Thursday, November 20, 2014

Educate Yourself

I'm sure you've heard the saying, "ignorance is bliss." When I went off on my own to college at 16 years old, I felt like I was being forced to grow up much faster than my peers back at high school. During this time, when I no longer was surrounded by people my age every day, I started to realize that ignorance wasn't going to get me anywhere in life, and that educating myself was the most empowering thing I could do to achieve my goals. This was when I really started questioning society and the world around me. This is what really led to my decision of becoming a vegan.

I love researching just about any topic that sparks my interest, so I researched a lot about vegetarianism, and then veganism, when I decided to change my lifestyle. One thing that I found most interesting about my research, was when I was with a family member and saw them eating, say, a hot dog, and I would ask them if they knew what was in it. They would immediately say something like, "No! Don't tell me, I don't want to know!" This was most interesting to me because I used to think the exact same thing! What is it about us as humans that make us want to be ignorant about the things that affect us in our every day lives? With food in particular, why would we want to eat things that we know are made of ingredients that are ironically unappetizing? Why do we choose to ignore the facts without questioning our role in the situation first? I saw the same ignorance to food in my family's reactions that I am trying to escape every day.

Educating yourself can be extremely empowering, especially when you find something the majority of society believes in, and you realize that it might just be ignorance and dismissal of the facts that keep us from making a difference. Often times I even question if social media is good for our health? Or if we should really be eating foods that we know are bad for us, such as chocolate cake? It is easy for us to be ignorant to the fact that we may be better off as a society if we only stepped away from the things that we all secretly know aren't good for us, just because they bring us pleasure. I think it really all comes down to perspective, and though I am not ready to give up vegan chocolate cake anytime soon, it definitely is something to think about.

CW

Educate yourself! Learn how hot dogs are really made (the phrase "meat batter" makes me cringe!):

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

I'm A Poet, Now You Know It

Three months ago, I started taking a college poetry class. Though I've been writing fiction stories since the second grade, I found writing poetry to be very challenging. However, I've also found that writing about what you are passionate about always makes for a better story, or in this case, poem. Since I am passionate about standing up against animal cruelty, I wrote a poem about exactly that. 

We live in a society with a continuous cycle of breeding animals, and then committing mass murders. Though it may be an extreme comparison, these mass murders of animals that end in lines or piles of bodies are exactly what happened during the Holocaust. Think about it. We see old pictures of naked human corpses in piles from concentration camps. We can also search the web and find pictures of animal corpses in piles from slaughter houses. Is there really a significant difference between what the names "concentration camp," and "slaughter house" really mean? I do understand the difference between murdering humans and murdering animals, but really, is there a difference? These ideas are ones that I explored in my spoken word poem below.  

Do You Ever Question Society?
By Caileigh Wasmer 

The world’s sanity
was buried
somewhere underneath those piles
of human bodies
when a man with a mustache
made us believe
there were superiors and inferiors
and yet,

we still
throw bodies into piles
and call it
humane
without really
calling it anything
and you may say

there is a difference between
the slaughtering of
man and animal
that leaves enough room for the
Earth
and the moon
and all the stars
and I might agree

because I see the difference
between piles of men
and piles of pigs,
but-
I see no difference.

We say they are not capable of feeling
the same way we are capable of feeling
but we watch them,
we watch them as they
squirm,
eyes pleading,
muffled squealing,
as we
gag,
throw,
stab,
tear,
chain,
electrocute,
snap their necks,
bullets through their brain.

we rip out their insides
we grind up their bodies
we put them in casing
we grill them
we put them between bread
which goes between our lips
as we watch fireworks above our heads as
we celebrate

our freedom

with the bodies of what used to be fellow
living earthbound beings
stuck between
our teeth.

You cannot look me in the eyes and tell me
this is the most compassionate way to exist.
I dare you to look me in the eyes and say

they are the animals.


I was able to share this poem with a high school English class when I went to teach them poetry with my professor and three others honors students a couple weeks ago. The reaction I got from them was satisfying as a new poet. My professor said she loved the poem, a fellow honors student of mine who is the president of the college poetry club said she started tearing up, and another honors student said if he wasn't already a vegetarian, he would have been convinced that he should be after hearing me recite my poem. Though these were nice things to say, I realized that it wasn't my actual writing that made them react in such a powerful way. I myself am still very much a novice when it comes to writing poetry. In fact, it wasn't even the way that I emphasized my points through spoken word, which is a more powerful form of poetry in itself. My point is that it was the content, the cold hard facts and the harsh comparison to the Holocaust that made people react. It is so easy to forget that what we are putting into our bodies for our own pleasure was actually once a living being that was murdered in a way we would never wish on our greatest enemy. It is interesting to me that when this is brought to peoples' attention, they react in such an emotional way. I've learned to love poetry, especially spoken word, and I hope someday my poetry about animal cruelty will change someone's point of view.

CW

Thursday, November 6, 2014

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

Even before I became a vegetarian over one year ago, I was vaguely aware of PETA, perhaps the most popular organization that stands up for animal rights. PETA is a great source of support and encouragement for those who are, or want to become, non-meat eaters, specifically through their website. On PETA's website, PETA.org, you have access to videos, blogs, current issues, lifestyle tips, shopping, ongoing investigations, and social media. You can also donate to their causes, or sign yourself up to volunteer. Personally, I could spend hours exploring their website- and I did! Here are a few great features that I found:

1. If you are new to vegetarianism, or are simply curious about animal rights, a great source of information is The PETA Practical Guide to Animal Rights by PETA's President, Ingrid E. Newkirk. There are hundreds of tips, stories, and resources that allow you to educate yourself on animal cruelty in America and around the world.

2. The PETA website is a great source of videos that are heart-wrenching and also highly educational about animal cruelty. Below is a video I found as an example of the footage PETA puts on their website to further raise awareness of animal cruelty and to prove that this does happen. If you do not wish to see "Sheep Punched, Stomped on, Cut for Wool," do not watch this video: 



3. Along with the above video, PETA started a trending hashtag on Twitter, #WoolFreeWinter, to stop the abuse of sheep for wool. This is only a part of their movement to stop the abuse of sheep. Other ways to get involved they suggest are to write a letter to your local newspaper to educate people about animal abuse regarding wool for this upcoming winter, and to send a copy of your letter to ATeam@PETA.org, to write to your favorite fashion magazine on the same issue, Text SHEEP to 73822 to tell Ralph Lauren to stop selling wool, and share information from PETA's wool investigation on your social media sites. There are a plethora of fun ways to get involved in different causes like this one on the PETA website.

4. There are links to many great blog postings from PETA. One that I found particularly interesting was a blog entitled, "PETA Tells Kids, 'Let Everyone Be With Their Family This Thanksgiving.'" The blog post was about informing children in a kid-friendly way that animal babies belong to their mothers, who are eaten on Thanksgiving. By expressing this fact to children, who are born with a natural empathy for animals, PETA is showing parents how to talk to their children about animal rights if they wish to do so. There are also links to great vegetarian dishes for Thanksgiving. 

5. There are many issues centered around animal rights around the world today. One great way that PETA advertises the awareness of these issues is by selling clothing and merchandise whose profits circulate back into PETA's life-saving animal projects around the world. PETA also works with other companies who support animal rights.

PETA.org is a great website that provides a great amount of information and resources that allow you to educate yourself about animal cruelty. The site is very easy to explore, and so much new content is posted daily. This website opened my eyes to the enormity of the vegetarian community, and I was happy to see so many people who are older than myself who have dedicated their whole lives to saving animals and raising awareness on issues I never knew existed. The PETA community is a great community.

CW