Facing Failing Health As A Vegan

January 20th, 2013 - filed under: The Food » Food and Health



I have been trying to write this post for ages, and I do mean ages. I’ve spent enough hours staring at this blank page, blinking cursor, to have written it many times over and still been able to bake a gluten-free vegan cake. Okay maybe that’s not true, but you get my point.

You’d think it would be a relatively easy story to transcribe. It’s a linear progression of factual events, right? Well, sort of. There are actually a number of ways I can tell this story, is the thing. For example I could very simply lay out the series of events, the way I got sick and why, and how I got better (I did). But that would sort of miss the point.

Or, I could write a scathing assault on our modern medical system which refuses to look at holistic health or even to pause at the quiet insistence of a new mother saying “No really, something is wrong.” Yeah, I could definitely write that story.

Or I could muse about the fascinating interplay of mental and physical health, wax New Age-y about the mind-body connection; wonder which causes which and ponder where it all begins (though I don’t think I’m the girl to write that article, ‘cause I’m not all that New Age-y and it’s all just Ouroboros anyway.)

Obviously, this is going to be a long post, can you tell?

The truth is that there’s only one way it feels right tell this story, and that is to contextualize it in the exact way that the entire thing was contextualized in my own life. It’s a story you don’t hear much in public, but I sure have heard it over and over in confidence. And I feel like it’s a story that needs to be told.

So this is my story: the story of how my veganism, held in deepest conviction, hit the wall of health crisis, and cracked with doubt.

~~~

Before I begin I want to acknowledge that I leave some things vague, mostly when it comes to my blood tests/numbers and what led to my diagnosis. This is because, well, it’s in the past now and I’m just not up for debating the specifics of how or what I could have done differently. I know everyone on the Internet is an expert (hey, me too!) but please respect that I don’t wish to argue about what I did or didn’t do.

I can imagine about a million and one ways in which people might be offended by what I’m about to say. I can also imagine another million and one ways in which people might want to invalidate my experience (Psychosomatic! Placebo! Armchair RD!). And you know? That’s fine. I’m not here to defend myself. I can’t please everyone, eh? I’m just trying to speak my truth and tell my story, exactly as I experienced it. Here goes.

Breastfeeding in a farm field. You now, like you do.


So, everything started a few months after Waits was born. But it was hard to get a handle on at first, because I was a) dealing with postpartum anxiety [certainly intertwined with my health issues], and b) a first-time mother who was attachment parenting a colicky baby, and c) still trying to “do it all” [ie maintain my blog and speed-write a book while keeping on top of all of the mom/wife/house stuff]. Which is why it took me so long to figure out that something was really wrong.

It began with the fatigue, and I don’t just mean that new mom exhaustion that’s born of too many sleepless nights. This was different, so that on my “bad” mornings my limbs were like lead, and moving into my day felt like so much work, it almost seemed unbearable. Like I said, the physical and the mental stuff was all tied up together.

The fatigue was often accompanied by a splitting headache, and after that came the rashes. My skin was suddenly hyper-sensitive. I had to stop using all lotion and even coconut oil – everything caused me to break out in itchy little red bumps. But even without any stimulus, the rash would come. Often it would be a fatigue day followed by a fatigue + headache day, with the rash setting in a few days after that. Or sometimes the rash would just show up, unannounced.

All of this compelled me to talk to my doctors; first to a midwife and then to an MD.

The midwife said that it sounded like typical new mom stuff. That I should come back if it hadn’t cleared up in a few months. It felt like the brush off.

The MD suggested that I had picked up a virus, any one of the many (like fifths and that cohort) that are common among small children. I asked about the strange recurrence, almost like a cycle, and he said that it could happen with these viruses. Even when I spoke to him again, six months later and it was still happening at regular intervals, he said it was just a virus. I felt like he wasn’t hearing me.

There were other symptoms as well, things that at the time seemed like maybe they were “normal” (in that new-mom sort of way), but as the year wore on and they all got worse, a bigger-picture of the problem began to emerge. My skin was often itchy and dry. I had these extreme mood swings. EXTREME. Often they seemed related to food, which was part of what prompted The Great Grand Diet Trial of 2011. I would get hot flashes, too. Clammy skin. Intense sugar cravings. And of course, anxiety and depression. Lots of anxiety, lots of depression. And eventually by the end of it, complete self-loathing.

This continued through the second half of 2010, and on into 2011. It only got worse. But my symptoms would ebb and flow, enough so that over and over, I would think it maybe had passed. I would feel better for a spell, and I would begin to believe that it had ended. Then, one evening my skin would feel a bit dry, and my heart would sink. And sure enough, the next morning, I would wake up with that same extreme fatigue, feeling like I literally couldn’t get out of bed.

That was the worst part of it all – the over and over up and then down, hope and then despair. That roller coaster, it wears you away. Does damage to the psyche.

I would have done almost anything to feel better. Anything. And when you’re vegan, eventually you start to wonder if your diet is part of the problem. Or maybe, everyone else wonders for you. But I couldn’t help it – I wondered too. I talked to my father, who is a well-respected doctor of Chinese Medicine. He advised eating meat. My Qi was weak, he said. “Just a little bone broth?” or, “Maybe some fish?

No” I repeated over and over. “Dad, I can’t do that. I’m vegan.” It became a point of contention in our relationship. He saw his daughter suffering and he wouldn’t accept my refusal of his solution. I felt like I was suffering and he couldn’t step outside his narrow paradigm to try to help me. But I’ll admit, his words and the words of everyone else wiggled in, and I worried that they were right. Was I making myself sicker because I was stuck in this ideology?

In March of 2012, over a year and a half into this, I spoke again with the MD. He still maintained it was a virus. Or, “Sounds like typical new mom stuff to me.

I felt completely alone. I felt like I was screaming for help and nobody was listening. And I felt like I was living a lie, blogging about the good stuff in my life (trying to practice gratitude, trying to be positive), while omitting this enormous struggle. It felt disingenuous and contributed to my shriveling self esteem.

In February of 2011, I quit blogging. I needed to figure out how to get myself better. Because I was truly, completely, hopelessly miserable. And I’m having trouble walking the line as I write this now, not wanting to sound melodramatic, but needing to express just how horrible it was, and how much it affected me. Quality of life? I had none.



Finally, in April 2012, I made an appointment with a Naturopathic Doctor.

I’d held off for a lot of reasons, mainly because of money (insurance doesn’t cover most naturopaths) and also I don’t know, maybe a sort of prejudice? I mean, I’m a hippie girl at heart, raised that way and totally accepting of alternative modalities. But homeopathy is something I could never really get behind (it just DOESN’T make sense to my scientist’s brain) and since I have both an MD and a Chinese Medicine doctor in the family, I just never really looked into Naturopathy.

But this was different, because I wasn’t getting the help I needed and very simply put, I was desperate.

I found a list of naturopaths that were covered by my insurance, and cold-emailed the ones that sounded like a good fit. This is what my email said:

“Hello, I’m wondering if you are currently accepting new patients. I am
dealing with lots of weird health/mental health issues which have come
up following the birth of my son. He is 25 months and the problems
started around 5 months postpartum.

I am “medium crunchy”, which means I’m actually very crunchy and
prefer alternative medicine techniques, but I’m also very grounded by
traditional science. You sound like you have a similarly balanced
approach and I’m wondering if we could have a consult and see if we
“click”.

Thanks so much! Cheers,
~Sayward”



Dr. Lasse called me back within a few hours. She left me a message, laughing at my “medium crunchy” remark, and sounding so kind. I felt right away that she could help me.

My first appointment was at the end of April, and I wept as she did my intake. I cried A LOT in that first session. I just felt such relief at finally speaking to somebody who looked me in the eye, who said “Yes, you’re obviously sick, let’s figure out why.” I had hope, real hope, for the first time in ages.

I told her my story and she agreed with my suspicion that my hormones were the underlying issue. The cyclical nature of the symptoms – and the symptoms themselves – seemed to indicate a hormonal imbalance. She was alarmed to hear that I wasn’t menstruating, something I hadn’t paid much attention to. I assumed that since I was still nursing I was just experiencing lactation-induced amenorrhea. Also, I hadn’t had regular periods in years, since way before getting pregnant (and since before going vegan, in case you wondered). I wasn’t actually menstruating when I got pregnant with Waits.

But she felt strongly that I should be, and so this became a starting point in our initial treatment plan. I left her office that morning armed to the teeth with a battery of the crunchiest crunchiness you ever did see. Herbal tinctures. Bitters for digestion. 3 different homeopathic remedies. Castor oil. A “prescription” to eat certain seeds on a lunar cycle in order to induce menstruation. I know! And of course, orders for a whole battalion of blood tests.



Two weeks later my blood work was back. Let’s pause and take a moment now. Try to imagine the absolute worst, the most ridiculous, the most comically ironic diagnosis that a vegan could receive.


No, it wasn’t B12. My B12 and D were great.


However, my cholesterol was abysmally low. And on top of that, I had blood markers for protein depletion. Seriously.

Cholesterol
Cholesterol is a type of fat found only in animal foods. Vegans do not intake ANY dietary cholesterol. Human bodies do produce cholesterol, however, that’s only if the body is healthy. Cholesterol is produced in the liver. My liver had been abused by many years of drinking, smoking, caffeine, and then eventually, pregnancy.

Cholesterol is the precursor to all sex hormones (like estrogen, progesterone, etc). Without adequate cholesterol, the body cannot make hormones.

Protein Depletion
You’ve probably heard vegans (and pretty much every vegan “leader”) scoffing at the protein question. “The protein myth!” and “How many cases of Kwashiorkor have you seen this year?” they’ll quip sarcastically. Basically, “neener neener, duh” is the attitude towards people who question protein.

But you don’t have to develop complete protein deficiency to be protein-depleted. And I, living an active lifestyle, nursing, and eating a sometimes-high-raw, always-vegan diet, was protein depleted.


I was devastated. Devastated. I felt like someone had punched me in the stomach. To hear “cholesterol” and “protein” as a vegan, well it just shook me to my very core. I was reeling.

My naturopath knew that I had some rescued hens, and she suggested that I start eating their eggs.

And maybe you’re thinking the same thing? It sure would solve all my problems, right? That’s a perfect little packet of pure protein and cholesterol, right there. In my very own backyard. Guaranteed cruelty-free.

The thing is though, it wasn’t about me. Because, sure, I could eat those very specific eggs that I don’t necessarily have an ethical objection to, and it would probably help me. Maybe even heal me. But then . . . what would that mean?

If I had to eat animal foods in order to get better, then that would mean I was not capable of being vegan. And if I was incapable of being vegan, then that would mean that the vegan ideology was fundamentally flawed. Because if I HAD to eat animals to be healthy, then eating animals could NOT be morally wrong.

So do you see? That this wasn’t just about me? Wasn’t just about my own health?

Veganism is the cornerstone of my life. It is my framework, it contextualizes my actions and informs my every decision. I believe in kindness and non-violence with the wholeness of my being. This is everything to me.


Those next few days, I was in a stupor. I cancelled a speaking engagement at the Mad City Vegan Fest, an event I’d been so looking forward to. How could I stand in front of a room and talk about veganism, when my own health was failing and my own faith was in crisis?

And then one night, just a few days after I received my diagnosis, I was making dinner and listening to a very popular vegan podcast. The host is one of my greatest mentors, and her discussions always calm and inspire me. This newest episode was all about talking to people who might misuse our words: people who call themselves vegetarian but eat fish, or people who call themselves vegan but eat occasional “humane” animal products, etc. And, there was a section on people who stop being vegan “for health reasons”. What a coinkidink.

One thing I’ve always loved about this speaker is the compassion that she seems to radiate in everything she does – it’s something I’ve worked hard to emulate. She’s just got a way with non-judgment, which was why it came as such a shock to hear the callous, almost mocking tone she took when speaking on this particular topic. She seemed to imply – no, she definitely said – that if someone gives up veganism for health reasons, it’s because “. . . they felt inconvenienced . . . ” and “. . . [they] didn’t really embrace it enough . . .”, ending with, “. . . and so the easy way out is an excuse that appears legitimate.”

This is, essentially, victim-blaming people during their most vulnerable time. And hearing this from someone that I so admire? Well that was just sort of my breaking point.

You don’t know!” I wanted to scream. “If you’ve never been sick you don’t understand! I would do practically ANYTHING to stop feeling like this!

So that’s the night I found my anger. And oh boy, was I angry. I resented everyone, everyone I’d trusted. All the vegan leaders and vegan doctors and vegan gurus who’d insisted over and over that I was eating the healthiest diet on the planet. They lied to me! FUCK THEM!

Well, that lasted about 12 hours. I’m not really one for anger and thus my self-righteous indignation didn’t make it past morning. The second I let myself remember why I was vegan in the first place, was the second my anger melted away (literally). Because, remember, it’s not about me.

I am vegan for the animals.

Period. I’m not vegan for the leaders and doctors and gurus, for the approval of my mentors or even for my own health. I’m vegan because I believe with all my heart and soul that it is wrong to inflict violence and suffering on innocent beings. Period.

So that was that. I’d uncovered my reserve strength. And now I had to find a way to get better while staying vegan. I mean, if anyone could possibly re-imagine, get creative, and think outside the box for a nontraditional solution, well I think that I’m just the girl for that job. I’m pretty freakin’ persistent.



I came to my next appointment with a renewed sense of purpose. “We have to make this work within the framework of veganism” I told my naturopath. She was supportive. We devised a plan.

I’m not going to go over every detail of my particular treatment, but in general it went something like this:

• Seeds. Within 3 weeks (seriously!) of starting the cycling seeds program for hormonal balance, I got my first period in over 3 years. I don’t even know what to say about this because it makes the scientist in me raise such a skeptic’s eyebrow, but listen. Dudes. It worked.

• Liver support. We wanted to help my liver efficiently make its own cholesterol. The regimen included castor oil packs, omitting alcohol, coffee, and black tea, and omitting refined sugar. I also cut out gluten because it very much exacerbated my most troublesome symptoms (fatigue and moodiness).

• Fat. Eating as much saturated fat (coconut products, cacao butter) as possible (SORRY NOT SORRY, DR. CAMPBELL) because saturated fat stimulates cholesterol production. Also, eating plenty of other healthy fats, like olive oil, nuts, and avocados (SORRY NOT SORRY, DR. ESSELSTYN). [Of course, I’m just being playful “apologizing” to these amazing doctors. I mean no disrespect – these are great men. But, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that although I believe a low-fat vegan diet is excellent for reversing and curing many chronic diseases, that does NOT mean that it’s the right diet for everyone. A diet for healing is different than a diet for maintenance, is different than a diet for building (pregnancy) and is certainly different than a diet for growth (children). I feel like a lot of vegans, and vegan leaders, overlook this important point. And in my own anecdotal experience, the vegans who most often get sick are of the low-fat and/or all-raw variety. Maybe this warrants it’s own post in the future, eh?]

• Protein. I made a conscious effort to include plenty of protein in my daily menus, with the aim of eating something protein-rich with every meal. During my intensive healing period, I was eating high-protein foods all day (beans, tofu, tempeh, quinoa, lentils, and more beans beans beans) and fixing myself a “protein & saturated fat” shake every morning and every night before bed.

• Additional emotional/physiological support, via herbal tinctures and homeopathic remedies. Because well why not?


And the results? Following this protocol, my progress was so immediate and so monumental, it felt like nothing short of a miracle. Within just a few weeks I felt like a different woman. I could hardly believe it.

And as the months passed, I only continued to improve. I was able to lay off some of the stricter guidelines (reintroduce black tea, drop the late night shake, etc). There was a lot of other very difficult stuff going on in my life back then, but my health remained strong and continued to gain strength, and that made all the difference in the world. Much of my anxiety and depression was relieved just by physically feeling better. So much.

When my blood was retested in September 2012, my cholesterol had moved up into the healthy range, and the markers for my protein depletion had mostly normalized (still room to improve, but much better). By the end of October I felt like both my physical and emotional health had made a complete recovery, and I scheduled my last session with my naturopath.

In some ways, I really feel like she saved my life. For those of you in the Portland area: Dr Raina Lasse, ND. I simply cannot recommend her highly enough.

~~~

These days I feel strong. I am healthy and I am happy. It’s actually not something I think about much anymore, which is more of a relief than you can probably understand. When you have your health, you just don’t realize how much you have to lose.

As for my current diet, I still eat coconut products (saturated fat) more often than most folks, but not every day. I’ve also retrained myself in the way I approach my meals, so that I always include some protein (it’s become second nature now). I do believe that every person requires a slightly different diet/macronutrient ratio, and that there’s no one set way that is a guarantee for good health. Some people only need very little fat, others don’t do well with carbs, and still others require lots and lots of protein. VIVE LE BEANS!

But all of these individual needs, I think, can be accomplished within the framework of a vegan diet. I do believe that now. Because I’m proof.

“I adore myself and everyone else.” Affirmation on the mirror at Cafe Gratitude, Hollywood.


If you are vegan and sick, please know that you are not alone. This is happening to others. This is even happening to leaders in our community. I know, because I’ve talked to them.

And you know what? It’s is a damn shame that there is such a stigma attached to this, that people feel the need to suffer in silence. I mean I get it, I do. As vegans we deal with enough skepticism from the “outside” world, and it can start to feel like you need to be a shining example of vegan health and perfection at every moment, or else you’re damaging the cause. But it’s a mistake, I think, that the leaders and bloggers and writers and others, are not sharing more of these sorts of struggles. Because we cannot fault people for giving in and going back, if they have no examples of how to persevere.

If nobody shares their stories, then everyone feels alone.

And if I, a deeply committed ethical vegan with a reputation and career on the line, living in freakin’ Portland Oregon, can actually consider going back . . . well, then I can’t blame isolated vegans in small towns who have no support system at all, for doing the same.

Losing your health is the scariest thing. When you’re sick, it consumes everything. But you don’t have to feel like hell just to stand by your beliefs, and you don’t have to stop being vegan in order to feel better. Find a medical practitioner – whichever type you prefer (I’m naturopath-for-life now!) – one that will actually listen and really wants to help. Get your blood tested! Don’t play guessing games, just pony up and pay to know what’s really going on. Then educate yourself, reach out to experts, reach out to the online community, find support, and work with your doctor to figure out a treatment plan that will fit your needs.

Once you’re better (and you will be), share. Leaders and bloggers and writers and everyone else, please share! We will never be able to figure out the whole puzzle, until we are looking at all the pieces. This is not a matter of veganism failing; this is simply a failure of information.

~~~

So that’s it. That’s the story of how I got sick, had a crisis of faith, found my strength, and fought my way back to health and happiness. My hope in telling this story is that it may inspire you to stand firm in your own convictions, whenever those convictions are rooted in love.

So with all my love,

*cheers*

To your health.



Edited to add: I am completely overwhelmed by the outpouring of support I have received today. Thank you all so much! It is downright scary to put yourself out there, but you have all reaffirmed my intuition that this was a story that needed to be told. And I am honored to have been able to share it.

As of now, tonight, this post has garnered almost 10,000 hits. Amazing! Please, keep sharing, because it’s obviously resonating with people out there. Again, I’m just so honored.

Unfortunately, I won’t be able to respond to each comment individually, but please know I have read and appreciate every single one. Thank you so much again – it feels great to be back! ♥

  • http://bonzaiaphrodite.com/ Sayward Rebhal

    Yes, this is one of the greatest lessons I learned from this experience. I just can’t judge!

  • http://bonzaiaphrodite.com/ Sayward Rebhal

    Thank you Elise! I’m so excited every time I read your blog these days, good luck and congrats with the impending monumental life change! =D

  • http://bonzaiaphrodite.com/ Sayward Rebhal

    Oh my goodness Charley, I’m so sorry to hear that you’ve been through this. And goodness, I know how hard it is. I hope that you are on a road to good health now, good luck to you!

  • Michele

    Wow. I cannot express my gratitude for your post and the detail you’ve provided. I have been so sick (depressed, bloated, gassy, headaches and an insanely itchy rash from head to toe) since last year. I finally went to a BIOSET/acupuncturist who helped me discover along with celiac disease that ive known about for 12 years, I cannot absorb B vitamins, tolerate soy, any grains, nightshade veggies, dairy (which I don’t eat), coconut, peanuts or refined sugar. As a vegan, I’m completely confused what to eat in place of tofu and tempeh and my pea protein shake which has a bit of rice powder in it. As I have pulled all the allergens, the bloat, depression and headaches have slowly dismissed but the rash still plagues me. It’s miserable. Always worse after a shower and bedtime. Any suggestions on what I can replace the proteins I can’t have with, would be greatly appreciated. I’ve been encouraged by the naturalist I see to eat meat and I won’t. Thanks again for writing this piece and giving those of us who can’t express what we are going through, a voice.

  • Rebekah

    It really is all about the animals. I always get the questions about what I would do if I had to eat meat, and I’ve given this question a great deal of thought, but it always comes back to that one fact, which is why I’m a vegan, is that it is all about the animals. I sometimes read or hear stories of animal neglect/abuse and I cannot help but feel the hurt in my heart and take it ever so personally. Some nights while trying to fall asleep I cannot get the images of animals suffering out of my head, and all I can do is pray that those that are suffering will find relief. I feel as strongly about the animal issue as you do, and yet sometimes I get wrapped up in the prideful-ness of the vegan lifestyle that I’ve been forced into (it’s become and us and them scenario, through no fault of my own). But when I feel my heart hurting for “my babies” (I refer to every animal as my baby) I know why I am really doing this. I really cannot imagine a day when I would go back to my old, selfish way of living and eating. VFL (vegan for life) no matter what.

  • Alesk

    I have read a lot of stories of vegan going to animal foods, because this or that didn’t work. And I believe that in most cases, when problems suddenly disapeared with addition of “little” animal foods, it was because on vegan dies, a person did not eat enough (vegan whole foods have lower caloric density than animal or processed foods an thus a person on a whole vegan diet had to eat more – in terms of volume, to achieve the same caloric intake). How much did you weight all this years that you hadn’t have menstruation? Many times menstruation does not occur if weight is to low, or caloric intake is too low. Protein depletion may also be the result of low caloric intake. Adding a lot of fat helped, but maybe because caloric intake went up, and maybe adding a lot of *any* foods would help?

  • goodfood

    Let food be your medicine, and medicine be your food!

    Glad to hear you got to the bottom of the health issues without having to resort to animal protein, dairy or drugs.

    Check out this fascinating story about chemo as a failed therapy. The alternative? The right detox diet. There is a link to the Gerson diet in the article.

    http://www.naturalnews.com/038811_chemotherapy_tumor_growth_fraud.html

  • GiRRL_Earth

    Sayward, you are an amazing woman!!
    -GiRRL_Earth

  • Anonymous

    This was such an excellent post, and I am so glad you were able to find your solution within the vegan framework. I also require more protein than the average vegan, and fewer starches. It can be a pain in the ass, particularly when travelling, but it keeps me healthy and energetic. I know exactly which podcast you are talking about, and I love her too. That part also upset me, particularly because I have a big problem with the strong tendency – particularly in America – to blame people when they have misfortunes and focus too much on the power of the individual to overcome anything (and disregarding personal circumstances, like socio-economic status and family support in the process). It’s why crazy things self-help stuff like The Secret are so popular…it’s appealing to think that if you want something badly enough, it will come to you. Sorry, but often it doesn’t.

    I am glad you had a positive experience with a naturopath. I found working with a naturopath to be immensely comforting, even though I am a skeptic and believer in allopathic medicine. She didn’t solve my health problems, but she certainly alleviated my stress by listening and asking questions. If nothing else, it made me feel less crazy and encouraged me to persevere until I did find a treatment that worked.

  • Tonya R Topete

    The right diet is a miracle worker. And what works for you won’t work for me. I had never considered cholesterol in this manner. Yes, you need it, but I’ve never heard that reason. I’ve always urged anyone thinking of becoming vegetarian or vegan to become highly-educated from credible sources. How do you know who’s credible these days? Where can people turn to?

  • http://twitter.com/Rebecca_Hawkes Rebecca Hawkes

    Oh gosh I have missed you blogging! I read your blog for about a year until I came to terms with my own conscious and decided to become vegan. It is not just a diet but an appreciation and compassionate ideology for others which becomes so evident in this blog post. Food wise I believe it is healthier (not just for humans) than a lot of other diets, but of course there are so many food choices that it’s not difficult too eat too little of some nutrition (for example the amount of malnutrition people that are overweight and on the Standard American diet). Eating animal products doesn’t have to be the answer and you are an inspiration. You stuck with your own morals to become healthy again and that’s something to be really proud about!

    Can’t wait to read more :)

    X

  • unethical_vegan

    Sayward,

    Low cholesterol levels are a common symptom of liver inflammation. Liver inflammation also triggers deficiencies in proteins produced in the liver. In fact, consumption of saturated fats is a way to *treat* liver disease. I think that your serum protein and cholesterol levels were not “deficiencies” but rather symptoms of a pre-existing condition. Moreover, while diet can be used to treat liver disease, I think its unlikely that a vegan diet was a causal agent. Hope this helps.

  • rachael snelling

    Thank you for this post, as someone who has suffered with a hormonal imbalance for 7 years, this article has been helpful. I am now considering the seed cycling myself.
    Due to extremely low progesterone, my fertility and hormones have not been as they should.
    Again thank you Sayward

  • http://www.facebook.com/luna.parrish Luna Parrish

    Fantastic blog! Thanks so much for sharing your story. I am bookmarking this one as I am sure I will want to re-read it one day. I wish you continued good health.

  • http://www.facebook.com/luna.parrish Luna Parrish

    A little judgemental don’t you think? We have all consumed things that are not good for us at one time or another. How do we know that Sayward may not be genetically pre-disposed to poor liver function or low cholesterol manufacture? Genetics play a strong precursory role in people who have high cholesterol so I see no reason why the same isn’t true for low cholesterol. Of course, I am certainly not advocating for the abuse of alcohol and cigarettes …

  • katrina

    I’m so sorry you felt so alone … I agree that we all put incredible pressure on ourselves to be the user healthy vegan who never gets sick. Thanks for having the amazing guts to share this story.

  • Esther at A,B,C,Vegan

    So proud of you for sharing, and more so, for finding the help you needed. So glad you are feeling better. Such an inspiration.

  • http://www.facebook.com/myvegancookbook Josh Latham

    Luna, I wasn’t being judgmental, just repeating what Sayward suggested caused her failing liver.

  • http://www.facebook.com/angie.daniels Angie Luci Daniels

    Curiously, what do you with the eggs your chickens lay? Just throw them out?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=815470064 Anonymous

    Your story is both heartbreaking and beautiful. Thank you for your honesty. Cheers for finding a healthy path for yourself and then to be so transparent sharing it with the world. I wish you all the best!

  • kristen

    thank you for your candor and honesty. i have never experienced anything like that so i can’t even imagine the overwhelming feelings you experienced. i do understand the stigma…i have hypothyroidism, have for years and years (long before i went vegan) and whenever i tell people the first question they have is “oh, because of your diet, right?” and i don’t think it’s a specific problem to vegans. anything out of the norm is subject to scrutiny. i guess as long as we keep working toward our best most healthy versions of ourselves it doesn’t matter what they think, right? and support each other. so thank you from the bottom of my heart. that is what your entire blog is for me…support. i actually came here today to revisit your pregnancy tips (recently discovered i am expecting!) but i am so glad i had an opportunity to read your story. i am thankful for your health and well being and your determination to do it in a way that felt healthy and supportive to you! and welcome back!!!

  • Leslie

    Thank you for sharing this post. Beautifully written and so insightful.

  • kristen

    i also want to add that i hope we can all reserve judgement on each other. i think the greater message to be taken away here is not that veganism is the end all be all, but that we all can take ownership of our health. mds, nds, herbalists, accupunturists, surgeons, etc, all go to school for years and study the body, but who lives in these bodies? us. no one knows better what is going on in my body but me and if my healthcare professional isn’t listening, perhaps they are not the healthcare professional for me. i applaud sayward for listening to her body and her conscience and finding a path to health that isn’t maybe the most traveled but was the path for her.
    sorry, don’t mean to be preachy…this is a topic that is very close to my heart! take care!

  • Sarah C.

    Thank you for finally writing this! I know I’m not the only one who was waiting and waiting to hear the results of your story, many of us with fear that it was going to be something horrible. But seriously, this is a great story and I think it needs to be out there, and I know we’re all glad you’re feeling so much better. So many people don’t take the time to figure out what balance within the diet is right for them and then blame the diet or the victim. But (and I say this, honestly, as someone who does eat “humane” eggs – it’s right for me and my family, as I truly believe my baby and my body need the cholesterol), you have stayed true to your convictions and found a (pretty easy to maintain, it actually sounds like, in the end) way to be healthy. Good on you! I hope you’ll return to blogging more regularly, because we love your “voice.”

  • Kat

    Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you, Sayward. You fucking angel. You are a goddess among women.

  • eileen

    I commend your strength and your vigor. Thank you for putting such a loving/candid post together. I will share this and am wishing you continued health.

  • Amy

    “We need different menu than our common ancestors with monkeys did. ”

    Except humans are related to apes, not monkeys. Monkeys are in a different family, and monkeys have slightly different diets than our ape ancestors.

  • Amy

    “We need different menu than our common ancestors with monkeys did. ”

    Except humans are related to apes, not monkeys. Monkeys are in a different family, and monkeys have slightly different diets than our ape ancestors.

  • Amy

    ” The cow proves this. A cow eats plants only and yet its tissues are very high in cholesterol. My whole point is that any diet can be healthy or not healthy. ”

    True, but cows have a totally different digestive process than humans. Comparing a cow’s health with a human’s health is a bit irrelevant. (I’m not bashing your post – I agree with most everything – just be careful jumping to conclusions.)

  • http://twitter.com/chynotto Chyn Otto

    I was listening to “Black Market Baby” and thought I’d check-in – and I’m glad I did! I’m not vegan but understand and agree with you about really listening to your body. Am very relieved and happy that your physical, mental and spiritual health are back on track :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/nyxie Candice Eisner

    Thank you so much for sharing this, for taking the time to write it all down, for being so honest and open.

    I can relate to this a lot, as I’m going through some health issues myself right now and am working with a naturopath. I know my vegan diet is making things more tricky, but I also know I’m not comfortable with going back to eating milk and eggs. This gives me hope that I can resolve things!

  • ruthie

    thanks for sharing your story! i have a story too– i became very sick after 12 years a vegetarian. that’s another story. you say you are vegan for the animals, but plenty of animals die as a result of your vegan food. the agriculture of grains and beans often brutally kills animals, destroys ecosystems and ruins topsoil. not to mention that plants eat animals. the death toll on a vegan meal is often much higher than a pasture-raised heirloom cow. (of course factory farming is the worse– but monocropping soy is just as bad as factory farming, for the environment and for the animals! i suggest you pick up a copy of “The Vegetarian Myth” by Lierre Keith. also, you said that you felt like you were screaming and alone and no one was listening– but your father was listening!!! I predict you will have continued problems if you neglect to eat animal products. the amino acids in meat and fish cannot be found in plant foods. also pick up a copy of “the mood cure” by julia ross. best of luck!

  • Amber

    Welcome back! I am so glad you are on the mend, you were missed!

    I am a vegan MD and definitely believe there’s a cure for a lot of things through veganism. I don’t know how I would have reacted in your situation, I suspect I wouldn’t have been as strong as you.

    You continue to be an inspiration. Thank you.

  • Desdemona

    I am so glad that you took the time and effort to write this; it’s wonderful to see someone thoughtfully and intelligently pushing back against the automatic “ZOMG YOU HAZ TO EAT A COW RIGHT NOW!” rhetoric that so many of us get if we so much as catch a cold. As you so rightly state, this is about larger issues than anyone’s personal health, and it’s worth doing whatever necessary to find ways to address problems while abiding by one’s ethics/morals/ideology/insert-life-informing-concept-here. I’m reminded of Jonathan Safran Foer relating his his Holocaust survivor grandmother’s explanation of why she refused an offer of pork, “not even to save [her] life” : “If nothing matters, there’s nothing to save.” I’m enormously grateful that you shared your story, not least because it will be my new go-to response to fundamentally lazy assertion that humans “need” the milk, eggs, or flesh of other animals in order to live healthy, productive lives. Thanks again, and all the very best to you.

  • Amanda

    Sayward!!

    So glad you followed your heart and found a path to health that aligned with your beliefs!

    We’ve missed you!
    xo,
    Amanda

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Melissa-Swanson-V/100000742467331 Melissa Swanson Ⓥ

    Thank you for this post! I love that your ethics weren’t compromised and you found a way to be healthy and happy while still being vegan. :D I hope you continue to thrive and have nothing but excellent health from now on.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Melissa-Swanson-V/100000742467331 Melissa Swanson Ⓥ

    “Nothing could be more compassionate then to want to free human animals of their self inflicted diseases, caused by their shitty diets.”

    Except freeing non-human animals from being raised in misery and needlessly killed? I’m sorry, but helping humans heal from things they *chose* to consume is NOT the most compassionate thing about veganism – the most compassionate thing is avoiding hurting animals who do not have a say and are unconsenting victims of torture.

    Maybe that’s why you said “plant based” rather than “vegan”, though? Veganism is more than food and is at heart a social justice movement, not a health movement. There are some vegans who ARE health advocates but that wasn’t the reason Veganism originally was started and, as health has nothing to do with fibers, clothing, animal testing, etc., health reasons don’t encompass all that ethical Veganism does.

  • Kim

    Thank you for sharing your story and I am glad you are feeling better! I have heard several stories from vegans whose health has suffered and so they started eating animal products again. I was happy to hear a story where a vegan stayed vegan and regained their health! I am always worried that one day I may get sick with something bad and people will judge my diet and say it was because I was vegan or maybe they would say well even being vegan didn’t help her so whats the point…..
    Thanks!

  • Sally Thomas

    I am blown away by your honesty and soul bearing. My heart goes out to you.

  • Shanna

    Thank you so much for sharing your feelings and struggles so others can learn. Every person is unique therefore every diet should be unique too. So sorry for what you had to go through… But you have reminded me to always pay attention to my body and my diet to be the most healthy. I truly believe health is most affected by diet and that veganism is the most healthy diet! Just each person needs to figure out the best vegan diet for them. It was very brave of you to share this with the vegan community but hopefully people will learn from it.

  • Anonymous

    That was amazing and so well written, I really wasn’t sure if it was going to end if you eating eggs or not, but you weren’t coming at it from a defensive angle so even if you had copped to eating a few of those eggs, it wouldn’t matter (to me). Usually the ‘veganism ruined my health’ posts get met with such backlash because they are defensive and crapping on veganism from the get-go. I’m glad you’re feeling better!

    Also, my favorite part was ‘SORRY NOT SORRY’.

  • Anon

    Thanks for the wonderful post, I really enjoyed reading it! Your honesty is inspiring; I’m especially impressed by the ease and self-awareness with which you pointed out what you couldn’t explain, or didn’t understand.

    As a side note, though, I’d add that there are some medical conditions which really do make veganism an impossibility – they’re relatively rare, on the whole, but they’re out there. One of the greatest sadnesses of my stepmother’s life is that she can’t maintain a vegan (or even vegetarian) diet and her health at the same time, as she has ulcerative colitis. Colitis, Chrohn’s and similar digestive disorders can entirely dictate your diet, in ways which you often can’t predict. At one point, she found that eating a chocolate muffin or two every day significantly helped her symptoms – explicable, no, but effective, yes!

    I agree with your conclusion that many health problems can be overcome within a vegan framework, but I think it should be noted that not all of them can. Especially in the case of chronic and potentially fatal diseases like ulcerative colitis, sometimes it’s impossible to base your diet entirely on ethics. This doesn’t mean you stop trying – my stepmother, for example, eats the minimum possible amount of meat and is scrupulous about checking its provenance – but it also means you shouldn’t feel like you’ve failed if you have to change to a different type of diet.

  • Julie Michelle

    Thank you for your incredibly moving story. I’m glad you are doing better now and I’m proud of you that you went the extra mile to find a vegan solution to your health problems. You are an inspiration!

  • http://www.facebook.com/catherine.garceau.5 Catherine Garceau

    S0 much love, so much thought, thank you for sharing. I can very much relate. When do you take a break? and heal, heal, or when do you keep helping others as you continue to be the health detective for yourself… Words of courage as yours make me smile, and think: “yes! this IS the journey of the true messenger!” Thank you for your passion!

  • Jala Duta

    Just love you <3 No one is perfect so we must forgive our mistakes…they make life more interesting anyways! There'd be no sense of miracle and amazement if everything was just "dandy" all the time. The ying of the yang. Keep on truckin' mama!

  • Patrick

    Thank you so much for the post! I, too, have doubted my vegan diet among failing health (headaches and fatigue, mostly). I’m ashamed to admit, I went to the egg. But it didn’t do much, and filled me with guilt. When it came down to it, a complete overhaul of my meals was necessary — and it did the trick. It didn’t mean eating meat or eggs again, it just meant more and different vegan food! You’re an inspiration to continue, and not let any passing headache or lack of energy make me rethink veganism again.

  • Renee

    This is the most amazing post. I wanted to cry and hug you. I am a vegan, a gluten free vegan, living on the Oregon Coast, 2 hours west of Portland. Not much for a vegan out here but not terribly hard either, just have to go to Portland if I want a special meal out, about once a year. Thank you for the amazing strength you have shown. You are an inspiration for all vegans but specially for those of us facing health issues. Thank you for sharing. That is an act of courage these days. Best wishes for you continued health.

  • http://www.facebook.com/rebecca.bennett.7773 Rebecca Bennett

    Like so many have already said, thanks for sharing your story. After reading some of the other comments (then getting kind of tired of that) I can see a lot of speculation and judgement one way or another that I feel kind of miss the points for me. I’m so glad that first and foremost you did not just take the brush off of your regular doctor. I hear about this time and again with people of all backgrounds not getting any kind of attention from their doctors. In the end they need to work out a diagnosis themselves and so be so ridiculously firm and relentless with their doctors to get anything accomplished and get on the road to wellness. Your story reminds people to take control of their health.

    And it’s so great to hear that your worked out a balance that remained in line with your veganism. I feel like many people would have taken the potentially easier route of eating the humane happy eggs but that would have left the hanging question of whether all the nay sayers were right all along. “Is veganism flawed?” “We ultimately have to eat animals.” While these questions still aren’t answered in a final manner they have been answered in your situation and people need to know that.

    Vegans can and do get sick just like everyone else. In fairness I feel diet should be in question for anyone and everyone who is ill. It really is a huge factor in our overall well-being (huge huge huge) and everyone is different. We all need to find the right balance to fuel and heal ourselves properly. I think this can be done within scope of veganism in most cases. I hope, with reading your story, more vegans will be encouraged to really try and seek out a solution in that scope before throwing in the towel and bowing to the healthcare industry’s refusal to accept a plant-based cruelty-free lifestyle.

  • http://bonzaiaphrodite.com/ Sayward Rebhal

    Wow Sien, we really do have a lot in common with our stories. I’m so glad you were able to figure out what was wrong, and work your way through it! <3

  • Susie

    Thank you for sharing your story. You are an inspiration. It is amazing how much what you eat affects your physical & mental health. I am definitely one of those vegans who doesn’t eat enough greens and probably doesn’t have enough protein…and I wonder why I am always so down!