So here I am again. Blogging about the same thing that I
blogged about last time. Basically an issue that has really been bothering me.
But I think I have found a decent conclusion to it now and made the tough
decision to walk away from it. I say it is tough because I wanted to believe in
a fairy tale that did not exist, once again hoping for the good in someone’s
intentions but feeling let down when that good was simply not there.
As I mentioned in my previous blog, I follow(ed) a small
farm community online and truly enjoyed the love and devotion displayed towards
her beloved chickens and other animals. But this illusion was shattered when
she publically displayed her blood-lust towards a weasel that killed some of
her chickens. This just did not sit well with me. It was like a contradiction
of who she was portraying herself to be. Here is this woman putting dresses on
her injured chickens and cuddling them like babies, treating all of her animals
like family members, and then she reveals that her animal love is conditional.
She has no problem spilling the blood of predators who are simply behaving like
nature intended them to. And she has no problem being graphically sadistic
about it. So that contradiction changed how I felt about her. I began to see
her as not quite the gentle animal-lover I had believed her to be. But I still
liked her anecdotes about her animals and I enjoyed watching her farm grow and
progress as she added horses, goats and turkeys to her menagerie.
I hoped maybe she would have a change of heart on the
predators and maybe realize she was wrong. After all, she did receive some feedback from readers who were upset with her blood-lust, and in a
later incident with raccoons she didn’t make such an issue out of it and did
state they would be relocated rather than slaughtered. So I hoped things would
be better as I really liked her writing style and her witty banter steeped in a
combination of pop culture and literacy.
However, there now stands an incident where there is no
turning back for me.
The other day she made an announcement that she was taking
orders on her turkeys for Thanksgiving!
Say what??
Are these the same turkeys she lovingly took endless photos
of, wrote cute little stories about, developed their personalities (to the
delight of us readers), and gave names to? She mothered these birds, she
clearly came across as though they were FAMILY members! Or was that my own
incorrect assumption? Perhaps it is normal to treat animals you plan to murder
with such familial ties?
I don’t think so.
There is something very, very wrong about this situation.
I called her out on it. I commented that I did not realize
she was going to kill the turkeys! I had thought they were pets like the
other animals…or perhaps I am wrong about them too?
Her response was that if they were not bred for meat then
the breed would die out as people have no use for them as pets. I then did a
little online research and discovered many anti-kill farms keep these turkeys
as barnyard pets. I mentioned that to her but she refused to budge on her
stance. And that’s fine, she can do whatever she wants. But I am left feeling rather
blindsided about who she is.
I then decided to leave her community permanently. There
just is no other way. And I was going to send her a message of peace and hope but then I saw she had posted an open letter on her wall, directed at me, without
naming me specifically. But it was very much directed at me. This is what she
posted:
“A NOTE TO READERS.
Hi. Welcome. Glad to have you here. Please, make yourself to home. That said...
Hi. Welcome. Glad to have you here. Please, make yourself to home. That said...
More and more, we are farm, not a zoo. My concentration, going forward, will be raising food-producing animals, giving them the best possible lives, as an end unto itself, and also to produce the best possible food.
If you choose to be a strict vegan, God bless you. That's a great choice, but it is not a choice for everyone. If you choose to consume dairy and eggs thinking you are not contributing to the torture and death of animals, you're not seeing the whole picture. Even if every drop of milk and every egg you buy and consume was produced by animals living in the lap of luxury, animals were slaughtered to produce it.
I know, I know. A huge veil was lifted from my eyes when I realised the fates of (abundant, unwanted) male chickens and dairy animals. I thought being a vegetarian was preventing animal death, and then I learned: the consumption of animal meat goes hand in hand with eggs and dairy, and will continue to do so, until the day Mother Nature decides to pop out a more favourable male/female ratio when she procreates. If we're facing our food, here, and I strive to face my food, squarely, without flinching, we need to face that.
I do not eat meat. I have not eaten meat for 17 years, which I believe gives me a little cred. I do not judge (and have never judged) those who do, and I am making it my mission to produce meat from animals who live, and die, as humanely as possible. I may even eat meat again someday, but that's another story. For now, I strive to be part of the solution of the CAFO problem, and not turn the blind eye I felt my vegetarianism granted me.
All this to say, if it upsets you to read about the slaughter of animals for meat, or the steps we take to protect our livestock, this might not be the page for you. I hope you stick around. I just wanted to be very clear about my mission here.
Peace out.”
So that was me told.
And this is her farm to do with
as she wishes, to treat animals however she desires.
And no, I am not a vegan or a vegetarian although I would like to be. And I like to feel I am heading in that direction. But I could not befriend an animal and then kill it. I do feel terrible guilt about eating animals or animal products. And this has given me a well-needed push to go in the vegan direction a little faster.
But what bothers me here is failing
to understand how she can dote on her animals like pets and then turn around
and kill them. It is unsettling. How she treats predators should have been a
red flag. But she gushes with such love and joy towards her animals that it
defies reason to think that she could slaughter them.
I made it clear to her by
posting my own farewell. I stated I had no interest in changing her mind on the
choices she makes, but I had to leave because she was not who I believed she
was and everything about her farm was too much of a contradiction for me. Of
course she deleted my comment even though it was said in complete kindness. She
obviously does not want any other readers to see my words and think about her
actions not being consistent with her behaviours.
Sigh. I have to put it all behind
me now. Which is often hard for me to do as I have such a hard time walking
away from someone or something that I loved or cared about. And I did care
about her farm, I had come to delight in her posts and adorable photos of her
seemingly worshipped animals.
I have gained wisdom from this experience
though, one more moment of growth in the greater journey.
And my hope for her is that she
looks at herself and asks herself why she is ok with the death of any animal, be
it either pet or predator, on her hands. What does that say about who she is?
Winona was right. Reality bites.
2 comments:
Farm life isn't always pretty. If I were raising poultry for food, I would try to give them as good a life as possible, but I wouldn't form personal relationships with them or try to 'humanize' them.
Hi, well yes exactly. If I needed to farm to survive or if that was my life's work, then I certainly would not be getting personal or cuddly with animals I would later be killing. I think it is either one or the other...otherwise it is just...disturbing. :(
Post a Comment