• About
    • About Us Overview
    • Thich Nhat Hanh
    • Meet Our Community
    • Employment Opportunities
    • News
  • Learn & Listen
    • Learn & Listen Overview
    • Media & Resources
    • Library
    • Creativity
    • Online Courses
  • Mindfulness
    • Mindfulness Overview
    • Foundations of Mindfulness
    • Mindful Living
    • Trauma-Informed Mindfulness
    • Guided Meditations
  • Community
    • Join Our Community
    • Initiatives
    • Journal
    • Start a Sangha
    • Wake Up (18-35)
    • Become a Monastic
    • Order of Interbeing (OI)
    • BIPOC Sanghas
    • LGBTQIA+ Communities
    • Lay Dharma Teachers
  • Visit
    • Visit Overview
    • Events
    • Types of Visits
    • Register for a Retreat
    • Volunteer
    • Contact Us
  • Bookshop
    • Overview
    • Shop Online
  • Donate
  • About
    • About Us Overview
    • Thich Nhat Hanh
    • Meet Our Community
    • Employment Opportunities
    • News
  • Learn & Listen
    • Learn & Listen Overview
    • Media & Resources
    • Library
    • Creativity
    • Online Courses
  • Mindfulness
    • Mindfulness Overview
    • Foundations of Mindfulness
    • Mindful Living
    • Trauma-Informed Mindfulness
    • Guided Meditations
  • Community
    • Join Our Community
    • Initiatives
    • Journal
    • Start a Sangha
    • Wake Up (18-35)
    • Become a Monastic
    • Order of Interbeing (OI)
    • BIPOC Sanghas
    • LGBTQIA+ Communities
    • Lay Dharma Teachers
  • Visit
    • Visit Overview
    • Events
    • Types of Visits
    • Register for a Retreat
    • Volunteer
    • Contact Us
  • Bookshop
    • Overview
    • Shop Online
  • Donate
  1. Home
  2. Articles
  3. Being Vegan in a Non-Vegan Household
journal

Being Vegan in a Non-Vegan Household

Thay preparing food
Share:
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedInShare via email
Monastic Walk Brighter

Turn Your Inbox into a Dharma Door

Subscribe to our Coyote Tracks newsletter on Substack to receive event announcements, writing, art, music, and meditations from Deer Park monastics.

Support Deer Park

Donations are our main source of support, so every offering is greatly appreciated. Your contribution helps us to keep the monastery open to receive guests throughout the year.

Donate
    • About Us
    • Learn & Listen
    • Mindfulness
    • Community
    • Plan Your Visit
    • Online Courses
    • Journal
    • Coyote Tracks
    • Bookshop
  • INITIATIVES
    • Thich Nhat Hanh Museum
    • Thich Nhat Hanh School of Interbeing
    • Sister Chan Khong Film
    • Happy Farm
  • Publishing
    • The Hidden Mountain Record
    • The Mindfulness Bell
    • Plum Village App
    • Podcasts
  • Donate
    • Contact Us

Plum Village Practice Centers

  • Blue Cliff Monastery

    3 Mindfulness Road
    Pine Bush, NY 12566
    United States 

  • Deer Park Monastery

    2499 Melru Lane
    Escondido, CA 92026
    United States

  • Magnolia Grove Monastery

    123 Towles Rd 
    Batesville, MS 38606 
    United States

  • Stream of Compassion Mindfulness Practice Centre

    670 Concession 20 W, Tiny, ON L9M 0H6, Canada

  • Plum Village

    437 Chemin du Pey
    
24240 Thénac
    France

  • European Institute of Applied Buddhism

    Schaumburgweg 3 Germany
    D-51545 Waldbröl
    Germany

  • Healing Spring Monastery

    2 Rue Pascal Jardin
    77510 Verdelot
    France

  • Maison de l’Inspir

    8 Rue des Fans
    77510 Villeneuve-sur-Bellot
    France

  • Thai Plum Village

    Pong Ta Long
    Pak Chong District
    Nakhon Ratchasima 30130
    Thailand

  • Asian Institute of Applied Buddhism

    Lotus Pond Temp, Ngong Ping
    Lantau Island
    New Territories
    Hong Kong SAR China

  • Stream Entering Monastery

    530 Porcupine Ridge Road 
    Porcupine Ridge VIC VIC 3461
    Australia

  • Mountain Spring Monastery

    2657 Bells Line of Road
    Bilpin NSW 2758
    Australia

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

Ask a Dharma Teacher

Dear Teacher,

I have a question. I try to not contribute to the suffering of living beings. I've been vegan for 21 years. I live with my boyfriend who's been vegan with me for 10 years. However, unfortunately, he started eating animals again. I'm trying hard to live like Thich Nhat Hanh. He is my teacher. He says, Love someone so they feel free, but also to not support any act of killing. I want my boyfriend to feel free, but I don't want to support killing. I feel disturbed by the dead animals in the kitchen and hurt he's choosing this path. What is the most loving, and compassionate way for me to move forward?

Thank you

ANONYMOUS, LOVING, AND COMPASSIONATE


Dear friend,

Thank you for your good question.

My husband is also a meat eater; I have been a vegetarian for almost 40 years. The Five Mindfulness Trainings helped us create a way for both of us to be happy: he only eats meat when we eat out and we look for interesting, creative ways to fix delicious vegetarian meals at home. There are other ways to compromise but that is how the Trainings helped us.

All the Five Mindfulness Trainings are guidelines; they are not commandments although we often try to turn them into that. They offer us concrete, practical ways to take care of ourselves and our sweethearts, as well as all beings.

Each of the Trainings tell us what to avoid and what to cultivate.

In the First Mindfulness Training we are asked to put an end to our aggression which includes avoiding killing living beings. We are asked to cultivate respect, even reverence, for all life. Some of us decide to become vegetarians or vegans as one way to protect the physical, emotional, and thinking lives of living beings.

If we feel like we are not measuring up to the First Mindfulness Training, we are really training ourselves in judgmental mind. It is also easy for us to get self-righteous about others who are taking lives, in which case we are training ourselves in cultivating pride.

Those, of course, are not the intentions of the First Mindfulness Training. Instead, the Training is designed to help us find ways to avoid letting our aggression and judgmental mind get out of hand and to help us cultivate True Love: kindness, compassion, joy, and equanimity.

Our teacher, Thich Nhat Hanh, says that we need not be perfect in our practice of the Mindfulness Trainings. Thay says, “If we know that if every day we will make a little progress on the path of mindfulness training that is good enough.”

DHARMA TEACHER TERRY CORTES-VEGA

Explore Online Courses

From time to time we offer multi-week courses related to mindfulness, the teachings and life of Thich Nhat Hanh, and a variety of similar subjects. Please see our schedule of upcoming courses.

Upcoming Courses
Laptop mockup

Plum Village App

Take the Deer Park Monastery and Plum Village community with you wherever you go. The Plum Village app is designed to cultivate mindfulness, compassion, and joy through guided meditations, deep relaxations, practice poems, bells of mindfulness, and other practices — all through a mobile device.

Open Plum Village Mobile App in the App Store
Open Plum Village Mobile App in the Google Play Store