Melanie Joy

Beyond Beliefs

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Vegans, vegetarians, and meat eaters can feel like they’re living in different worlds. Many vegans and vegetarians struggle to feel understood and respected in a meat-eating culture, where some of their most pressing concerns and cherished beliefs are invisible, and where they are often met with defensiveness when they try to talk about the issue. They can become frustrated and struggle to feel connected with meat eaters. And meat eaters can feel disconnected from vegans and vegetarians whose beliefs they don’t fully understand and whose frustration may spill over into their interactions. The good news is that relationship and communication breakdown among vegans, vegetarians, and meat eaters is not inevitable, and it is reversible. With the right tools, healthy connections can be cultivated, repaired, and even strengthened.
In Beyond Beliefs, internationally recognized food psychology expert and longtime relationship coach Dr. Melanie Joy provides easy-to-understand, actionable advice so you can:
• Learn the principles and tools for creating healthy relationships
• Understand how to communicate about even the most challenging topics effectively
• Recognize how the psychology of being vegan/vegetarian or of being a meat eater affects your relationships with others, and with yourself
This book is currently unavailable
312 printed pages
Original publication
2017
Publication year
2017
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Quotes

  • Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted2 years ago
    I have chosen to use the term “vegans” to refer to vegetarians and vegans, and “non-vegans” to refer to vegetarians and meat eaters.

    Vegetarians can be in either category because what matters most for the purposes of this book is the way a particular vegetarian identifies or experiences themselves in a relationship. For example, a vegetarian in a relationship with a meat eater will likely identify more with the vegan perspective, while a vegetarian in a relationship with a vegan may identify more with the non-vegan perspective
  • Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted2 years ago
    But because the experience of vegans and vegetarians, who make up only a small minority of the population, has received virtually no attention and is underrepresented in relationship and self-help books, vegans and vegetarians are the most likely readers of this book.
  • Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted2 years ago
    Although vegans are not supporters of the behavior of eating animals and shouldn’t expose themselves to anything that makes them feel unsafe, they can nevertheless try to understand the non-vegans in their lives so that they are able to respect the person beneath the behavior. Because eating animals (rooted in the ideology of carnism) is such a widespread practice, a social norm, it requires a different degree of psychological distancing than do those behaviors that are widely regarded as unethical. With this understanding, vegans may be able to practice a degree of allyship toward the non-vegans in their lives.

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