You don't necessarily lose weight as a vegetarian or vegan. To maintain your current weight, replace your calories that you are losing by not eating meat. Say you'd usually eat 300 calories of chicken at dinner, eat 300 calories of something else.
Thank you for sharing your story! I think it's very important for young people to understand how important health is and how much you should not take it for granted.Like you I was very tiny until I reached sixteen, and then filled out. But I became anorexic in my thirties and still suffer the aftermath of six years of being severely underweight. I have osteoporosis and am being treated for it, and have to sit on a donut cushion now because my tailbone is bruising from the gravity and weight sitting places on it (and I am not even underweight anymore). That is how bad my spine is. Not to scare you, but please make sure to take care of yourself and get enough to eat. Your growing bones need all the help they can get.
Well, let's just say that cows do not like being milked and the conditions hens are raised in to obtain the regular eggs in your grocery store is inhumane. I strongly suggest looking into eating less dairy and eggs, and sourcing them from local farms, where the animals are treated with some semblance of dignity and care (I know some may not agree). It is OK to ease into this significant lifestyle change. Small steps forward are better than nothing and whether you're consuming dairy and eggs or not, just not consuming meat is still making an impact! It took me 15 years as a non-budging ovo/lacto veg and developing an allergy to dairy for me to finally give up milk and eggs over this summer.Thanks for the tips everyone! It's going to be so much fun to be a vegetarian because I feel that it's a good thing to do, also I love to cook, and go to grocery stores, and help find food so I can make new recipesthe hard part is getting protein what kind of foods would be good for protein? I believe that I don't have enough... It might be hard because my family eats meat like everyday and my older brother is in LOVE with it and always telling me to it. But I'll give it a try because I love trying new things hope my parents agree with this they already know I'm not a fan of meat and I'm also a picky eatter so they make me cook my own food because I hate all food lol
But I'm still going to ear eggs and milk because I was told cows like being milked and eggs well their not meat I don't think.
Thank you for the advice, greatly appreciated! My dad gets our eggs from a farmer friend and we get a lot of them, so I think that'd be good. I'm happy I've never been a fan lots of fast food places, the smells gross me out and I read to many horror stories on the internet about that stuff, and don't know why.. Guess I want to know the truth about what goes in my system. Anyway, thanks for the advice everyone it's so handyWell, let's just say that cows do not like being milked and the conditions hens are raised in to obtain the regular eggs in your grocery store is inhumane. I strongly suggest looking into eating less dairy and eggs, and sourcing them from local farms, where the animals are treated with some semblance of dignity and care (I know some may not agree). It is OK to ease into this significant lifestyle change. Small steps forward are better than nothing and whether you're consuming dairy and eggs or not, just not consuming meat is still making an impact! It took me 15 years as a non-budging ovo/lacto veg and developing an allergy to dairy for me to finally give up milk and eggs over this summer.
Proteins and fats do not need to make up as large of a portion of your diet as we are led to believe by conventional dietary "advice". Of course, you do need them, but just not be overloaded with them! Given that you say you have a tree nut allergy, a good source is beans and rice. If you aren't gluten intolerant, vital wheat gluten is extremely protein dense, though should not be consumed frequently (you can make a rather tasty homemade, soy free chicken substitute with it though!). Leafy greens, if consumed in large quantities, are actually good sources of protein as well! But you really and truly do not need protein in the quantities most Americans (and other westernized nations) consume. That is plain and simple meat industry propaganda! If you're feeling tired and weak as a veg, it's not a lack of protein, it's more likely not eating enough calories. If you are eating a healthy vegetarian diet of fruit, veg, grains, beans and a little dairy and eggs, you'll be fine on protein.