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It was a gloriously golden, warm September afternoon and I was crumpled up in the foetal position on my bedroom floor, ugly crying. I had nothing left in me. I was a 23-year-old, newly married, employed, financially alright, plant-based vegetarian, and for the 600th day in a row, I felt horrible.
I was supposed to be packing for a leisurely weekend camping trip but I could not muster up a shred of mental, physical or emotional energy to pack or prepare. In frantic texts to my new husband, I described myself as “drained,” “zapped,” “dried up.”
Somewhere in my exhausted tears there was frustration. This should not be happening to me. I had been a vegetarian for a decade; for the past five years, I had been eating a “clean,” plant-based diet. I took a B complex, I didn’t have anemia, I drank vegan protein shakes almost daily even though they made me cringe, I drank enough water, I slept well.
I should be okay. Yet here I was, crying at 2pm because I felt like zombie.
And then a strange thing happened. I had not had animal protein in 10 years and I hadn’t craved it in nearly as long, but suddenly my body instinctively called out for meat.
A few days later, I ate chicken. A week or so later, I had sausage. I was a carnivore again. Slowly, I regained strength.
When I gave myself permission to eat meat again, I started to look at all the many other foods I had demonised and just how sick I had become.