1
If he can shed the mummy wrappings of acquired
notions, complacent bigotries, and superstitious customs, and look at the
problem with fresh eyes, he is more likely to succeed in his quest of truth. If
he can re-examine the whole meaning of it as though it were a newly discovered
problem, he is more likely to move towards its correct solution. If he will
refuse to be intimidated by dietary precedent, and begin to rethink the whole
matter of eating's why and wherefore, he will reach astonishing results. For
much nonsense about diet has come down to us by ignorant tradition and
unthinking inheritance.
2
As one draws closer to the soul of things, he comes
more into harmony with Nature. And if he is true to his instinct, he will eat
his food more and more as Nature herself produces it.
3
Inferior and even harmful foods have been eaten for
so long that most people have become addicted to them and, through habitual use,
come to like them. It is true that several of these foods have been part of a
civilized diet for generations, but the duration of an error does not make it
less an error, and does not justify its continuance. It is a fact worth
speculating upon that many groups of early Christians were both mystical and
vegetarian. Had they not been ousted by the Emperor Constantine - whose
imperialistic political purpose they did not serve - from the official
Christianity which he (and not Jesus) established, we might today have seen half
the Christian world holding a faith in mystical beliefs and eating fleshless
foods. The France of Louis XII saw some remnants of those early sects, such as
the Albigenses, Montanists, and Camisards - and no less than one-third of the
total population of the country - living as vegetarians. Luigi Cornaro lived to
a hundred in Italy on a strictly limited daily quantity of food. Dr. Josiah
Oldfield was nearing his hundred when I last visited England and attributed the
fact to avoiding eating too much, which he termed "the great evil." He is also
an enthusiastic advocate of vegetarianism.
4
We are so much the victims of custom and usage, of
habit and convention, that even where we at once perceive this weakness in other
persons, we fail entirely to perceive it in ourselves. Emerson, the man who
wrote the finest essay on the virtue of nonconformity, who proclaimed, "thus
ossification is the fall of man," who became the outstanding American prophet of
novel views in religion, was completely conformist and habitarian at home, was
still the follower of old views in diet. Whenever he encountered dietetic reform
visibly in practice before his eyes, he almost lost his serenity in the
vehemence of the scorn which it provoked in him. His was still the
compartmentally divided mind; he sought truth in the study room but not in the
dining room! He admired reform in one field but despised it in another.
5
The greatest of all diet reforms is the change from
meat-eating to a meatless diet. This is also the first step on the spiritual
path, the first gesture that rightness, justice, compassion, purity are being
set up as necessary to human and humane living, in contrast to animal living.
6
If there is any single cause for which I would go up
and down the land on a twentieth-century crusade, it is that of the meatless
diet. It may be a forlorn crusade, but all the same, it would be a heart-warming
one.
7
We hear often of those who live to a ripe old age in
health and in strength, but who eat whatever they fancy and drink what they
like; they sin against the laws of health and live without any health regimes or
disciplinary controls. This is used as an argument against the latter. But it is
a poor argument. For anyone who follows their example takes risks and runs
hazards with his health, since theirs is a way based on mere chance and complete
uncertainty. They were lucky enough to be blessed by nature with bodies strong
enough to resist the ill-treatment thus received or favoured by destiny with
recuperative power to ward off its bad effect. If anyone could collect the
statistics, they would unquestionably show that for each person who escaped
infirmities and lived long in this way, a hundred failed to do so.
8
A meatless diet has practical advantages to offer
nearly everyone. But to idealists who are concerned with higher purposes it has
even more to offer. On the moral issue alone it tends to lessen callousness to
the sufferings of others, men or animals, and to increase what Schweitzer called
"reverence for life."
9
A meatless diet is advisable for aspirants, where
circumstances permit, as the brain fed on it is less resistant to meditation.
10
The delusion that flesh food is essential to
maintain strength dies hard. I do not know a stronger animal than an elephant. I
have seen it in the East doing all the work that a powerful steam-crane will do
in the West. Yet the elephant is a vegetarian. Moreover it outlives most other
animals.
11
Why should we abstain from meat-eating? (a)
Cultivated land if planted with vegetables, fruits, and nuts will yield much
more food for an overpopulated world than it could yield if left under pasture
for cattle and sheep. (b) The ghastly work of slaughtering these harmless
innocent creatures can be done only by hardened men, whose qualities of
compassion and sympathy must inevitably get feebler and and feebler. How many
housewives could do their own butchering? (c) In terms of equal food value, the
meatless diet costs less. (d) Animals which suffer from contagious diseases pass
on the germs of these diseases to those who eat their flesh or parasites. (e)
Meat contains excretory substances, purins, which may cause other,
non-communicable diseases.
12
Those who would like to be vegetarians for
compassionate reasons but feel the need of meat for maintaining strength can
find proper substitutes in milk and cheese. These dairy products contain the
same animal proteins as meat, and will serve as well to sustain vitality, while
being free from the stain of slaughter.
13
Another point for vegetarians is that cruel, wild
beasts such as tigers and treacherous, angry reptiles such as snakes live wholly
on animal products. The connection between their nature and their food is not
entirely coincidental.
14
Nature (God) has given us the grains and seeds, the
fruits and plants to sustain our bodies; what we have used beyond this was got
by theft. We robbed calves of their milk and bees of their own stored food.
15
Whatever man harms or hurts, he will have to live
with for a time until he learns to refrain, until his reverence for life is as
active here as anywhere else. This is why the horrors of vivisection will have
to be expiated by the man who caused them.
16
Only a heroic and determined few can suddenly
reverse the habits of a lifetime and adopt new ones with full benefit. For most
people it is more prudent and beneficial to make the change by degrees. Thus, if
convinced of the merits of a permanent meatless diet, they can cut down
periodically the meats consumed, taking care to replace them by suitable
substitutes. If convinced of the curative virtue of a temporary unfired diet,
they can eat less cooked and add more vital foods to their meals.
17
Confronted by a totally new set of concepts of
living, they irritably shake their heads at its supposed faddism or caustically
jeer at its supposed quackery or derisively taunt its advocates with their
supposed crankiness.
18
We are called to give others - animals as well as
humans - the same treatment that we call on God to give us.
19
When the body has become accustomed through long
years of dietary habit to a vegetarian menu, the sudden introduction of flesh
foods may lead to nitrogenous poisoning. This is because the body can no longer
tolerate a foreign protein. And from this we can understand why lifetime
vegetarians, and especially lifelong ones like Indian Brahmins, become sick or
suffer from nausea when accidentally or unconsciously, they let a piece of meat
slip into their food.
20
The foods that suit him best, he alone can find
out. But he should select them from the restricted list with which philosophy
will gladly provide him.
21
It is not only that we ought to avoid the dead
animals for our food, but also we ought to avoid the products of live animals
for this purpose, too. By accepting them for bodily nourishment we accept the
influence they contribute to the forming of our nature. Body and mind are
intertwined. We can well sustain our lives without milk and its derivatives,
just as we can without red flesh, white flesh, fish, and eggs.
22
Scientifically, milk is modified blood and eggs are
interrupted chicks.
23
By experiment he may discover what agrees with his
stomach and what not. It he notices disagreeable symptoms mentally or
physically, such as dull headaches or stomach heaviness, then he should drop
this item of food and observe whether there is any difference in his condition.
If not, then it is not the food but something else that lies behind the
distress.
24
He should not be willing to absorb the psychic
characteristics of an animal which come with meat, and more especially with the
blood of meat.
25
Our appetites have become perverted, our cravings
for food have become morbid. We eat quantities for which the body has no actual
need. The conventional dietary habits are false standards by which to live. We
could quite well maintain ourselves by eating smaller amounts of rich,
concentrated, and stimulating proteins, as well as of clogging starches.
26
Neither meat nor alcohol is indispensable to the
body. Neither health nor palate will suffer without them. By slowly reducing
their intake - or suddenly, if one prefers and is able to do so - the desire for
them will completely vanish in time. But proper substitutes from the dairy or
from the plant kingdoms should replace them if this transition is to be
comfortable and satisfactory.
27
Nature's restorative power usually tries to heal
the body or correct its functions but man's ingrained gluttony, error,
ignorance, and self-indulgence usually throw too much obstruction in its way to
let this desirable result happen.
28
It is not only the artificial heating of food which
deprives it of nutritive, vitalizing, and healing qualities, but even the
natural wilting of food does so to a lesser extent. Scientific methods of
preserving, refrigerating, or keeping fresh food introduce new evils which
destroy the value of their benefits.
29
There is no objection to gratifying the palate;
indeed it is quite natural to do so. But when it happens at the expense of
spiritual and physical well-being, then it reaches a point when it does become
objectionable and unnatural. The cravings of the palate are not what they ought
to be but what, hereditarily and artificially, they have been made to be.
30
When it comes to combining the technical knowledge
of biology with spiritual insight, the change of viewpoints makes it necessary
to modify and even correct the scientific knowledge. That milk provides a better
way to get animal protein than meat is perfectly correct; but to accept what is
taught by science, that we need animal protein, is wrong. This is not so, but
the long continued habits of the human race have made it seem so.
31
The statement of physiology that tissues must be
fed with protein to repair their waste is a greatly exaggerated dogma. They need
but little - a couple of ounces are enough. What the average man eats is far too
rich in protein, so the system must set itself to work getting rid of this
surplus, thus increasing waste products and unnecessarily spending vitality.
32
The psychic effects of meat-eating are undesirable.
If those who believe that they cannot sustain life without it could see these
effects, and if they had to be their own butchers, how many would continue this
habit?
33
Protein is protein, whether extracted from animals
or plants. It does not alter its chemical composition if its source is
transferred from one of these to the other.
34
The protein myth needs deflating. The cow eats no
protein at all, only grass and fodder, yet it produces milk which is converted
into high protein cheese. I have lived on a diet of fresh fruits and some rye
crackers for more than a year at a time and maintained my normal weight
throughout the period.
35
If he cares enough for the Quest and understands
enough about the relation between it and diet, he will come sooner or later to
choose his food with more resistance to habit.
36
There is some confusion here both in the arguments
of advocates and the criticisms of objectors. It is not possible for any man
completely to avoid taking the life of all other creatures in the animal
kingdom, especially tiny creatures like microorganisms. But it is possible for
him to avoid taking the lives of larger creatures which possess larger, more
delicate nerve systems, and causing suffering to them unnecessarily.
37
Never before have there been so many deaths from
diseases of the blood vessels including the largest of them all - the heart.
Why? The introduction of larger quantities of meat into the diet has led to the
introduction of larger quantities of other animals' blood into the body.
38
If you are to be a guest, it is no great trouble to
either you or your host, to warn him in advance about the prohibited foods.
39
Early in human history, milk was disdained as an
article of food because it was thought to be unnatural for adults to take what
Nature supplied to infants.
40
Pythagoras pointed out that the way a nation
treated its animals, so far as they are at its mercy, is an indirect judgement
of its character.
41
Although sodium chloride salt is unacceptable as an
article of diet in its manufactured commercial form, it may be acceptable as a
medicinal article when it appears as one of the ingredients of a natural spa
spring water. It would then be taken for a short period only and for the
therapeutic purpose of assisting in the removal of a bad bodily condition.
42
Smoking is a falsification of the natural instinct
of the body to preserve its own inner cleanliness as well as an insult to its
sensibility to irritating odours. If smoking is actually enjoyed as a pleasure,
that merely shows how false have become the habits imposed on the body's natural
instinct. He who desires to rid himself of the smoking habit must therefore
restore the operation of this instinct. Among the various techniques that he
will have to adopt, one is that of fasting. Short but regular fasts will help to
purify him and give back what he has lost - the true instinct of the body and
the senses. When this instinct is restored, the desire for smoking will begin to
fall away of itself, and indeed an aversion to it will replace it.
43
The intolerance of some aggressive and fanatical
opponents of meat-eating, smoking, and alcohol-drinking is itself a vicious
attitude which harms them in a different way as much as those bad habits harm
their addicts.(P)
44
There is an opportunity to strengthen his will,
overcome a bad habit and show his determination to quicken progress by dropping
smoking altogether from the first day.
45
Those who light one cigarette after another do not
sin against morality; they sin against health.
46
The thirteenth Dalai Lama considered tobacco to be
more pernicious and more polluting than alcohol and banned its use not only by
the monks and priests but even by the laymen.
47
Alcoholic drink releases the sociability in man,
but if taken further it then releases the animality in him.
48
The more materialistic type of person needs heavier
food, the more spiritually minded needs lighter more digestible food if he is
not to dull his sensitivity.
49
Alcohol is objectionable as a part of human diet
particularly when it is used in high concentrations as in brandy, gin, rum, and
cocktails. Then it is poisonous physically and morally. But as a medicine for
emergencies it is acceptable.
50
During my Mexican experiments, I discovered that a
cooked meal dulls the mind and produces a sleepy feeling, but not so with an
uncooked one. Now that I live on a mixed diet, I prefer to have the cooked meal
at night so that the sleepiness comes at the right time.
51
It is not only the unnecessary killing of tamed
animals for food that shows man's thoughtless lack of mercy, but also the
unnecessary hunting and killing of wild animals. They are entitled to their
mountain or forest home.
52
Bodhidharma, the founder of Zen, was not the only
person who nourished himself with dried tea leaves. A few years after the end of
the American Civil War, John Muir - geologist and genius, nature lover and
explorer - carried for food only bread and dried tea leaves while climbing the
high Sierra Nevada Mountains overlooking the Yosemite valley. He did this quite
often and kept a sturdy health, which shows that the legend about Bodhidharma's
diet may not have been so mythical after all.
53
It is a task heavy enough to stimulate spiritual
intuitions in our era without adding the extra burden involved in correcting
false appetites at the table. That is a thankless task which incites the
greatest impatience in others and the greatest reluctance in oneself. One
instinctively shirks becoming a dietary iconoclast overturning the ancient and
beloved idols of whole peoples. For no habits are so hard to uproot as eating
habits, none so much a part of ingrained human nature.
54
There is no universal maximum of the amount of food
and frequency of meals. That depends on the man's type and on his activity. Each
must find out what keeps him most efficient.
55
The harmful effects of tea drinking upon the
heart's action, the tissues of the stomach, the digestion of starch and protein
cannot be denied. The accumulated effects of its poisoning of the body are
serious.
56
Many students raise the question of excessive
smoking and cocktail drinking. There was plenty of excuse for the former during
the war. It is not serious psychically, although bad for health physically.
Cocktail drinking is, however, inadvisable for the student who begins to make
progress on the path. All strong spirits like whisky and gin, or liquors like
brandy, are definitely harmful to him because he is bound to have become more
sensitive than when he began the Quest. What was all right for him in the past
is not so now for he has advanced since then. The further purification of the
self must proceed to make possible the further illumination of the self. He may
find it helpful to overcome these physical habits of smoking and drinking by
taking short fasts of about one complete day in duration. During each fast he
should drink water mixed with fruit juice. Two or three such days per month
would help to strengthen the higher will and to weaken the undesirable habits.
And of course he should pray daily for the strength to overcome them. Indeed,
prayer for the Overself's Grace in this connection is most important.
57
One good way to serve others is by shopkeeping, and
a still better way is to make one's shop a health food store. In the latter
case, one is doing more than merely earning a living, since he will be rendering
a specially needed service in his community. Health foods are, in many cases, a
vast improvement over ordinary foods, and useful to supplement the meatless
diet.
58
Animals live in the herd instinct. They do not
possess self-consciousness as individualized human beings possess it, nor have
they the capacity of aspiring to what is above their own level. But they are
subject to evolution and will ultimately arrive at our level. Kindness to those
nearest the human stage promotes their evolution into its best side. Cruelty to
them launches them into its worst side and punishes us with a karma of criminal
primitive classes of the lowest order.
59
The eating of meat is a remnant of primitive
demon-worship, when animals were sacrificed on temple altars to these unseen and
unholy creatures. The initiated among the early Christian Fathers knew this
well. In The Spiritual Crisis of Man, I have already stated Saint John
Chrysostom's opinion of meat-eating as being "unnatural" and "of demoniacal
origin" while Origen wrote, "Do not flatter the demons by means of sacrifices."
60
There is far too much ignorance among educated
people - so how much more among the others - of the heavy contribution made to
the causes of sickness by faulty eating habits and by dietary deficiencies.
61
The wisdom of the World-Mind has put quick-lines
into the animal mind - which you may call instincts if you wish - which show it
how to keep alive by picking out the food needed. Man, being the possessor of an
animal body, shares a proportion of these instincts; for the rest he must use
his judgement.
62
Only good positive thoughts were allowed to enter
his head and good meatless food his stomach.
63
It is a fact, which some clairvoyants have observed
and which scientific researches by the late Sir J. Bose in Bengal and Cleve
Backster using polygraph technique in New York have confirmed, that plants feel
and that they have intelligent responses which on a human level would be
emotional. This has in fact been advanced as a defense of meat-eating and
against those practising meat avoidance. My reply is that the plant form is not
so sensitive as the animal form, lacking so highly developed a nerve system. It
suffers - but less.
64
It is necessary to eat living things as food in
order to keep living ourselves. That is not a matter of our choosing but a
necessity forced upon us by Nature or God. We have no freedom in the choice. But
we are free to reduce the area of our destructiveness and to lessen the amount
of pain we inflict. It is less destructive to uproot a vegetable or pluck a
fruit than to slay an animal - and there is less suffering too. This is the
answer to the argument that we still destroy life when we become vegetarians.
65
If we could examine the prehistoric period of man,
and not merely his latest century, we would find that the duration of his life
has since been shortened, while the condition of his body has deteriorated
through new diseases. The cause in both cases lies in his changed feeding habits
to some extent, and in his unrestricted sexual habits to a much larger extent.
66
Where man has given himself up to sexual excitement
as a continuing and enduring feature of his life - as contrasted with the wild
animals which experience it only at particular seasons - the cause exists not in
the different nature with which he has been endowed but in the excess of
strongly nutritive material which has absorbed into his body. To prove that this
is so, one has only to take the case of his domestic animals which, when also
getting superfluous nutriment, are excited more often than the wild ones.
67
Foods which stimulate sexual activity include eggs,
oysters, chocolate, and meat.
68
The extractive substances of red fish like salmon
and carp and red meats like beef and venison irritate the vital tissues and
raise blood pressure. This in turn raises sexual desire. White meat and white
fish are less liable to do this.
69
Diet alone will not be enough to bring sexual
function under control, but only helps to do so. Otherwise, the rabbit would not
be so unchaste. Climate is not less important, for the flesh-eating Eskimo
living in Arctic regions is sexually lethargic whereas the vegetarian native of
tropical regions is not.
70
Our definition of sin needs widening. It is also
sinful to break the laws of hygiene, to indulge in habits that are either
poisonous or devitalizing, to eat foods obtained by slaughter.
71
If the grains, fruits, cereals, and vegetables
which we eat are themselves undernourished because the soil in which they grow
is deficient in minerals or otherwise exhausted, then we in turn will not really
receive from our food the proper nourishment we believe it is giving nor will
the cattle pastured on such depleted soil. Nor is this all. If the foods derived
from unbalanced soil are our mainstay for a lengthy period of years, the
unbalance will be reflected in our body as some kind of sickness or malfunction.
72
Wherever and whenever meatless diet becomes the
rule, and not the rarity that it is today, we may expect violence and crime to
abate markedly.
73
The changeover from a meat diet to a vegetarian one
creates in some cases a feeling of bodily weakness. This will be limited to the
transition period only, which may be a matter of days or months, depending on
the individual. Such persons should make the changeover gradually. Many others
have made the change quite abruptly without any fatigue or any harm.
74
The person who is afraid to alter his living
habits, and especially his eating and drinking habits, because he is afraid that
other persons may regard him as queer, eccentric, or fanatic forgets that the
ownership of his body, the responsibility for its well-being, belongs to him,
not them.
75
Some men who have shivered at the thought of
inaugurating these reforms or conforming to these regimes came nevertheless to
do so in later years. Why? Because they were given a strong enough incentive.
Attacked by heart disease, they were warned by physicians to abandon salt;
suffering from different sicknesses, they had to abandon meat; others who were
gluttons were ordered to curb their meals to more modest proportions. Here the
incentive of avoiding earlier death enabled them to accept an abhorred
discipline.
76
Emerson, with all his admirable wisdom, was yet not
wise enough to attend to his diet. He regularly ate too much cold pie and
suffered from indigestion. But what was worse, he ate beef and thus set a bad
example to others. His mind was so well purified and so strongly concentrated
within the Good, the True, and the Beautiful that it was not affected, whatever
happened to his body. But the minds of others were muddier and weaker. A correct
example would have been better for them.
77
After some weeks on an uncooked food diet, the
intellectual type of person will find, as I found, that there is greater mental
clarity and greater mental drive. In fact, there may even be a tendency to
overwork intellectually in reading or writing. A century ago, John Linton, of
England, reported the result of a long period on such a diet in these words: "I
was able to write with an ease and perspicacity and satisfaction which I had
never before known, or had any idea of."
78
Nobility of character will not save a man who eats
meat from the dark karma which he thereby makes, although it may modify it. This
bad habit puts his good health into peril.
79
The movement is a circular one. Bad eating habits
can produce an excess of bile. This in turn produces depression, irritability, a
critical view of people and events. On the other hand, the man who starts with
such a view will finish with an excess of bile, too. This is why philosophic
disciplines are directed toward both the body and the mind, not to one alone.
80
A glass of wine which might upset the mental
balance of a beginner, and to that extent cause him to forget his quest or
create inability to meditate, might leave no more mark on an advanced man than a
wave hurling itself upon a rock.
81
The established alimentary errors of the modern way
of living - that is, the artificial way - may be partially corrected by eating
more fresh fruits and vegetables. It is unfortunate, however, that the
commercial definition of freshness does not coincide with Nature's. Therefore we
must be more fastidious and selective when buying these foods. This correction
is needed by all victims of civilization; it does not matter whether they come
to it because of food chemistry's revelation of the need of dietary vitamins or
because of mystical philosophy's revelation of the need of return to nature.
82
The Bhagavad Gita, India's manual for yogis
since the most ancient times, prescribes that the food for spiritual
practitioners should be light and digestible. Why? Because the body's condition
does throw its influence into the mind's condition. A body which is habitually
constipated, whose bowels are tight and filthy with accumulations, receives and
spreads morbid poisons. These affect, in time, not only the organs directly
concerned but also the sexual organs, the blood, brain, and nerves. Lust is
stimulated, negative ideas are intensified.
83
The follower of a fleshless diet who throws his
principles to the four winds in a trying situation lest he be thought peculiar,
eccentric, different is more eager to please other men than the Overself, more
interested in what their opinion is of him than in the success of his quest. How
easy it is to make concessions, to give in to the herd expectations! How hard to
go all the way with one's convictions, to keep one's link with integrity
unbroken. Yet faithfulness is the only attitude for the man who has felt this
practical pity for dumb animals.
84
If he really believes in this teaching, he will
seek to bring it into every area of his life. There is no area from which it can
rightly be left out, not even from that of the kind of food he eats.
85
What really happens is that the body remembers
having been fed at certain hours and with certain foods. These memories have
been integrated into its subconsciousness and provide the real source of the
urge to repeat the experience. The habit is really mental but appears physical.
86
Where rennet is used in the making of cheese, the
final product is no longer purely vegetarian. Where eggs are part of a diet, the
animal life they contain, even though it is only incipient, violates the
vegetarian principle of living.
87
Those who feel it necessary to include eggs in
their otherwise vegetarian diet, should confine themselves to sterile eggs which
can never be hatched.
88
The sin of gluttony does not necessarily mean
eating too much food. It may also mean eating too rich food even when the
quantity is not excessive.
89
Mustard, pepper, and paprika stimulate sex organs.
90
It is proper to defend one's life when it is
menaced by aggressive men or by wild beasts, but it is against philosophic
ethics to take life without a just cause, as when one kills animals for food -
still more when one kills them wantonly for sport. Every higher instinct urges
us to substitute compassion for cruelty in our dealings with the lower kingdom.
91
The aspirant who fails to practise non-injury sets
up an evil relationship which will have to be worked out later, a relationship
which will block his entry into the state of lasting enlightenment until it is
so worked out. The unnecessary taking of animal life for his food is one form,
although a common one, of violation of this ethic.
92
Although he need not go out of his way to appear
different from anyone else, although he must effect that compromise with society
which will enable him to live in it as necessity dictates he must, he need not
become so subservient to the social codes or subscribe so timidly to the social
practices that he is willing to slaughter innocent animals for food just because
everyone else is doing it. In this matter there can be no surrender, no
frightened conformity with barbarous habits. In this respect he will see that
the civilization in which he finds himself has not fully outgrown the savage
elements. Its progress in social manners and technical efficiency is one-sided.
93
Diet depends on the type of person as well as the
stage of development. The contemplative introvert intuitive type needs a
fruitarian diet. The physical extrovert type needs a complete heavy protein
diet. The best guide to the diet suited to each individual is the Gita
rule, plus his own instinct, modified by such factors as climatic conditions
around him, local availability of foods, and so on.
94
There is a tradition that live snails crawled all
over and wholly covered the Buddha's head to prevent his getting sunstroke when
he had fallen into deep inner absorption in a place where no tree branches gave
their usual shelter. Whether this is true or not, it does convey the idea that
the apostle of mercy and love for the whole animal kingdom received his own love
reflected back to him by members of that kingdom.
95
The yogi who lives in contented isolation from the
burdens and worries of family existence is not helpful to the poor fellow who
has to till the field and produce the grain with which to feed him. For, from
some source or other, he has to be fed whether he lives in cave or jungle. He
cannot live on roots and barks and leaves; that is a pretty fiction for fables
and fairy tales. He needs rice or wheat or milk and vegetables, and probably
some fruits.
96
The beautiful coloured fruits which the trees and
bushes offer him have been saturated with beneficent solar rays, not with
innocent blood.
97
What is the answer to the question, Can we offer a
meatless diet to pet animals? We can, provided hardboiled eggs and milk are
included in the diet. The pet dog or cat will grow just as healthy and have all
the strength it needs. But it is very difficult to succeed in limiting it to
such a diet unless it is started from the time when it is a little puppy or
kitten.
98
Exaggerated notions of the value of the vegetarian
diet must be discounted. It will not of itself suffice to keep a man
healthy or free from the lower passions.
99
If it be asked why abstention from meat-eating
should be conducive to sexual self-control, the answer must include a few
assertions to be complete. But the prime reason is because most of the animals
which are killed and eaten by man owe their own existence to the sexual lust of
their parents and this lust permeates their flesh in an invisible
psychic-magnetic aura. Most fish of course are an exception to ordinary sexual
birth, yet shellfish are a notoriously aphrodisiac article of food. The cause of
this must be sought elsewhere than in their origin.
100
Salt is unnecessary in the diet. Most people have
a large salt intake from sheer habit, which in turn makes it seem almost a
necessity for their bodies. Spiritual aspirants are much better off without
salt; it is an artificial irritant that erects additional barriers to progress.
Science believes that salt intake is necessary in hot weather to replenish what
is lost through the body's perspiration. The fact remains that the salt would
not be lost if it were not consumed in the first place; this is the real cause
of this vicious circle.
101
The custom which prevailed so widely on vanished
Atlantis of offering animals and slaughtering prisoners during the periodical
religious rituals, and which was carried over by the survivors into African,
American, and Asiatic civilizations of historic times, has died out as purer and
more rational concepts of religion have risen. But the custom of offering
animals to please not a divine being but a human one, is just as prevalent today
as the stupid Atlantean barbarity formerly was. Men still breed hapless
four-legged creatures by the million only to slay them in the end and serve them
at meals. Such destruction is carried out without feeling, without conscience,
and without real necessity. And what right does any of these human beings have
to destroy the existence of such a multitude of creatures who have their own
place, function, and purpose in the divine World-Idea? In claiming for himself
such a right, man arrogantly proclaims himself wiser than his Creator and in
disturbing the creation itself by his bloody habits of eating, he violates
sacred laws for which he is duly punished. His health suffers, his passions are
never allayed, and his violence in war is never ended.
102
Those who believe that a meatless diet must be a
flabby and tasteless one believe wrongly. It is quite possible for a vegetarian
or a vegan or even a fruitarian to enjoy meals, to find them appetizing and
satisfying.
103
If every slaughterhouse were razed to the ground
and orchards, thickly planted with fruit-bearing trees, replaced them, all would
benefit in the end - including those unfortunate men who earn their livelihood
from such slaughter.
104
Food does not directly supply energy but its
presence in the body during the process of metabolism acts as a channel for
energy to be set free in the body. This is why those who fully undergo the
purificatory processes of the Quest and thus regenerate their body, not only
need less food than others do, but subsist on finer forms of food.
105
If too much protein is undesirable because it
ends in toxic products and destructive acids, too little is also undesirable
because it ends in insufficient weight and lessened strength.
106
He alone is entitled to ask for help or mercy -
which is a form of help - who himself shows pity, spares life, eschews cruelty,
and grants mercy to the helpless and oppressed, who does not, in Plutarch's
phrase, "allow his lips to touch the flesh of a murdered being."
107
Mushrooms belong to that order in Nature to which
parasites, fungus, and bacteria belong.
108
Grace before meals is like a blessing upon
murder, when the meal is part of an animal which has been hunted down by a group
of sportsmen helped by bloodthirsty hounds.
109
So long as their plant, grain, vegetable, and
fruit food is mass-produced and grown with artificial chemical or animal manure
fertilizers and later sprayed with poisons, so long will true health be
impossible for city dwellers. For requisite vitamins and minerals will either be
lost - destroyed by these wrong methods which serve commercial interests only -
or else ill-balanced because too rich in some nourishing elements and too poor
in others.
110
Because the flesh of dead animals and the eggs of
living bodies have no true affinity with the bodies of human beings, who exist
on a higher level, they are unfit for use as foods by those beings.
111
Foods which cause clogging of the intestines are
either of a starchy character (white flour is used to make wallpaper hanger's
paste) or composed of gristle and bones (carpenter's glue is made from them) or
of fatty oily character (observe how they cling to the inside of a frying pan
when cold). To reduce the use of such foods is very desirable.
112
The raw food cure is a form of mono-diet which
offers most of the advantages of moderate fasting without its disadvantages. By
careful choice during the first part of the cure there can be used only foods
with eliminative properties, serving equivalently to a fast; while during the
second part a different kind, having upbuilding properties, can be used.
113
It is an ancient knowledge although a neglected
modern one, that many vegetables and fruits have strong medicinal properties.
114
He does not eat meat, not so much because he
thinks it poisons the body, but more because he feels pity for slaughtered
animals. He does not drink alcohol because he believes it would interfere with
the efficiency of his work, and much more because of his spiritual effort at
self-conquest. He does not smoke, first because he regards smoking as physically
unhealthy, and second because his body becomes so refined as to feel a
physiological reaction of strong nausea to it. Thus, these three renunciations
are both preoccupations with bodily welfare and with ethical ideals; indeed,
they are actually tokens of his balanced ideals.
115
What applies to the place of the body applies
consequently to the foods eaten to maintain the body. Because they leave some
effect upon the mind through the nerve system and the brain, foods are
classified into three kinds by the yogis. Anyone can see the reason for this in
the case of some foods and drinks like alcoholic liquors, which stimulate the
passions. There are other foods which have a calming influence on the mind.
116
It is unfortunately largely true, this accusation
that vegetarians are often drab creatures, that vegetarian restaurants are not
seldom dreary places, and that vegetarian meals are often tasteless and
unsustaining. But this need not be.
117
We may fast for a few days but we must eat for a
whole lifetime.
118
Nature (God) has given men the plants whence to
draw the food needed to keep them alive. But few seem to notice that these were
given to them raw, not cooked. Men egotistically try to better the gift, to
their own detriment and disease.
119
In the early stages of an unfired diet,
unpleasant symptoms of elimination such as headaches may appear - just as in
fasting. They are to be welcomed, not regretted.
120
To convert barley into beer and grapes into
brandy is to destroy the gifts of Nature. Yet this is done every year to the
extent of millions of tons. There is a penalty in human degradation and human
misery for this.
121
Meat is a very putrefactive food: it decays
quicker than vegetables or grains. If it is not digested and passed out of the
body in a normal period, this putrefactive quality may lead to certain diseases.
This is why vegetarians suffer less from these diseases than meat eaters.
122
The disciplined abstinence from prohibited or
undesirable foods is not to be made into a source of self-torment.
123
Saint Paul on vegetarianism: "I will eat no flesh
for evermore, that I make not my brother to stumble." (1 Cor. 8:13)
124
The difficulties of keeping to his own rigid mode
of protective habit usually become too much in the end for a fastidious
traveller. Sooner or later, he succumbs to them and has to give way to the
polluting drinking vessels, contaminating eating plates, and meat-smelling
restaurants of the non-Brahmin castes. An iron will and inflexible determination
to hold to one's regime is needed.
125
It is a mistake to take a meal when mentally
tired or emotionally disturbed. The benefit of food intake will be offset by the
harm of upset digestion.
126
His experiments in dietary reform must come to
this end: he will find that he returns to the philosophic admonition of expertly
balanced feeding, but with some better understanding of what constitutes
"balance." Formerly, the ingredients of his raw salads were limited to lettuce,
cucumber, and cress. He will add other raw vegetables such as peas, red cabbage,
squash, and even vegetable roots such as carrot, celeriac, parsnip, and beets -
grated, of course, or he could not endure them, and rendered palatable with
tasty dressings. Formerly he mixed indiscriminately fruit, raw and cooked
vegetables together at the same meal. Now he will try to keep them apart and eat
them at separate meals.
127
How free from hard toil in the fields would the
wide adoption of a fruitarian diet render the life of man! How independent of
farm equipment and tools, kitchen stoves, fuel, appliances, utensils, and all
the other paraphernalia with which he burdens himself!
128
They will one day feel mercy for the animals and
desist from the custom of slaughtering, cooking, and eating them. Of course, the
slaughter is done indirectly, by others acting on their behalf. But some of the
guilt remains.
129
Even water taken to excess may lead to death,
even beneficial vitamins also. Thus science knows from tests with animals that
almost any food item or product can be fatal if too much too quickly is eaten or
drunk. This verifies my often used phrase that "a good overdone becomes the
bad."
130
The vegetarian who refuses to turn his body into
a graveyard for slaughtered animals is obeying not only a moral law but also a
hygienic and an aesthetic one.
131
Appetite has really become an artificial and
abnormal thing, having taken the place of true hunger, which alone is natural.
The one is a sign of bondage but the other, of freedom.
132
It may be considered folly by common opinion but
this refusal to destroy life unnecessarily, this reverence for it, must become a
deeply implanted part of his ethical standard.
133
If the body is intolerant of particular
treatments and allergic to particular foods, it should not be forced to accept
them.
134
The time has come to arouse the conscience of all
those who sincerely seek the Good and the Right to their duty in the matter of
slaughtering innocent animals, a conscience which, if it could speak unperverted
by racial habits, would emphatically repeat the Mosaic commandment, "Thou shalt
not kill."
135
There are cruelties practised on animals to gain
food for man, dress for women, entertainment and medicinal drugs for both. The
human claim of necessity as a justification is a mistaken one.
136
There are two groups who go even farther than the
vegetarians. One eats only the fruit of trees and so are called fruitarians. The
other abstains from dairy produce but still eats vegetables and so are called
vegans.
137
To put the body under a necessary discipline is
not the same as putting it under an unnecessary tormenting asceticism. Those who
cry out that the body is being maltreated when it is no longer fed with red
meat, or gorged with excessive food, or poisoned with fiery liquor, cry a false
alarm.
138
It is true that Gandhi drank milk but the fact
always troubled his conscience.
139
The legumes are much favoured by vegetarians
because they are rich in protein and palatable in taste. But they are also
gas-producing and somewhat indigestible. If eaten at all, they should be taken
in small quantities.
140
I have scooped up the inside of many an avocado -
an excellent food - and spread much tahini on many slices of bread.
141
A Japanese guru told his disciple that he would
have to wait twelve months for enough purification to prepare the way for his
sanctification. During that time, his efforts should proceed strenuously, and
they were not only to be concerned with the thoughts themselves but also with
the physical intake, solid and liquid.
142
In this matter it is better to be fastidious, and
to reject much that is offered.
143
As his mind becomes purer and his emotions come
under control, his thoughts become clearer and his instincts truer. As he learns
to live more and more in harmony with his higher Self, his body's natural
intuition becomes active of itself. The result is that false desires and
unnatural instincts which have been imposed upon it by others or by himself will
become weaker and weaker and fall away entirely in time. This may happen without
any attempt to undergo an elaborate system of self-discipline on his part: yet
it will affect his way of living, his diet, his habits. False cravings like the
craving for smoking tobacco will vanish of their own accord; false appetites
like the appetite for alcoholic liquor or flesh food will likewise vanish; but
the more deep-seated the desire, the longer it will take to uproot it - except
in the case of some who will hear and answer a heroic call for an abrupt change.
144
The animal in a slaughterhouse or being hunted by
a pack of hounds accompanying a sportsman is full of fear. This affects the
adrenaline glands which pass toxic material into the body. Whoever eats the meat
of that animal may be getting protein and strength, but he also gets undesirable
material.
145
Have they no pity on the lambs torn away from
their mothers' sides (as I have seen in New Zealand) to be slain and exported to
satisfy the appetite of humans?
146
The killing instinct in men shows itself first in
their diet and after this in their perpetual wars. Even when Rome became
Christian the gladiatorial shows were continued as the cockfights were in
Protestant England and bullfights in Catholic Spain.
147
It is philosophically advantageous to preserve a
comprehensive equanimity amid the vicissitudes of human fortune and to practise
a reasonable indifference toward outer conditions. But it is inhuman and
unreasonable to demand, as the price of spiritual peace, that we shall renounce
all earthly satisfactions to the point of neither enjoying delicious food nor
feeling aversion to repulsive food - a rule set down in the chief manual of
yoga.
148
Those who sin against their body in order to keep
the good opinion of others, or to appear sociable or convivial, commit the
further sin of being weak, insincere, and fearful.
149
Several nuts, but not all, are excellent sources
of protein to replace that which is lost through abandoning meat. Their
indigestibility will disappear if they are finely ground in a mill or made raw
into a butter.
150
How necessary it is to test theory by result in
these matters of diet is exemplified in many cases like that of Metchnikoff, who
propounded the yogurt-way of achieving abnormal longevity and followed it
himself, only to die within three years from the diseased bowel condition which
his unbalanced fanaticism produced.
151
Eating food of a special kind or sitting in an
isolated cave cannot of itself make anyone spiritually minded. But it can lessen
the number of obstacles in the way of anyone who seeks to become spiritually
minded.
152
The sensitive and humane person who does not
pause to consider his guilt in this matter has let himself take the easy
conscience-drowning way, parthy because it is the popular way and partly because
he is duped by a science and religion which are blindly playing the ego's game.
153
Fresh fruits should be tree-ripened. Dried fruits
should be naturally or sun-dried, but if a process must be used it should be the
low-heat one. Grains, nuts, fruits, and vegetables provide a complete diet for
man.
154
The work of bringing the multitudes into adopting
a non-flesh diet, and into abandoning harmful habits, ought to be freed from
unwise presentation. It ought to be persuasive education, and not vehement
propaganda. The case for it ought to be presented temperately and prudently, not
aggressively and fanatically.
155
He must find out by personal experience what his
stomach can easily digest, and strictly take nothing else. This is one rule. He
must eat of such foods no more than his body really needs, which is always less
than what custom and society have suggested he needs.
156
Whatever we eat beyond that which the body really
needs, gives no strength and yields no benefit. Instead, it actually harms us.
Instead of strengthening, it weakens us. Instead of benefiting, it poisons us.
157
How can the human race avoid the fate of being
slaughtered in war when it itself slaughters so many innocent creatures in
peace?
158
The exploitation of other living creatures to
gain unnecessary human food, must be protested against. Forcing their
enslavement to human service and slowly distorting their bodies into having
unnatural exaggerated functions is a crime against them.
159
Those animals which have lived in the society of
man can sense his intent enough to fear death when he takes them to the
slaughterhouse.
160
Is the peaceable man to reduce or stop violent
aggression against his fellow men but to continue it against other fellow
creatures? What about the animals? We are not entitled to destroy animal life
without an adequately necessary and morally justifiable purpose. Therefore it is
well to enquire from the wise and good into the character of such purposes, and
be guided by their counsel rather than by environmental custom. For the latter
has led us, through its utter ignorance and total unawareness of the higher
laws, into a situation where blow after blow falls heavily upon the human race.
Why should we be so astonished that peace is so hard to obtain, that all too
often flaming violence of war and death and mutilation is carried across the
land despite our prayers to God and our plans to the contrary? So long as
millions of innocent animals are bred only to be sent to the slaughterhouses for
our unnecessary food, so long will Life pay us in like coin. The lower
characteristics are taken into the body, the blood, the nerves, and the brain.
They become a part of us. The mind's response to higher ideals is dulled. The
passions which make for strife and thence for war meet with less opposition from
conscience and reason. The fear, suspicion, fright, and desire for
self-protection which contribute toward war, being impregnated into the blood of
our meat during the moments preceding its slaughter, are little by little
brought into us too through the glands, the nervous system, and the brain, as
our own blood feeds them in turn. It would be desirable, although admittedly
difficult, gradually to adopt a meatless diet as a help to secure both the
individual's development and the world's peace.
161
Everything is polarized, whether in the visible
universe, or in the invisible forces of life itself. This is what the Hindus
call the pairs of opposites and the Chinese call the Yin and Yang. All things
are complementary and compensatory, yet at the same time antagonistic. If Yang
gives us energy, Yin gives us calm. Both are necessary. The macrobiotic cult has
also brought this principle into the diet, but they have done it in a fanatical
way, with the consequence that they make the largest part of the daily diet a
cereal, which leads to excess of starch and of acidity. Also, they use too much
sea salt, which leads to a corrosive effect internally. Finally, like the
Indians, they do most of their cooking with oil, which places too much strain
upon the liver. We should seek balance in diet as in study.
162
Saint Anthony, founder of Christian monasticism
and father of Christian anchoreticism, laid down a rule for himself to eat only
once a day, and that after the sun had set. But the Buddhist rule for monks is
to eat the last meal at midday when the sun is at its highest point! Can we not
see here as in so many other spiritual matters, how much human opinion governs
men - and not divine inspiration!
163
Peasants in Germany and Russia, in Bulgaria and
China, know the worth of black bread. But with the pseudo-progress and the
surrender to appearances rather than to honest values, its replacement by whiter
and whiter bread is possible, perhaps probable.
164
Many spiritual aspirants who are practising yoga
in India usually prepare their own food. The theory is that the magnetic
influence of the person who prepares the food affects the latter, and the
aspirant eating food permeated with bad magnetism suffers thereby. The advanced
yogis do not need to be too concerned about this, as they are more immune in
some ways, although more sensitive in others. But where they have the choice
they will be careful in this matter.
165
A saying of the Buddha: "It is not the eating of
meat which renders one impure, but being brutal, hard, pitiless, miserly." This
passage was directed against those Brahmins who boasted of their faithfulness to
external rites.
166
Jesus' criticism of dietary concern was directed
to those orthodox Hebrews who ostentatiously took every care to free their meat
from blood as prescribed by their religion, but took little care to free their
hearts and minds from selfish, materialistic, or unworthy thoughts and feelings.
167
Just as Buddha protested to the Hindu priests
against the sacrifice of innocent goats on religious altars, so Jesus protested
to the Israelite rabbis against the sacrifice of innocent lambs on religious
altars. But where Buddha, in his opposition to all ritual, suggested no
substitute, Jesus suggested the eating of bread in place of the lamb's flesh and
the drinking of a little red wine in place of the lamb's blood.
168
It has been asked why the Pythagorean teaching
interdicted the use of beans in a vegetable diet. Having sojourned and studied
in India, Pythagoras was well acquainted with the Bhagavad Gita's rule
that the yogi's food should be light and easily digestible. He gave exactly the
same rule to his followers. Dried beans fell under the ban because they were
then, as now - because of their tough skins - notoriously indigestible. A
further reason was his belief, also picked up in India, that all large and
medium size beans contain an ingredient which is harmful to the body. The very
small bean called "gram" in India and "Mung bean" in China does not fall under
the ban: it is harmless, nourishing, and palatable."
169
Perhaps it was dated thirty-five years ago that I
went on a journey with V. Subrahmanya Iyer. We travelled for about ten days
through jungles and mountain villages in the depths of Mysore state. On our
trip, a yogi who was unknown to us joined the party and stayed with us for a day
or two. Later in the first day, the yogi darted to the ground where some
creepers were growing in a shady, damp place. He pulled up part of a plant and
showed it to me and praised its medicinal merits. Iyer told me it was used by
old people to become more youthful and to lengthen life; the yogi told me he
used it to treat patients suffering from leprosy, to strengthen the heart and
thus prevent attacks, and to purify the blood. He added that it was even useful
in the kitchen where, mixed with curry and grated coconut, it improved the taste
of food. I could not at the time identify the plant with anything I had seen in
the West. In Sanskrit it is Soma Valli, in Tamil it is Vallarai, in Hindi it is
Brahmi. Preparations from it are made by the ayurvedic native herbalists and
medical practitioners.
170
In the warm climate of southern Italy it is
possible to find that vegetables are softer, tenderer, and tastier than in our
cold northern climate where they are often stiff and fibrous and even
indigestible if eaten raw. Even the Italian peasants themselves in the south
will eat them raw when out working in the field. This advantage, of course, is
offset by the risks of disease associated with raw foods in the Mediterranean
countries - especially the risk of dysentery. But to live anywhere in the
Mediterranean is to be able to live much more on raw and therefore more
vitaminous food than it is in the colder countries.
171
Strange impossible ideas enter my mind at times.
Reason soon bids them take their exit, but now and then a few reappear to haunt
me. One of them is this: The Japanese associate with their traditional tea-cult
an entry into the atmosphere of spiritual tranquillity. May it not be that the
modern British - from whom, and for this particular purpose, I must leave out
the Celts of Wales and Cornwall, Scotland, and Ireland - being deficient in
metaphysical faculty and mystical temperament, drink their tea in an unconscious
and futile attempt to touch the divine stillness by a grossly physical act? For
the figures show that they drink more tea per head than any other people in the
world, outside Southeast Asia.
172
The eating of onions and garlic is forbidden to
the Yellow Hat monks of Tibet - the celibate, stricter order. A monk who has
partaken of them is regarded as unclean, and cannot take part in any religious
ceremony. He is not even allowed to put out a fire.
173
Many of the monks and porters in Tibet make their
lunch of tsampa - which is barley flour mixed with cold water, kneaded into raw
dough-like paste, rolled into a ball, and eaten uncooked. The monks have only
buttered tea, the porters beer, to complete their lunch. The porters can carry
heavy loads on this diet, which is repeated at breakfast and at night. The point
to be noted here is that although their work is exceptionally burdensome because
of the steep and rocky nature of the mountainous ground over which they often
have to travel, they carry it out quite successfully on such raw, uncooked food.
174
Even the two great religious lawgivers who laid
down social rules for their followers which allowed a flesh diet, did not allow
it absolutely. Muhammed and Moses prohibited pork from being included, while
Moses went further and ordered a preliminary process that robs the meat of much
of its harm. It is not so much the meat that is harmful and debasing, as its
life-force carrier, the blood. Before a Jew eats meat, the blood is almost
entirely withdrawn from it, being drained out by a soaking for some hours in
salt water.
175
The monks belonging to the thousand-year-old
Carthusian Order never eat meat. They model themselves largely on the early
Christian monks of Egypt. The Trappist monks of today are also vegetarians.
176
Comte de Saint Germain ate oats for his
breakfast. He drank a special herbal tea. He formed the habit in India while
gathering knowledge from a certain teaching.
177
The ancient Sanskrit texts give strict rules
about eating. They forbid the preparation of food by a member of a caste lower
than that of the man who eats it. Even today a Brahmin would rather carry his
own food than go into a non-Brahmin restaurant when travelling. On these lines a
Westerner should do the same if he cannot find vegetarian food.
178
England pays out an enormous amount of money for
the doubtful privilege of buying dead bodies from abroad to feed living men. She
could save all that money and thus help to strengthen her situation. And, if she
used her arable land entirely for fruit, vegetables, and grain crops instead of
cattle grazing or breeding, she would get five or six times as much food from
the same ground.
179
During my Asiatic travels a group of Chinese
Buddhists asked me to talk to them - an activity which in those days I was
willing to do, unlike today. After the spoken address they invited me to dine
with them. There were about twenty of us and when tea was served one laughingly
remarked that, in contrast to the English, they put no milk in it. I enquired
why milk was rejected. He answered that it was distasteful to many, if not most,
Chinese because those who drank it were supposed to emit a cowlike odour, while
it was repulsive to the Buddhists among them because its human use was a robbery
of the calf.
Milk is an animal product but few Western vegetarians seem able to leave it out of their diet and yet remain satisfied. I am one of the few. Their difficulty lies principally in replacing the nutritive substances and calcium minerals which milk and cheese supply and which are necessary to the human body. I believe this difficulty could be met, as the Chinese meet it, by using soyabean milk and soyabean cheese, whose chemical composition is about the same as the animal product. Or a different and suitable replacement could be nut milk, which is easily made either from almond or coconuts. I do not even use this, preferring tahini, the thick fluid derived from sesame seeds.
180
It is a Japanese idea to serve each vegetable
separately - and to eat it separately and not to mix all the vegetables together
as in the Chinese chop suey (which is after all not a real Chinese dish, but an
American invention). This brings out the best taste and flavour of each of the
vegetables.
181
Indian widows are made by custom to live a very
ascetic existence. Their food is sparse and basic: no spices are allowed in it
because it is believed they strengthen sexual instincts.
182
A philosophical view of the matter must discount
the value of certain injunctions given by eminent spiritual authorities, such as
several traditional Hindu manuals which say "the yogi is to eat what is put
before him" (as a sign of his freedom from aversion and attraction), or such as
the Japanese Zen master Keizan's rule: "Food exists only to support life: do not
cling to the taste of it."
183
Even among the Indian teachers there is lack of
agreement on this subject. Although this contradiction may not be known to
enthusiastic recent converts, it is bewildering to some of their veteran
followers. Swami Brahmananda, a direct disciple of Sri Ramakrishna and first
president of the Ramakrishna Order of Monks, declared that it was nonsense not
to eat meat. The late Swami Shivananda, second president of the same order and
another direct disciple, often smoked tobacco. I remember an anecdote which was
told me by His Highness the late Maharaja of Mysore. Swami Vivekananda came to
Mysore in quest of financial help for his proposed journey to Chicago to address
the 1893 World Parliament of Religions which was destined to bring him sudden
fame. My friend's father, the previous Maharaja, immediately recognized the
inner worth of the Swami and gladly granted help. He sent one of his palace
officials with Vivekananda to the local bazaar with instructions to buy whatever
things he wished to have. But despite the official's repeated cajoling, the
Swami would not accept anything else than a large cigar which he lit at the shop
and seemed to enjoy hugely. Vivekananda ate meat. He even advocated animal food
to his fellow Hindus because it would give them more strength and more power as
a nation in the fight for its own rights and place. But had the science of
nutrition been as advanced in his day as it is now, it could have informed him
that all the body building and energizing attributes of flesh food could be
obtained from vegetable proteins and carbohydrates.
Sri Yashoda Mai, the female guru, and Sri Krishna Prem of Almora, her male disciple, both smoked. Her Holiness told a North Indian prince that it was not bad to smoke and offered him a cigarette herself. So naturally he smoked it, having received it from such holy hands. "I could not refuse it," the prince told me. This began a course which ended in chain-smoking. I knew him for many years and finally persuaded him to free himself from both smoking and gluttony.
Ramana Maharshi of South India, like most Brahmins of that region, considered meat as too low a form of food to be used by the spiritually minded. In the West we know that Blavatsky, the Theosophical seer, too often kept her fingers busy rolling long Russian cigarettes. Gurdjieff, the Armenian occultist and one-time teacher of Ouspensky, usually produced packets of cigarettes for his disciples to smoke, whilst himself indulging in oversized cigarettes.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, following the common habit of his time and place, ate animal food. He even poked gentle fun at vegetarians.