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Herbie of the Week: Tara (She No Longer Suffers From GI Issues or Depression + 45lbs GONE!)

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Meet our Herbie of the Week: Tara!

Tara once suffered from a laundry list of health issues including headaches, depression, chronic constipation, fatigue, ulcers, sinus infections, and severe PMS symptoms as well as high cholesterol and blood pressure. The most debilitating, however, was her gastrointestinal problem.

Hoping to find an alternate solution to fix her ailments, Tara visited a gastroenterologist, who recommended a diet with little to no animal products and high in unprocessed fruits and vegetables.

She immediately adopted a vegetarian diet, but unfortunately her GI issues didn’t go away. That’s when a co-worker told Tara about “Forks Over Knives“, which led her to adopting a plant-based diet — and the results are AMAZING!

Since making the switch, Tara has lost 45lbs, no longer suffers from depression, fatigue, severe PMS symptoms or GI problems!

Get ready to be inspired by reading Tara’s story!

I grew up on a typical southern diet of extensive meat quantities served with fried and starchy sides. I was always able to maintain a healthy weight despite my poor diet thanks in large part to my gymnastics and cheering routines throughout my middle and high school years. It wasn’t until after the birth of my daughter 6 years ago that I struggled to with my weight as well as my overall health.

Like many others, I was astonished when the weight crept on as I was eating the same way I had my whole life. I began to try the same fad diets many of my coworkers and friends were doing. I’d get excited as soon as I dropped 20 pounds, only to find myself discouraged at my inability to keep the weight off.

My most successful attempt was utilizing the Weight Watchers program, which helped me to learn to monitor the nutrition of the foods I was consuming. I was able lose a total of 30 pounds with this program in 2009. That was also the year I began taking college courses to become a teacher. The stressful load of my courses combined with my job and family caused me to lose sight of my health goals and the weight quickly came back on. By the beginning of Summer 2010, I had hit an all time high of nearly 200 pounds on my small 5’3” frame. Sadly, I carried this weight around for an extensive period of time manipulating myself into thinking that I was genuinely happier being heavier.

Had my weight been my only concern, I’m not certain that I would have been motivated to seek medical help. However, I had a plethora of ailments causing me a great deal of dissatisfaction in my life. I had begun suffering from daily headaches, depression, fatigue, ulcers, frequent sinus infections, and severe PMS symptoms. The most debilitating of my health issues was my debilitating gastrointestinal problem. Chronic constipation was impacting my work, school, and home life. I was constantly running to the drug store for a quick fix only to find myself in pain a short time later.

My PCP ran my blood work and found that my cholesterol and blood pressure were high but that I had no thyroid problems. She recommended an expensive shake diet (for which I’m sure she got a kick back) as well as an antidepressant. Discouraged with the thought of taking more pills, I began to do some research of my own in hopes of finding an alternative solution to my health problems. I made an appointment with a gastroenterologist. I anticipated he would likely run extensive and expensive tests to find the cause of my digestive issues. To my surprise, after reviewing my health history and blood work, he simply recommended a diet with little to no animal products and high in unprocessed fruits and vegetables (he didn’t use the specific term plant-based diet). “That’s it?”, I thought. “Well, changing my diet is certainly less expensive than medicinal route my PCP recommended, why not give it a try?”

I quickly and easily dropped 25 pounds just from switching to a vegetarian diet alone. I was inspired with the surprising ease of being able to maintain this lifestyle and that I was able to provide foods my entire family could enjoy. Unfortunately, I was still suffering from the same GI issues. A coworker recommended that I check out a video that changed her life, “Forks Over Knives“. Wow! It was like someone had flipped a switch in terms of how I viewed health! I was determined to learn more about the plant-based lifestyle. I immersed myself in readings like Dr. Fuhrman’s “Eat to Live” and “The China Study“. I also joined several online groups for best practices and support.

I initially decided to follow Dr. Fuhrman’s “Eat to Live” plan. Following an intense plant-based plan, I was able to drop 15 more pounds. Though my weight loss plateaued, I continued to follow a plant-based lifestyle, allowing myself the occasional cheats (bean and cheese tacos are my guilty pleasure). I find that having the online support, such as the Happy Herbivore Facebook page, and continuing to try to new recipes from plant-based cookbooks has been a critical part of my success.

Since going plant-based I have dropped a total of 45 pounds! I do still struggle if there are weeks where I haven’t planned my meals appropriately or packed quick and easy snacks. Going to the farmer’s market is now one of my favorite weekly activities and I’m ecstatic about the mobile produce truck San Antonio has now, called Truckin’ Tomato, making local organic produce more accessible. I also joined a gym and am enjoying toning muscles that haven’t been used in quite a while! My husband, the devout omni, is actually coming around after seeing the long-term benefits a plant-based lifestyle offers.

I now haven’t had a sinus infection in two years and no longer suffer from depression or fatigue. The severe PMS symptoms are long gone as well as the gastrointestinal issues! I love that Lindsay always talks about progress instead of perfection. There are definitely hectic weeks where I have set backs, but I am always reassured that I can get back in the saddle. It has taken a few years of practice, but I think I am beginning to find a balanced routine of incorporating being plant-based into my crazy life.

I love wowing friends and family with delicious WFPB recipes and telling people of the obstacles this lifestyle has helped me overcome. One of my proudest moments was when my 6 year old daughter declared herself an herbivore on her “All About Me” poster for school! It inspires me that my family and I are creating new familial customs and leading both a more nutritious and ethical lifestyle. I would like to genuinely thank Lindsay and all the other herbies for continuing to be a source of valuable information and beacons of support and reassurance in my life.

Thank you so much for sharing your incredible story with us, Tara!

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A Vegan Taste of Asia (Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan)

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If you follow me on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, you know I’ve spent the last few weeks in Asia 🙂

After writing Vegan in Europe, I decided I needed to explore a new continent 🙂

(I suppose I technically went to Asia when I stayed in Istanbul, but that doesn’t really count, right?!)

Although there are so many places we want to see in Asia (The Great Wall is on my bucket list!! As well as the elephant sanctuary in Thailand–next! Plus INDIA!), I knew we had to start somewhere and opted to do a little… sampling.

We also did something out of character for us: We went on a cruise!

From the moment I started HH, I didn’t know how I’d ever take a day off (the internet is 24/7!) let alone go somewhere without internet. (I’ve blogged before about how being unplugged for 24 hours was terrifying and one of the hardest things I ever did).

Going on this cruise was a huge victory lap. Not just a celebration that I’d finished writing books (My new cookbook Holidays & Gatherings has just arrived! and the enhanced print version of the Guide will be here in May!) but that I (finally!) have a firm grip on my OCD + overcame my paralyzing fear, anxiety, and depression. Woo!

The biggest lesson for me has been the power in small steps. (Yaknow, progress not perfection!) That 24-hour challenge changed my destiny. It seems so insignificant, but it put me on the road to recovery. (Of course I had no idea it would be so monumental at the time.) I built on that, brick by brick. I took more days off. I put more trust and faith in my amazing team (Carly & Jamee, you are the BEST EVER! I mean it!!), I took more days off and started letting go.

A little internet challenge did what thousands of dollars in therapy could not!

It was not about talking about it, thinking about it, or wanting it anymore. It was about DOING it. Doing whatever I can, right now, and building on that.

PROGRESS NOT PERFECTION.

But enough about me 🙂 Let’s talk about the FOOD in ASIA!

Although I took and studied a good bit of Japanese before our trip and have fun speaking it, I’m totally illiterate. I can’t read Japanese… AND I’m totally clueless when it comes to Chinese, Vietnamese, etc.

This little issue, plus the fact there isn’t a bus/train system in Asia (like Eurorail in Europe) and flying around between places can be quirky (if not expensive) we thought traveling by boat seemed easiest.

I also had a lot of concerns about eating — how would I communicate my needs!? Is there fish sauce in EVERYTHING!? I liked the idea of always knowing a salad bar was available and waiting for me 🙂

As such, we didn’t eat out a lot, and I’ll do another post next week on my cruise and what I ate on the ship, but I do think I was more worried than I should have been.

While there is a huge language barrier for the English-speaker in Asia, I’ve found vegetarian was widely understood, and it’s understood as what we call “vegan” or “strict vegetarian.”

Many Asians are Buddhists, and many Buddhists are strict vegetarians, which means there are both ample options and a wide understanding of this dietary restriction.

For example, Scott and I signed up for two day-long tour excursions, both that included lunch. We assumed lunch would be a wash for us, but both times the tour guide started by saying “are there vegetarians on the bus?” (We also weren’t the only ones! yay!)

Fresh produce markets are everywhere and cultural. You can also find lots of people selling fresh fruits on the street.

You can rely on these for foods.

I also found “street potatoes” in many places. The supermarkets also had already cooked potatoes.

Asia is also the land of tofu. I’m usually a take-it-or-leave-it tofu eater, but the tofu in Asia was so good I would go at it with my chopsticks. No soy sauce, no nothing!

Scott is obsessed with tofu so we pilgrimaged to the best handmade tofu place in all of Japan: Tokyo Shiba Tofuya Ukai. It was $16 (yep!) and worth every penny.

(It also didn’t give me the toots… if you have that usual problem with soy! LOL)

As for fish sauce (or Oyster sauce), this seems more of an “American” dining problem. It’s used in Asian cooking, yes, but all the local chefs I talked to said they didn’t use it all that much.

The real problem with Asian food in Asia is that most of it, even what you think is vegetarian — like noodles, is not even a little bit vegan. Most noodles are made with egg (soba is usually vegan, and gluten-free) but even if you find vegan noodles, the broth they are cooked in or served with, almost always uses all kinds of random animal parts.

That’s not to say you’ll starve! There are plenty of vegetarian restaurants everywhere (even in the smaller, less touristy cities. I counted four just walking around Keelung in Taiwan, for example) and restaurants in the bigger, urban cities (like Singapore, Ho Chi Minh City, or Hong Kong) will even have little designations or icons indicating vegetarian dishes on their menus.

I always found or saw all-vegetarian restaurants walking around, but if you do some planning beforehand (say check Google and Happy Cow) you’ll find a ton of listings. If you stick to those places and plan to go to them, you’ll be fine. Otherwise you’ll wander around feeling deprived or hungry.

There probably are a million amazing vegan options at any restaurant, but if you can’t read or speak the language how can you make it work? Yaknow?

Or just go on a cruise. LOL.

This was the “vegan pancake special” at Ain Soph. Yes that’s ice cream and cranberry sauce on the pancakes! How it came out! The pancakes tasted like crossiants! It was a totally new experience for me. Scott was obsessed.

Scott’s lunch: Green curry with tofu and rice.

I also LOVE how they serve a salad. I ate it out of the glass with chop sticks and then dumped it on my plate.

They also gave us a complimentary slice of vegan cake. The portions in Asia are very small by American standards, but I loved it. This cake was maybe 2 inches. You can see the fig size for scale.

We also wanted to try authentic ramen. Ramen is not vegetarian in Asia, unless you look specially for vegetarian ramen. It took effort but we found T’s, which is crazy popular with locals (there was a huge line!) This ramen was amazing and so different from any kind of noodle dish or “ramen” I’ve ever had before. I must find a way to recreate it!

These are the tiny noodle shots all over Tokyo. They sit 4-8 people and are hidden in dark corners in dark alleys:

I’ve always liked tea, but really got into it in Europe. High Tea is popular in a few places (especially Singapore) but they also have an interesting selection of teas you wouldn’t normally find in America. Although I’m usually not a lemonade person, I couldn’t pass up this Kumquat Green Tea Cooler in Taiwan, especially since it was SO HOT outside.

Perhaps my favorite “eat out” meal of the trip was at the Po Lin Monastery in Hong Kong. It was strict vegetarian, served “family style” — all these plates on a lazy susan to be passed among myself and 8 other diners (all strangers before the meal!). This is common in many restaurants in Asia. I really like it!

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Buffalo Chickpea Chili, Acorn Squash Tacos, Easy Cinnamon Rolls & More!

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We’re kicking off November with a new meal plan that’s sure to dazzle your tastebuds!

Stay warm during these cool fall nights with the Buffalo Chickpea Chili (NEW!) and Black Bean & Pumpkin Soup (NEW!). You’ll also enjoy Acorn Squash Tacos (NEW!), Thai Vegetable Quinoa Salad (NEW!), and Easy Cinnamon Rolls (NEW!) for breakfast!

Buffalo Chickpea Chili

Individual Highlights

  • Easy Cinnamon Roll (NEW!)
  • Orange-Flavored Cauliflower
  • Acorn Squash Tacos (NEW!)
  • Thai Vegetable Quinoa Salad (NEW!)
  • Black Bean & Pumpkin Soup (NEW!)
  • Spinach Hummus & Vegetable Pinwheels
  • Buffalo Chickpea Chili (NEW!)

Get this meal plan now.

Acorn Squash Tacos

Family Highlights

  • Orange-Flavored Cauliflower
  • Black Bean & Pumpkin Soup (NEW!)
  • Thai Vegetable Quinoa Salad (NEW!)
  • Slow Cooker Red Bean & Coconut Curry
  • Acorn Squash Tacos (NEW!)
  • Simple Broccoli Spaghetti
  • Buffalo Chickpea Chili (NEW!)

Get this meal plan now.

Thai Vegetable Quinoa Salad

Testimonials

I started with weekly meal plans, monthly, then right to the yearly plans as I knew this would be a permanent life-style change. The plans have been great in saving so much time and I don’t have to think about what the next meal will be. I have lost 30 lbs in the past year and expect to continue the trend.”- Penny R

I love the meal plans because they are for individuals, the shopping list is done for me. I am so happy to have found these meal plans. They really work for me and they look and smell so good. I think my co-workers, family, and friends may soon all be converts!“- Sarah K

Get the current meal plan now.

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Happy Herbivore Holidays & Gatherings Releases!

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Happy Herbivore Holidays & Gatherings is here!!

Well, the cookbook stork already visited a few of you early so you already have my newest cookbook baby, but for everyone else… TODAY IS THE DAY!

The Official release date for my newest cookbook, Happy Herbivore Holidays & Gatherings.

p.s. I’ve taken to calling Holidays & The Happy Herbivore Guide to Plant-Based Living my twinsies, since they were both released this year 🙂

ANYWAY! My new cookbook is an all-out celebration of food for all year long. It’s not just Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter, New Year’s — I mean yes, I covered all that! BUT it also has recipes for every occasion you can think of–from party appetizers, to game day foods, barbecues, potlucks with omnivores, big events, catered events, sexy date night, (over 20 “regular” dinner menus!), KIDS, and much, much more.

AND everything is super duper easy and fast (most recipes take 20 minutes or less)… because I, too, want to be the life of the party!

My team (and everyone at my publisher, too) feels this book is my best yet — and we’re not being biased because it’s the newest one. There’s something magical in finality.

Because I knew HHHG would probably be my very last cookbook I really tried to enjoy her — the process of writing her, designing her. I gave it everything I had and then some. I think that shows in the recipes. This book is also about love and family, and so much of my own family is in the book. I’m getting a little teary over it…

GO BUY THE BOOK.

No really. Go do it this week. It’s my last and I wanna go out with a bang, so let’s make it a NYT bestseller. This is THE week — my one shot! We can do it!

And there are so really amazingly awesome recipes in it for you.

I CAN’T WAIT TO SPEND THE HOLIDAYS WITH YOU!

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Herbie of the Week: Tommy (He Reversed All of His Medical Issues With a Plant-Based Diet!)

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Meet our Herbie of the Week: Tommy!

Once a die-hard carnivore, Tommy stopped taking his health for granted when at the age of 37, his doctor diagnosed him with diverticulitis after discovering abnormal growths in his colon and a pre-cancerous stomach lining.

Not long after his diagnosis, his wife Margret (a former Herbie of the Week!) stumbled upon “Forks Over Knives“, and they watched it together. When it was over, Tommy decided right there to stop eating animal products and has been plant-based ever since (along with the rest of his beautiful family!).

In addition to reversing all his health problems, he’s lost 45lbs, inches off his waist and has more energy than ever!

Continue reading for Tommy’s inspirational story!

Switching to a plant-based, vegan lifestyle is, by far, the greatest thing I have ever done. Eating was always one of my favorite things to do, and for a long time, my lack of knowledge and lack of discipline got the best of me both physically and mentally.

As a child, I was exposed to copious amounts of cholesterol, salt and MSG through home cooked Thai meals and TV dinners. In high school, I often left campus to eat fast food. Working the night shift in the military and living in the dorms, I was required to eat whatever the “chow hall” provided…which I will admit was often very tasty, but probably not as healthy as it could have been. After my military enlistment, I followed my dream and went into law enforcement. Again, not having a good knowledge base on what healthy foods were and a lack of planning ahead: meals were limited to anything that was offered during the midnight hours (think drive-thru, gas station food, or 24/7 restaurants who aren’t known for their healthy menu options). On our days off, I was that guy who invited everyone over to show off my BBQ skills.

Never in a million years would I have ever thought of turning to a plant-based diet. I considered myself a die-hard carnivore. Greens were garnishment, and they were disposed of accordingly. To the amazement of my coworkers, I ate anything that was put in front of me!!! I was often asked how I could eat so much crap, not be obscenely overweight and still function. What they didn’t know was I had a hard time functioning. I was feeling fatigued, I was gaining weight, and I was easily agitated. Knowing what I know now about food, it scares me to look back and remember what I did to my body by eating all of that crap. If I knew just how bad I was destroying myself, I would have taken the time to prepare my meals and bring them with me, or make better choices eating out. That was the problem though…I didn’t know HOW much it mattered – the “food” choices and their effect on me. Things were about to change dramatically.

I have type O- blood. Because of its rarity, I was asked to donate blood more-often than periodically while in the military. Of course, I was willing to do so, and I continued to donate blood beyond my enlistment until one day, when one of my pints of blood was rejected due to a high count of Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT). A visit to my then family practitioner followed by a series of lab tests revealed I had fatty liver. The doctor was astonished to hear that I rarely consumed alcohol (most people with diagnosis consumed extreme amounts of alcohol). When I informed him of my fast food diet, he insisted my liver would fail within the year and I would die shortly after. I walked out of his office with a direct order to quit eating fast food, and to limit my fat intake to 30 grams a day. Ten months of limited gym time and eating tuna on wheat bread (no condiments) took me down from 210 pounds to 155 pounds. I remember during my six-month post-visit to the doctor how surprised he was to see the changes I had gone through, not because it was some miracle solution he prescribed me, but because I actually listened to him and followed through with it. I guess he had a hard time getting his patients to correct their eating habits. By the end of a year, I had completely reversed my liver condition.

Unfortunately, I didn’t stick with the plan. The way I saw it, I was back to normal and could eat a fast food meal here and there…and here and there. This time, I occasionally weighed myself to make sure I didn’t break 180 pounds. I picked 180 pounds because that’s when my uniform seemed to become uncomfortable. I know, pretty scientific stuff right there…but that’s how I gauged my “health”. My wife, Margret, and I knew our eating habits could be better, and eventually went as far as to reduce our grains and carbs, making for a more paleo-style diet, eating only lean proteins marketed as “lean” (although now that I know how to read food labels, this is completely false when way over half of the calories come from FAT). This went on for quite some time. Since I wasn’t feeling as fatigued and lazy as I did before, I managed to stay around 165 pounds with extreme exercise. I trained for marathons in which I was burning thousands upon thousands of calories each week. Again, I was basing my level of health on how much I weighed. And although I was in the range I wanted to be, I had an in-proportionate amount of belly fat that exercise couldn’t quite rid.

In 2011, this method of gauging my health proved to be highly inaccurate again when polyps were discovered in my colon. I had been experiencing extremely painful night time wake-ups, extreme pain. I couldn’t place the exact sensation, or self diagnose. Was it appendicitis? I had never felt such pain, from a place of rest, for no apparent reason. Going to sleep every night was slightly dreaded…and these restless, painful nights were the catalyst for a chilling diagnosis. We went to see our family practitioner. He examined me, listened to my symptoms and set me up for a mega-popular prescription antacid. Although he didn’t think it was necessary and was erring on the side of caution, he wrote me a referral to see a gastroenterologist specialist. Even the GI specialist discounted me at first, stating that I was “too young” to have developed any serious issues. He too erred on the side of caution and decided to “take a look” anyway. A colonoscopy/endoscopy procedure coupled with the removal of several colon polyps and stomach lining biopsies – proved to throw any of that “erred caution” out the window. I was 37, with several abnormal growths in my colon, had a pre-cancerous stomach lining, diagnosed with diverticulitis, and was scared. But I had lost enough weight (although gained some back) and my blood work numbers had turned around for so long, wasn’t I healthy?

Following my surgery, my newly acquired gastroenterologist informed me it was rare for him to schedule a colonoscopy appointment for a 37 year-old patient, quite rare for him to actually find something of concern and that I was now under the “cancer” microscope for the rest of my life – yay for twice-a-year colonoscopies ((sarcasm)).

Following that scare, I stopped taking my health (and everything else in my life for that matter) for granted, although we still felt in the dark. Having thought we lived a healthy lifestyle and eating “clean and right” – why was this happening? Never in our lives have we felt so helpless, no control, living our lives by the chance of that “dart” of cancer – and it had it’s aim on me. In the following months, Margret was consulting from her home office, and we were expecting our second beautiful daughter when she happened upon a powerful little documentary that would forever change the way our family lived.

I came home from work one day and Margret was at a loss for words, she stumbled a little for a way to ask me, but all she could come up with was “I would like for you to watch something with me.” I thought I was in trouble by the concerned look on her face, but couldn’t imagine what it could be. Margret and I sat down and she put on the documentary “Forks Over Knives“. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing and seeing!!! The food industry was (and still is) out of control, and its consumers are paying for it, with their health and well being. I was sick to my stomach. I was pretty upset for being misinformed by the major food agencies and industries about what we were actually eating. It’s one thing to voluntarily eat food that you know to be unhealthy, but when you make a conscious effort to eat healthy and find out that what you are eating is actually causing cancer and/or harming you in some other awful way…that’s just not cool. Right then and there, the past two months with my cancer diagnosis, EVERYTHING absolutely clicked – I proclaimed “Well, that’s it. We’re changing the way we eat”, which was a relief to my dear wife. I know she was so torn – she knew (as I did in that moment) that those foods we had in our fridge were damaging to our health and at the same time she couldn’t imagine asking me to change so much of who we thought we were for so many years. Margret and I vowed to never eat animal products again.

Our family has been whole foods, plant-based for nearly 3 years, and absolutely loving it!!! The results have been phenomenal on so many levels!!! I have so much more energy, both physically and mentally, than I ever had before. All of my medical issues have been reversed and that stubborn belly fat has pretty much dissipated with no exercise regime. With that, I understand that being healthy is not just seeing a particular number on a weight scale; it’s being informed and knowing what I’m feeding my body. I find I enjoy cooking more than I ever have, because cooking without animal products at first may take a tiny getting used to (but it’s so much easier when you have good resources such as the Esselstyn, Campbell, and McDougall families, as well as Happy Herbivore) : )

I am a law enforcement officer. I am, for now, a very small minority in my career field in terms of my dietary choices. Once in a while, I’ll find another officer who is a vegetarian and even they’re saying: “Oh, right on, but I wish I had your will power.” It didn’t take will power for me to switch to a plant-based diet. It took having the TRUE knowledge of why what goes into bodies, the TRUE science behind how it affects us, both negatively and positively. It took me looking into the future and seeing that I want to be there for my daughters and their children. It took a threat to my health & life.

I have found that a plant-based diet has enhanced my performance in my career. One, my uniform and utility belt fits SO MUCH NICER! I used to find the way my uniform fit, for lack of better description, was painful! I look back at my older photos and I cannot believe the difference. Two, I often find (especially when ordering food at a plant-strong friendly restaurant) the fact that I’m a Vegan and a Law Enforcement Officer – the combination tends to open people to upbeat, positive conversation. I plant those “seeds” with the people I work with and people I meet while on duty. I think folks may be surprised initially that someone, a stranger, cares enough about their health to suggest a plant-based, vegan diet. If you can help just one person, it’s always worth it! I get dubbed “The Vegan PoPo” by pretty much everyone. And I proudly claim that title. I’m literally the “vegan police”, ha ha ha! I enjoy the outreach – to show people that you can be at your healthiest, top form and leave the animals off the plate!

There’s absolute scientific evidence (that goes back DECADES, and is backed by the most profound dietary research in our history) that our previous diet was not actually healthiest for our family. Margret has always provided our family with the healthiest food possible, based on the information that we had. When Margret found “Fork Over Knives”, in addition to further diligent validation of reading and research – we discovered a whole new take on healthy eating and realized we needed to change our ways for the better and had finally found that way. We no longer feel helpless, or a target for degenerative diseases. Life is good.

NOTE FROM MARGRET (TOMMY’S WIFEY):

Okay y’all. I really need to chime in here because I proof-read Tommy’s interview, and there’s a lot that I need to add. Quite frankly, because Tommy is never one to toot-his-own-horn, no matter how well deserved!!!

My husband is the epitome of compassion and grace. He always has been! Since adopting a plant based diet and later becoming vegan, he’s had a tremendous impact on those around him in a variety of ways. He’s always helped people. ALWAYS putting others first (even above his own family) by going well above the demands of his job. He’s saved countless lives, comforted thousands of people, talked them off bridges, paid for their gas, used his own personal roadside assistance to help those who cannot afford a tow, bought food for those who need it, collects and distributes stuffed animals for kids involved in accidents or incidents that may seem scary to them, he advocates for animals on and off-duty (a lot of times in rural parts of the county animals need assistance, and he gladly ensures their safety as well as the human public). He plants those “positive seeds” everywhere he goes and any time he can. He often allows his co-workers to sample his lunch (I think they’re surprised, even those they tell everyone else that he eats “tree bark”). He credits me with a lot of our family’s positive changes. But he lives and breathes this commitment to a healthy life and healthy world, so diligently. I couldn’t be more proud of him.

Thank you so much Tommy (and Margret) for sharing your story with us!