How to Become Vegan - Steve Pavlina

How to Become Vegan

By Steve Pavlina

  • Release Date: 2015-11-29
  • Genre: Health & Fitness
4 Score: 4 (From 133 Ratings)

Book Synopsis

In How to Become Vegan, New York Times bestselling author Steve Pavlina explains the long-term benefits he's experienced over the last 18 years of leading a vegan lifestyle — not only the physical advantages, but the mental clarity and the incredible boost in energy that happened once he managed to go vegan past 30 days.

Chapter 1: How to Transition to Vegan Foods
Chapter 2: Increasing Your Food Intelligence
Chapter 3: Restoring Conscious Choice
Chapter 4: Eat Vegan on a Budget
Chapter 5: Eat Vegan While Traveling
Chapter 6: Be Unapologetically Vegan
Chapter 7: Legal Discrimination
Chapter 8: Eating Vegan Is Just the Beginning
Chapter 9: Honour Your True Feelings
Chapter 10: Dealing with Animal Eaters
Chapter 11: Vegan Romance
Chapter 12: Go Fully Vegan
Chapter 13: Create Your Own Vegan Rituals

EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW: Be Unapologetically Vegan

New vegans are often pretty socially timid when it comes to getting their needs met. Some of them act like they should apologize for inconveniencing other people, as if it’s an unfair burden to help someone who doesn’t want to slaughter animals for food.

I suggest you dump that attitude. Being vegan is awesome. You need never apologize for it. By going vegan, you’ve made a decision that’s all around better for everyone. Have no doubt about that.

Don't buy into the brainwashing that tells you you’re a high-maintenance social outcast. Don’t marginalize yourself. You’ve made an intelligent choice. You’re not a social outcast. You’re a leader. Act like one.

Many vegans adopt the mindset that being vegan puts them on the fringes of society. The thinking is that when you go vegan, you’re no longer a mainstream person. You’re weird, different, and unusual. You’re not like everyone else.

If you’ve bought into that kind of thinking, you’ve inadvertently swallowed some propaganda from the animal products industries. They devote part of their marketing budgets, both directly and through trade associations, to encourage people to marginalize vegans in this way. Why? Because veganism is a threat to their profits. So they manipulate social pressures to try to prevent more people from wanting to go that route.

It’s unfortunate that vegans buy into this kind of thinking too. I’ve certainly fallen for it at times.

Instead of seeing yourself as an outcast, get aligned with the truth. By going vegan you’ve made serious progress in improving your lifestyle, not just for your own benefit but for the benefit of animals, other people, and the world as a whole. This isn’t outcast behavior. This is leadership, plain and simple.

By graduating to veganism, you’ve put yourself at the top of the human pyramid in terms of alignment with intelligent, ethics, and conscious growth. Feel good about what you’ve accomplished, and keep learning, growing, and improving.

This isn’t a mindset that stems from arrogance or conceit. It stems from caring. Isn’t it obvious that as a vegan, you’re behaving in a more caring and compassionate way towards the planet? It’s it obvious that the world would be greatly improved if more people followed suit? Let the obviousness of that sink in.

Tags in Health & Fitness : How to Become Vegan Steve Pavlina ebook , How to Become Vegan Steve Pavlina epub , How to Become Vegan Steve Pavlina AUDIOBOOK , How to Become Vegan by Steve Pavlina ePub (.epub) , How to Become Vegan book review , Health & Fitness

Latest Impressions

  • Another Vegan with a Nasty attitude

    1
    By )/Ann
    The cult mentality of most vegans is truly sickening. I was shocked by the author's condescending tone toward everyone who isn't vegan. This book should not be classified as informative. It's filled with opinions and packed with insults. An absolute waste of time.
  • Opinion writing

    1
    By Jennsi4ever
    Honestly, I was hoping for a more informative read. One of the worst self help books in general. Most all the author’s writing was full of opinions. Not a lot of facts at all. Also, the author was completely, emotionally driven in his claims. A serious vegan snob, sorry to say. This book read more like his self diary of how he felt anything non-vegan was evil. I really hope the next book I find on how to be vegan will be fact based. -How to be vegan, not how to be elite.
  • Obnoxious and minimally informative

    1
    By iggynutwood
    I didn’t realize horses could get so high, but this author is UP there. The book doesn’t give you much information other than a sense that Steve feels morally superior to most. Almost nothing about “nutrition” is discussed. Mostly just a rant about WHY you should be vegan rather than functional information on HOW to be. Feels more like he cares about people not eating “animal flesh” than helping anyone successfully replace it. He spends more time discussing why he doesn’t need to explain to anyone where he gets his protein from, than actually explaining where he gets his protein from. As someone that’s looking for data and information on how to make the jump, this book felt more like an indoctrination into a cult than anything practical.
  • Slanted but Good

    3
    By Legendlime
    I one day hope to become vegan. This was the first book I read to begin the process. I felt the author was really hard towards meat eater. It all a choice and they have one too.
  • Awesome

    5
    By JeezyTaughtMeee
    Awesome book Steve, a def helping my transition
  • How to be Vegan

    5
    By NSU ACNP
    A great way to prepare oneself for the amazing transition to becoming vegan. Glad I read it!
  • Condescending and Poorly Written

    1
    By cedwardbear
    As someone who is actually trying to find information on becoming a vegan, this book was very disappointing. All arguments were opinion-based and there were no references of actual fact from actual sources. My dissatisfaction is not because I believe the author's argument to be false, but it would have been nice to see empirical evidence to support the claims. As condescending as the author's tone was, I would expect it to be written beyond the level of a high school English student; sadly, this was not the case.