy, balanced nutritional composition.

Healthy vegetarians make a daily effort to monitor their nutritional intake, particularly in regard to certain vitamins that are more easily found in animal meat, most notably Vitamin A, Vitamin D, Calcium, Zinc, Riboflavin, Iron and especially Vitamin B-12. The right combination of foods is required so that the vitamins are activated and ingested in the right amounts. From a Chinese medicine perspective, which highly values a nutritional balance among foods that fall across the dietary spectrum, this article is invaluable in learning to become a healthy vegetarian.

For a more Western perspective, read this article from the Mayo Clinic, or this excellent list of vegetarian nutrition resources from the Vegetarian Resource Group.

About Ryel Kestano

Ryel Kestano is the founder and operator of EcoDater.com, an online green dating site for eco friendly singles. Members include vegetarians, environmentalists, outdoor lovers, eco-travelers, and many other holistic, spiritual singles.
RSS

Subscribe

Green Blog has daily updates and posts from authors around the world. Get our latest posts, commentaries and articles by RSS-feed or by adding your Email to our newsletter. You can also follow Green Blog on Twitter.

Learn More

This blog post has been marked with the following tags. Click on one of the tags to learn more. You can also learn more about this topic by browsing the Food & Health category.

You can also learn more about this topic by browsing the Food & Health category.

Archives

Browse our archive of over +3 years worth of blog posts, articles and commentaries:

Twitter

Twitter

Follow Green Blog on Twitter.

  • imihaiu
    I have to disagree about us being omnivorous and all that. If we had more will power we could understand vegetarians as people who have evolved. As long as we stay healthy, I think it's something noble and purifying both physically and mentally.
    Dan Manson
  • KorbinSigmund
    Since ancient times and until today we have evolved as omnivorous. Our metabolism is designed to use nutrients form a varied diet. Becoming a vegetarian may come with some risks because we are depriving our bodies of some essential nutrients found in meat. Because I do not trust the way the life stock is grown and processed, I chose to become a vegetarian but I use natural supplements from barleans organic to offset the lack of meat nutrients.
  • I used to be a lazy vegetarian, but wound up with anemia that way. Once I stopped being so lazy and started to actually eat the right foods, the anemia cleared up almost immediately. Everyone who eats has to be smart about it, whether vegetarian or not, but vegetarians need to be even a little smarter. Thanks for the post!
  • I don't like to be a vegetarian because our body needs protein which we can get in meats. Yes, being vegetarian is good because you can have a great skin but you will have a lack of energy we should eat meat even for just once a week.
  • agreenlife
    You can get more accessible proteins from other sources - non meat. If you do your research correctly it is quite possible to fulfill all your bodies needs without eating meat - including the need for protein.
  • This is a very informative post. I have read in another article, that there are different kinds of vegans. It think that it is important to know what veggies you are eating and know it's nutritional content. It is also essential to enjoy eating them because food should be appreciated.
  • Sally
    Oooo! I found a good site that is a good "follow up" to this blog entry ... www.vegstarterpack.com. Thanks for the pseudo-scientific proof that being veg is healthy!!!
blog comments powered by Disqus

Comment Guideline

Comments with profanity, personal attacks or objectionable material will be edited or deleted. Feel free to refute someone's points or offer counter arguments, but please do not engage in name calling.

Green Community

If you want to discuss this topic (or any other issue) even further you could always join Enviro Space, our green community. Come and meet new people, discuss various topics and make new friends that share your interests.