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I’m trying to go vegan, but being French I’m having a very difficult time avoiding cheese since I just love it so much. Do you have any advice? --Corine

by Christopher Hassett

I’m trying to go vegan, but being French I’m having a very difficult time avoiding cheese since I just love it so much.  Do you have any advice?  --Corine 

It’s important to have a good understanding why you want to become a vegan.  Is it due to an ethical position on animal rights, the environment?  Is it an issue of spirituality or religion?  Are you merely experimenting with the many benefits that go with being a vegan?  If it’s about experimenting, then I suggest you play with the idea of being predominantly vegan while enjoying without guilt, though perhaps only on special occasions, your favorite cheeses.

This, then, would require little else of you than the willingness to detach from one of the many labels we tend to place on ourselves, in this case, “I am a vegan.”  These labels, by the way, are nothing other than constructed identities, entirely false, that lock us needlessly into rigid or constricting behavioral patterns, where the familiar mantra is “I can’t do this,” or “I can only do that.”  At their worst, they diminish us in the context of our greater and more complex selves, which can’t so easily be summed up in predictable, ready-to-tell stories about who or what we are.  

If, however, your motivation is a moral/ethical one, then you’ll need to figure a way to align your higher ideals with your cravings, which isn’t always so easy -- we all know how powerful cravings can be.  But there are strategies that will help.  I’ll suggest one in particular because it works well for all cravings, especially those more unconscious ones (smoking, for instance).  It goes like this: the moment a craving arises, look directly at it with your mind’s eye.  Find exactly where it’s coming from.  Literally point right at it if you can.  Try to see what it looks like.  What is its color, its shape, its texture?  Be totally present and aware while doing this.  In shining the light of awareness on your craving, you’ll find that it has seemingly vanished, at least for the short-while, until your awareness once again fades.  In the meantime, you’ll have found the momentary power to overcome it, which is a major accomplishment when it comes to cravings.  The good news is, the more often you do this the more effective it becomes in reducing cravings.  Of course, it’s always helpful to have other snacks nearby that might equally sate your desires, for instance -- since you are seeking an easy vegan alternative -- a plate of baby carrots drizzled with fresh lemon juice and lightly seasoned with salt and pepper.  Voilà!  Who needs cheese?  

With a little more effort, you can also make your own vegan cheeses from nuts.  It’s time-consuming but not all that difficult, and some of the recipes can be very good.  Or you can go the easy route and buy non-dairy cheeses in health food stores or even online.  Though I must say, I haven’t found one for purchase that is anywhere near as good as the traditional cheeses we’ve come to love.

With that said, I think it’s important to caution against any movement into veganism that isn’t fully conscious of your body’s fundamental needs, which are complex and interrelated.  A common problem with poorly planned vegan diets is that they tend to be seriously deficient in vitamin B12 and omega 3 fatty acids, the both of which play an important role in long-term mental and physical health.  Other common deficiencies are vitamin D, calcium, iodine, and iron, to name a few. 

So if your plan is to go vegan, my advice would be to do so with an awareness of both its benefits and potential risks, which can be varied and perplexingly different for each individual.  To that end, becoming a vegan can be a great opportunity for understanding the unique and ever-changing needs of your own body.

Christopher Hassett is a mind and body healing practitioner who works with clients around the globe.  Learn more about natural approaches to improved health at www.threeperfections.com.  Do you have a question or concern you’d like Christopher to respond to?  Please email him at: conversations@threeperfections.com.  

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Jessica E. Davis (Editor) May 24, 2013 at 04:58 pm
Hi Kim, Can you edit your announcement about the garage sale to include the time and location?Read More Thanks!
Marshall Thompson May 25, 2013 at 12:12 pm
Amen! Love motorcycles, hate noisy, illegal modified exhaust systems.
No More Secrets Beach App
Max May 25, 2013 at 11:21 pm
@hellwood. Regarding your last question, I would speculate that the trashing is independent ofRead More one's city of residence. But, to specifically address your question, I would think that a large fraction of the kids that play here in Malibu are local to the area (say, about 50%). If you look at the baseball/soccer fields after the games, I bet that you will see many items of trash (plastic wrappers, peanut shells, plastic bottles, etc.). And, if you look under the grandstands, you will also see trash. It really doesn't matter where the people who litter the place happen to live; this behavior is simply unacceptable. People are people. In my case, I make it my personal responsibility not to litter anywhere, be it in Malibu, outside Malibu, the tables at the Colony Market, the beaches, parking lots, etc. It's simply the right thing to do. And, I'm sure that you feel the same way also. Let's hope that more people and their kids follow the same example.
hellwood May 25, 2013 at 06:37 pm
Max, You have told this story once before. If I had to guess, I would say that meeting a MalibuRead More resident that ignorant is possibly a one in a million chance. People in general tend to take a lot of pride in the city they live in, no matter how undesirable it may be to a visitor. Anybody who thinks throwing trash all over the place is cool should volunteer one day a year for community service or be forced to watch some documentaries of our not so distant future. Do you really think that the local residents are the ones trashing this place?
Max May 23, 2013 at 01:54 pm
@hellwood. What you say is true also. Based on your assessment, all sports and visitors to ourRead More parks should be prohibited. Why? After every sporting event, and, after most weekends, I see all forms of trash littered throughout the park, the baseball fields, the parking lots, etc. And, all this in the PRESENCE of trash containers. When I approached a parent that littering is not only illegal; and, that birds mistake pieces of plastic as food which, as a result, kill them as well as their babies; and, that peanut shells attract rodents; and, also that allowing their kids (and, the parents) to litter is NOT a way to instill good habits amongst the children, I was told, "That's why we pay taxes...so that the city workers can clean up this mess." Could it be that some of these parents also own beach homes?
M Stanley May 21, 2013 at 06:53 pm
Still no official spokesperson for CA State Parks? Not one person that speaks on behalf of theRead More project?? A REAL person who is paid to present facts, who got the contract to do the outreach that was in the budget documentation? Reach Out whoever you are, earn that pay!!!
Sulah cat May 21, 2013 at 06:36 pm
OK. Jamie, here's the deal. The money spent to restore the lagoon came from a pot of bond moneyRead More (voter approved) that was intended to be used ONLY for the maintenance of wetlands here in the state. If that money had not been spent here in Malibu it would have been spent elsewhere in the state on some other wetland. Any other use is a moot point. If you felt you were attacked it was only because you did seem a little obtuse. You first made the hot rod reference. Personally, I'm more into flat sixes than flat heads. Peace and have a good one. Puuuuuuuuuuuuuur.
JamieDixon May 21, 2013 at 04:19 pm
Sulah cat, My posts have demonstrated my belief that the “Malibu Lagoon RestorationRead More Project” is a name that may have been created in order to mislead people into thinking it that the project would be a worthwhile public expense. The idea of restoring the Lagoon isn’t necessarily a bad idea. That being said, I believe the money spent to alter the Lagoon could have been spent in many other ways that would have served the public better. Why do you attack me personally? First, you say I’m not a car guy and then you accuse me being into flat head Fords? Fords, really? Sincerely yours,
Max May 21, 2013 at 10:22 am
Your worst nightmare scenario: I predict that you’d experience brain freeze if you wereRead More having a procedure right here in Malibu at your friendly gastroenterologist’s place just as a smoke alarm went off in his office. You’d be a real quandary, namely, “When, what, where and how to evacuate?” In this case, the Santa Ana winds would blow from inside, as well as outside, the doctor’s office, in which case, both you and the good doc would evacuate pell-mell (or, should I say, pell-smell?). In anticipation of this high-pressure scenario, perhaps it’s in your best interest to hop onto the I-80 and (re) evacuate the 2831.67 miles back East, from whence you came, to avoid this potential sensory overload occurrence. In the meantime, should we get hit with another fire (G-d forbid), our Firefighter heroes, upon entering your home, would exclaim on their megaphone, "OK everyone, if you follow my commands and remain calm, everyone will be safe. Therefore, in accordance with International Red Cross protocol and common-sense guidelines, please make way for Burt, the children, the woman, the elderly and, finally, able-bodied men, to evacuate, in that order!"
David Armstead May 20, 2013 at 01:26 pm
the People of Malibu better wake up! this issue with Paradise Cove is only going to get worse. TheRead More city and Paradise Cove are working on an expansion of the parking there. See the link to a recent meeting at the city that is the beginning of Paradise coves expansion. It is very quiet and no one knows but look at the plan. Currently Paradise Cove does not have the proper Zoning to be doing what they do down there. The city thinks by letting them expand that it will get people off the highway so they are in favor but in reality it only puts more money into the pockets of Paradise Cove and people will still park on PCH and Paradise Cove will continue to sends drunks out onto the road to endanger all of us. Speak up! http://www.malibucity.org/download/index.cfm/fuseaction/download/cid/20457/
webecool May 20, 2013 at 03:26 pm
I ate lunch Friday at the Adamson House lawn and nearly 'chuncked out' with the smell of sewage.Read More Uggggg! It was worse than the biggest sewage spill that Paradise Cove ever had in the 15 years living there. I'm not a scientist like everyone else who has been arguing about this project but I know the smell of 8hit when I smell it. Something is seriously wrong. I am a mechanical engineer and it seems to me that all the scientists and smart designers have not taken into account any fluid dynamics. Water flows in, water flows out....water flows through. How hard is that? It seems to me they have designed what is called turbulence!
steve dunn May 19, 2013 at 04:43 pm
All I get on this blog is an ad for verizon
Jessica E. Davis (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 03:51 pm
Love that you are using the message board to ask this question. Does any one have any ideas?
M Stanley May 16, 2013 at 01:33 pm
Thank you for the information Jessica!
Jessica E. Davis (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 05:54 pm
Also, first make sure you are signed in, and if you can't go to the reset password link here:Read More http://malibu.patch.com/forgot_password.
Max May 15, 2013 at 11:03 am
Dear Phil (re: Burt's column), I can’t quite put my finger on it, but, I sense anRead More Eggs-itential undertone to all this. Does the chicken Egg-ist on behalf of the egg or vice versa? Eggs-perience will reveal the truth. To be complete, I must rehash Camus’ “The Play-egg.” Yet, as I recall, in the Book of Eggs-odous, there wasn’t a single Play-egg, but ten of them… so many, in fact, that it seems to many readers to be literally a Dozen Play-eggs. But, then again, I’m not very religious. In fact, many of my colleagues take me for an Egg-nostic. But, they are such Hard-boiled fanatics, that, in fact, their peers surmise they boarder on Egg-lectic. But, as Burt always says in da ‘hood, “Om-letting them be what they want to be.” We, however, have one on Burt: Rumor has it that he fell of the Vegan and had an egg salad… to which he Eggs-claims, “It was a serving of ‘Egg Beaters,’ you Egg-Heads!!”
Jessica E. Davis (Editor) May 14, 2013 at 10:27 pm
From my family: McCluckens
Susan Tellem May 14, 2013 at 07:35 pm
Call them Nuggets, Fricassee, Kiev, Marsala and Enchilada because that's what chickens end up as onRead More the dinner plate. Just sayin'.