| 5 years ago :: Aug 25, 2008 - 8:52PM #1 | |
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Hey,
I am a vegetarian. Someone told me once that this is more a female spirituality practice as if it somehow makes me unmanly. What do you all think about this? I figure that the Buddha was a vegetarian, and let's not forget Kwai Chang Cain and Mr. Spock. All kidding aside, is vegetarianism a valid path for a man? It seems to work for me. Dave |
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| 5 years ago :: Aug 26, 2008 - 2:42PM #2 | |
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Many Hindus and Seventh Day Adventists are vegetarians for religious reasons. And half of them are men.
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| 5 years ago :: Aug 26, 2008 - 2:42PM #3 | |
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Many Hindus and Seventh Day Adventists are vegetarians for religious reasons. And half of them are men.
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| 5 years ago :: Aug 27, 2008 - 2:05PM #4 | |
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| 5 years ago :: Nov 14, 2008 - 7:56PM #5 | |
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Dave Bear: Do YOUR thing, man! I haven't evolved THIS far in my life by listening to what "everyone else" says. I am a diabetic; and veggies are a BIG part of my daily menu. I do eat some meat, but THAT does NOT make me "more of a man". LOL. I am a man, period. As long as you are happy that's all that REALLY matters.
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| 5 years ago :: Nov 15, 2008 - 9:35AM #6 | |
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I would strongly disagree. I wanted to say "it's a bunch of crap," but I don't think Beliefnet would go along with that kind of assessment. There is a certain segment of feminism which says stuff like this in trying to assign all negative traits to men and positive traits to women. So a "real man" has to become more like a "woman." I've eaten meat most of my life, but I struggle to be vegetarian, and mostly I succeed.
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| 5 years ago :: Nov 16, 2008 - 3:49PM #7 | |
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That is exactly my point. Although I acknowledge that men's spirituality and women's takes somewhat different forms, it is still human spirituality. Further, I detest it when some feminists try to define all good traits as feminine and all bad traits as masculine. On another forum I was accused of abusing women because I had responded to someone who was trashing all men . She had said that men were subhuman as we were abusers by nature. In fairness to her, it was pretty clear from her posts that she had been raped. I meant to assure her that I was not her enemy. However, another man told me I was being dishonest because men are abusive to women everyday. He accused me of a lack of self-awareness. He started apologizing to women for being a man, and then he challenged the rest of us men to apologize too. I was really angry. I felt that by twisting the language to say I had abused when I hadn't, desensitized people to what real abuse like rape, etc. is about. I got limited support on that forum. However, the woman in question and I reached something of a peace as she told me it must seem unfair to be branded as evil when I was a good man. Anyway, to get back to vegetarianism: It didn't last very long and I fell off the wagon. I am back to savoring the taste of meat.
Dave |
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| 5 years ago :: Nov 16, 2008 - 3:49PM #8 | |
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That is exactly my point. Although I acknowledge that men's spirituality and women's takes somewhat different forms, it is still human spirituality. Further, I detest it when some feminists try to define all good traits as feminine and all bad traits as masculine. On another forum I was accused of abusing women because I had responded to someone who was trashing all men . She had said that men were subhuman as we were abusers by nature. In fairness to her, it was pretty clear from her posts that she had been raped. I meant to assure her that I was not her enemy. However, another man told me I was being dishonest because men are abusive to women everyday. He accused me of a lack of self-awareness. He started apologizing to women for being a man, and then he challenged the rest of us men to apologize too. I was really angry. I felt that by twisting the language to say I had abused when I hadn't, desensitized people to what real abuse like rape, etc. is about. I got limited support on that forum. However, the woman in question and I reached something of a peace as she told me it must seem unfair to be branded as evil when I was a good man. Anyway, to get back to vegetarianism: It didn't last very long and I fell off the wagon. I am back to savoring the taste of meat.
Dave |
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| 5 years ago :: Nov 17, 2008 - 3:54PM #9 | |
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| 5 years ago :: Aug 25, 2008 - 9:56PM #10 | |
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I'm sorry perhaps it is nothing more than semantics, perhaps it is indeed more. There is nothing unmanly in being a vegetarian, I'm not so sure that being a vegetarian is necessarily a spiritual path, however. It seems to me when one wishes to mix spirituality in one is more likely to be talking about a Vegan. But perhaps that simply reflects my own understanding. None the less being vegetarian or Vegan doesn't seem unmanly to me for what that might be worth.
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