Comment on CEwire2023 is Back Live! June 3-4 by Paul Farkas

CEwire2023: The Largest CE Conference in Optometry is Back!
With 60 Synchronous (Interactive) & Asynchronous (On Demand) COPE CREDITS

REGISTER HERE

DOWNLOAD June 3-4 Schedule of Courses!

Join us for the largest online CE event in optometry and see why over 20,000 ODs have chosen to participate over the past six years!

Use your conference pass to Watch LIVE online these dates:

February 25 & 26
April 29 & 30
June 3 & 4

September 9 & 10

OR watch ON DEMAND at your own pace and on your own schedule through December 1, 2023.

Register to receive exclusive discounts from leading vendors, and tune in to the CEwire2023 Livestream, where we’ll chat with optometric thought leaders and eye care industry executives.

Discuss the event & ask questions in this thread. Hope to see you there!

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Are Insect Protein Bars Vegetarian? by Christian

Get ready, kittehs.  We’re taking the bus off-(topic)-road.

The question today:  Is eating eating insects vegetarian?  

  1.  What if you’re spiritually opposed to eating meat, does eating a cockroach count as “meat”?   (I know, I know.  Trolling question.  But … does it?)
  2. Or, if you don’t eat meat because of environmental impact, would you eat bugs but maintain vegetarian status?  Rather than a long winded explanation that you don’t eat meat, except for little insects?  
  3. And lastly, if you don’t eat meat for healthy reasons … does eating bugs affect your health negatively?  Have you tried and compared?

This and more, in today’s musings …. 

You might know about my blood test news already, if you’re (one of the seven people) following me on the endmyopia Facebook.

This:

bloodtest32342

Image is a link to the FB thread.  Comment at will.

There’s a much longer story behind this, going back a few years.

Short version, I went on a little excursion to find out the relationship between blood sugar and eyesight.  This is a rather huge subject, about which there is a lot to be said.  A lot that isn’t being said.  Retinopathy, a recent example I briefly covered.  A major cause of adult blindness, even if you aren’t diabetic you’re at risk, affects millions of people.  Nobody. talks. about. it.

There are a lot of dots worth connecting for those in particular who are at risk for diabetes.

When I started with the sugar eye connection research, I was in Budapest for the summer.  I went for the first, baseline blood test.  That’s when things go off the rails a bit.  It turns out that there are other things that need attention.  Off the charts TSH (Thyroid stuff), bilirubin numbers with enough digits to resemble a winning lottery ticket.  Adventurous levels of cholesterol.  Apparently, I’m a mess.

I was a little shocked, to say the least.  And then, off to research all those topics.

It turns out that my little corner of the world, myopia, is pretty much exactly the same as any of those other health topics.  Available information is divided up into:

  1. Mainstream medicine (aka. how do we make the most possible profit by managing a symptom).  Arrogance paired with lots of prescription sales.  Yay.  Alternative to them?
  2. Coo-coo for cocopuffs pseudoscience Internet hippies.  They are the first thing I find once digging past the mainstream.  We know these guys already.  They who also turn off people to eyesight health talk, by being just … their hippie selves.  Then the
  3. Buy-my-ebook, health-back-in-a-weekend sites.  *sigh*  These range from accurate and helpful, to well intentioned but nuts (Ray Peat diet, anyone?), to just utter nonsense.  And lastly,
  4. Science minded alt-health explorers, professionally trained or otherwise.  Those always seem the hardest to find.  Why is that?

The science eventually lead to some usable tools, and I manage to fix the TSH problem.  Interesting adventure that, including fun details like ending up in some subway station in Bangkok, buying bottles of pig Thyroid hormone pills from some random guy I found online.  Ten bucks for a thousand pills of pig Thyroid, who can beat that?!  (Also, wow.  That stuff *works*.)

The various findings and experiments did eventually fix my TSH issue (at least till recently, but that’s another topic).

My approach as always, is to figure out which is the top level problem, and focus on troubleshooting just that, first.  Once you get that under control, you can start looking at the other issues, if they remain despite fixing the first issue.

Right now, long story short, I’m on to the triglycerides and cholesterol questions.  And yes, I know.  I’ve been reading all of the things online.  One interesting troubleshooting option, the one I’m exploring right now, is eating vegetarian for a while.

If this does the trick, I already have the next question lined up.

What about eating insects?

For one and just for fun, for those who are vegetarian, out of concern for the environment or the animals (rather than health reasons).  Is the principal based opposition to meat eating also opposed to eating insects?  In other words, can you be a hippie-type vegetarian, and eat crunchy grasshoppers?

One might reason that if a hippie-vegetarian-vegan uses insect sprays and kills ants and cockroaches, eating them wouldn’t seem to pose any additional contradictions to belief premises.

Yes?  No?

And for two, it’s worth exploring whether any possible cholesterol penalty created by questionably raised and fed animals also applies to insect critters.  For those like me, who aren’t spiritually opposed to eating the moo-cow, but may benefit from not eating it anyway.

Check out this crickets protein bar article, from Yahoo:

Bugs are the leanest, meanest, and most eco-friendly protein source out there, and they’re arriving in the mainstream kitchen — much sooner, even, than the early adopters of insect-laced foods could have anticipated.

It’s no secret that in many cultures around the world, bugs have been, and continue to be, a diet staple. Here in the U.S., it’s starting to become common knowledge that crickets pack a mega-protein punch (ounce by ounce, double that of beef, studies show) and have a complete amino acid profile. They’re also rich in magnesium, iron, and vitamin B12, and are perfectly balanced in terms of omega-3s and -6s.

“Eating insects can add protein, unsaturated fat and minerals, plus B vitamins and iron to your diet,” New York-based nutritionist Kerry Anne Bajaj confirms to Yahoo Health.

And so, we have entered the era of the cricket protein-based energy bar.

Pat Crowley, the founder of Chapul, is one of the pioneers in this food field. With TED talks, participation in a European Union food innovation summit, and a prestigious NEXTY award all under his belt, Crowley is getting ready for a mass distribution of his company’s cricket flour — the main ingredient in its energy bars — in retail stores across the country in June.

“The ‘yuck’ factor was two years ago,” he tells Yahoo Health. “Anyway, that only lasts the first, and maybe second, time someone tries cricket flour, and then it goes away.”

Cricket flour — which is simply made by slow-roasting the bugs and then grinding them into a fine powder — is particularly mild and blends smoothly into just about anything. “You wouldn’t even know it’s there in a blind test,” Crowley says. “The only way you’d feel it is that you’d be healthier.”

Being a complete protein, cricket flour is particularly valuable for people who don’t eat meat like chicken and beef — many of whom may find it challenging to get enough protein for optimal health. But really, cricket flour is a versatile and healthy option for everyone (except, perhaps, for the stricter vegetarians and vegans), and in addition to rolling it out en masse (“we are in 500 stores now and we expect to be in 5,000 by the end of the year,” Crowley says), Crowley and his team continue to experiment in their kitchens with different recipes.

“You can use

There are lots of insect food carts here in Bangkok.  It won’t be difficult to see what happens whenever I might add some cockroaches to the vegetarian diet.

insectfoods

Never.  I’ve never eating a single one of these.  

I’m curious what you think about all this.

Can you be a spiritual vegan hippie vegetarian, and eat bugs?  Am I just totally stepping in it, besides referring to them as hippies, posing the insect question?  What’s your take on the offensiveness level on that one?

And then otherwise, health and bugs eating?  Clearly the environment would benefit … right?

Tell me in the comments below, or on the thread in Facebook.  (Or Endmyopia’s Twitter but honestly I haven’t quite made sense yet of how that whole Twitter thing functions).   Conversation does interesting things, and I know you, my audience.  You’re the quiet observer.  But … come on, let me know what you think! 

Cheers,

-Jake

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on CEwire2023 is Back Live! June 3-4 by Steve Silberberg

CEwire2023: The Largest CE Conference in Optometry is Back!
With 60 Synchronous (Interactive) & Asynchronous (On Demand) COPE CREDITS

REGISTER HERE

DOWNLOAD June 3-4 Schedule of Courses!

Join us for the largest online CE event in optometry and see why over 20,000 ODs have chosen to participate over the past six years!

Use your conference pass to Watch LIVE online these dates:

February 25 & 26
April 29 & 30
June 3 & 4

September 9 & 10

OR watch ON DEMAND at your own pace and on your own schedule through December 1, 2023.

Register to receive exclusive discounts from leading vendors, and tune in to the CEwire2023 Livestream, where we’ll chat with optometric thought leaders and eye care industry executives.

Discuss the event & ask questions in this thread. Hope to see you there!

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on CEwire2023 is Live! Feb 25-26 by Steve Silberberg

CEwire2023: The Largest CE Conference in Optometry is Back!
With 60 Synchronous (Interactive) & Asynchronous (On Demand) COPE CREDITS

REGISTER HERE

DOWNLOAD February 25-26 Schedule of Courses!

Join us for the largest online CE event in optometry and see why over 20,000 ODs have chosen to participate over the past six years!

Use your conference pass to Watch LIVE online these dates:

February 25 & 26
April 29 & 30
June 3 & 4

September 9 & 10

OR watch ON DEMAND at your own pace and on your own schedule through December 1, 2023.

Register to receive exclusive discounts from leading vendors, and tune in to the CEwire2023 Livestream, where we’ll chat with optometric thought leaders and eye care industry executives.

Discuss the event & ask questions in this thread. Hope to see you there!

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Floaters In The Eye: Should You Be Panicking? by Rishi

These changes can happen at any age. They most often occur between ages 50 and 75, especially in people who are very nearsighted or have had cataract surgery.

Rarely, eye floaters can result from other eye surgery or:

  • Eye disease
  • Eye injury
  • Diabetic retinopathy
  • Crystal-like deposits that form in the vitreous
  • Eye tumors such as lymphoma (rarely)

Serious eye disorders associated with eye floaters include:

  • Retinal detachment
  • Retinal tear
  • Vitreous hemorrhage (bleeding)
  • Vitreous and retinal inflammation caused by viral infections, fungal infections, or auto-immune inflammation
  • Eye tumors

That’s comprehensive and conducive to less panic.  Well done, WebMD.

And he’s at least partially right, whoever sawdust-eating, yawn-inducing minion they have chained up in the basement, writing these articles.  

Note the ever handy excuse of the medical establishment, with anything that starts with, “as you age”.  

“Well, good buddy old chap, you see … as we age, ha, ha.  Collagen.  Shred-like.  What can you do, eh?  Here, take this prescription, partially covered by insurance.  Btw, have you checked out my new Benz?  I’m not getting any younger either.  And have you seen our new line of Armani frames?  Very fetching, old chap.  Try on a pair!  As we age, we do want to keep looking good, eh?”

old-chap

Collagen-eyeball-soup.  Not even worried.

So, let’s be serious.  Should you worry?

And before we get into it, no.  Your eyeball isn’t supposed to disintegrate into a collagen shred soup, just because you turned 55 yesterday.  

But …

If you have low or no myopia, and are under 50, then calm down.

Also, not overweight or diabetic.

You just woke up, a little speck or two, probably not a huge deal.  If it’s a bunch of floatey bits though, always, always go get that checked out immediately.

There’s also the matter of what seems like floaters but could be low blood pressure or other aspects not related to eyesight.  Remember here that I’m the eye guru and not a medical doctor. You shouldn’t ever listen to me on subjects other than myopia.  

Always get weird symptoms check out immediately.

But if you have moderate to high myopia, spend lots of time in close-up mode, aren’t the healthiest eater, maybe are lacking in exercise . then the sudden appearance of floaters should make you worry.  

And get a checkup with an ophthalmologist, like now.

Why?  Because …

15% Chance Of Retinal Tear Or Detachment

A study reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2009 found that sudden presence of eye floaters and flashes means that one in seven people with these symptoms will have a retinal tear or detachment.

lattice-degeneration-floaters

And up to 50 percent of people with a retinal tear will have a subsequent detachment.

If you have been checked, and got what is a fairly common response of “well it’s a bit of lattice degeneration“, then this might be the time to stop ignoring your eyesight health.

Wikipedia accurately describes lattice degeneration:

quotesLattice degeneration is a disease of the human eye wherein the peripheral retina becomes atrophic in a lattice pattern and may develop tears, breaks, or holes, which may further progress to retinal detachment. It is an important cause of retinal detachment in young myopic individuals. The cause is unknown, but pathology reveals inadequate blood flow resulting in ischemia and fibrosis.

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Glaucoma Management with Advanced OCT/OCT-A Technology, with Dr. Nate Lighthizer by joel b. goldberg

Solix with Dr. Nate Lighthizer

** All OD & OMD Attendees in the US & Canada will receive a $10 Starbucks Gift Card. **

REGISTER HERE

Are you interested in learning more about Glaucoma management with OCT/OCT-A?

Optovue Solix by Visionix offers an arsenal of features to identify, assess, and manage Glaucoma confidently.

Join us for an interactive webinar and learn how to apply these features clinically to revolutionize care and retain your patients.

Topics include:
• iWellness & AngioWellness for discovery
• New RDB and OCT-A vessel density metrics from the same scan for efficient assessment
• NEW advanced scans and reports for RNFL, GCC, and vessel density with trend analysis for progression management
• And more!

live Q&A will follow with Dr. Lighthizer so don’t miss it!

** All OD and MD Attendees in the US and Canada will receive a $10 Starbucks eGiftCard from ODwire.org!

REGISTER HERE and DISCUSS HERE

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Dr. Howard Ketelson on the SYSTANE® Product Family of Artificial Tears by Dr. Stanley Hallock

In this ODwire TV episode, we speak with Howard Ketelson, PhD, former Head of Dry Eye Care Ideation and Innovation at Alcon, and now life sciences expert at PA Consulting.

We discuss his involvement in the development of the SYSTANE® Product Family of Artificial Tears. (He was one of the scientists at Alcon responsible for its development; it is always fun to speak to ‘insiders’ who can give us some insight as to how and why product were developed!)

We also turn our attention to the latest product in the family, SYSTANE® COMPLETE PF, a preservative-free formulation, and discuss its benefits and how it is different from other drops.

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Are Insect Protein Bars Vegetarian? by Amy

Get ready, kittehs.  We’re taking the bus off-(topic)-road.

The question today:  Is eating eating insects vegetarian?  

  1.  What if you’re spiritually opposed to eating meat, does eating a cockroach count as “meat”?   (I know, I know.  Trolling question.  But … does it?)
  2. Or, if you don’t eat meat because of environmental impact, would you eat bugs but maintain vegetarian status?  Rather than a long winded explanation that you don’t eat meat, except for little insects?  
  3. And lastly, if you don’t eat meat for healthy reasons … does eating bugs affect your health negatively?  Have you tried and compared?

This and more, in today’s musings …. 

You might know about my blood test news already, if you’re (one of the seven people) following me on the endmyopia Facebook.

This:

bloodtest32342

Image is a link to the FB thread.  Comment at will.

There’s a much longer story behind this, going back a few years.

Short version, I went on a little excursion to find out the relationship between blood sugar and eyesight.  This is a rather huge subject, about which there is a lot to be said.  A lot that isn’t being said.  Retinopathy, a recent example I briefly covered.  A major cause of adult blindness, even if you aren’t diabetic you’re at risk, affects millions of people.  Nobody. talks. about. it.

There are a lot of dots worth connecting for those in particular who are at risk for diabetes.

When I started with the sugar eye connection research, I was in Budapest for the summer.  I went for the first, baseline blood test.  That’s when things go off the rails a bit.  It turns out that there are other things that need attention.  Off the charts TSH (Thyroid stuff), bilirubin numbers with enough digits to resemble a winning lottery ticket.  Adventurous levels of cholesterol.  Apparently, I’m a mess.

I was a little shocked, to say the least.  And then, off to research all those topics.

It turns out that my little corner of the world, myopia, is pretty much exactly the same as any of those other health topics.  Available information is divided up into:

  1. Mainstream medicine (aka. how do we make the most possible profit by managing a symptom).  Arrogance paired with lots of prescription sales.  Yay.  Alternative to them?
  2. Coo-coo for cocopuffs pseudoscience Internet hippies.  They are the first thing I find once digging past the mainstream.  We know these guys already.  They who also turn off people to eyesight health talk, by being just … their hippie selves.  Then the
  3. Buy-my-ebook, health-back-in-a-weekend sites.  *sigh*  These range from accurate and helpful, to well intentioned but nuts (Ray Peat diet, anyone?), to just utter nonsense.  And lastly,
  4. Science minded alt-health explorers, professionally trained or otherwise.  Those always seem the hardest to find.  Why is that?

The science eventually lead to some usable tools, and I manage to fix the TSH problem.  Interesting adventure that, including fun details like ending up in some subway station in Bangkok, buying bottles of pig Thyroid hormone pills from some random guy I found online.  Ten bucks for a thousand pills of pig Thyroid, who can beat that?!  (Also, wow.  That stuff *works*.)

The various findings and experiments did eventually fix my TSH issue (at least till recently, but that’s another topic).

My approach as always, is to figure out which is the top level problem, and focus on troubleshooting just that, first.  Once you get that under control, you can start looking at the other issues, if they remain despite fixing the first issue.

Right now, long story short, I’m on to the triglycerides and cholesterol questions.  And yes, I know.  I’ve been reading all of the things online.  One interesting troubleshooting option, the one I’m exploring right now, is eating vegetarian for a while.

If this does the trick, I already have the next question lined up.

What about eating insects?

For one and just for fun, for those who are vegetarian, out of concern for the environment or the animals (rather than health reasons).  Is the principal based opposition to meat eating also opposed to eating insects?  In other words, can you be a hippie-type vegetarian, and eat crunchy grasshoppers?

One might reason that if a hippie-vegetarian-vegan uses insect sprays and kills ants and cockroaches, eating them wouldn’t seem to pose any additional contradictions to belief premises.

Yes?  No?

And for two, it’s worth exploring whether any possible cholesterol penalty created by questionably raised and fed animals also applies to insect critters.  For those like me, who aren’t spiritually opposed to eating the moo-cow, but may benefit from not eating it anyway.

Check out this crickets protein bar article, from Yahoo:

Bugs are the leanest, meanest, and most eco-friendly protein source out there, and they’re arriving in the mainstream kitchen — much sooner, even, than the early adopters of insect-laced foods could have anticipated.

It’s no secret that in many cultures around the world, bugs have been, and continue to be, a diet staple. Here in the U.S., it’s starting to become common knowledge that crickets pack a mega-protein punch (ounce by ounce, double that of beef, studies show) and have a complete amino acid profile. They’re also rich in magnesium, iron, and vitamin B12, and are perfectly balanced in terms of omega-3s and -6s.

“Eating insects can add protein, unsaturated fat and minerals, plus B vitamins and iron to your diet,” New York-based nutritionist Kerry Anne Bajaj confirms to Yahoo Health.

And so, we have entered the era of the cricket protein-based energy bar.

Pat Crowley, the founder of Chapul, is one of the pioneers in this food field. With TED talks, participation in a European Union food innovation summit, and a prestigious NEXTY award all under his belt, Crowley is getting ready for a mass distribution of his company’s cricket flour — the main ingredient in its energy bars — in retail stores across the country in June.

“The ‘yuck’ factor was two years ago,” he tells Yahoo Health. “Anyway, that only lasts the first, and maybe second, time someone tries cricket flour, and then it goes away.”

Cricket flour — which is simply made by slow-roasting the bugs and then grinding them into a fine powder — is particularly mild and blends smoothly into just about anything. “You wouldn’t even know it’s there in a blind test,” Crowley says. “The only way you’d feel it is that you’d be healthier.”

Being a complete protein, cricket flour is particularly valuable for people who don’t eat meat like chicken and beef — many of whom may find it challenging to get enough protein for optimal health. But really, cricket flour is a versatile and healthy option for everyone (except, perhaps, for the stricter vegetarians and vegans), and in addition to rolling it out en masse (“we are in 500 stores now and we expect to be in 5,000 by the end of the year,” Crowley says), Crowley and his team continue to experiment in their kitchens with different recipes.

“You can use

There are lots of insect food carts here in Bangkok.  It won’t be difficult to see what happens whenever I might add some cockroaches to the vegetarian diet.

insectfoods

Never.  I’ve never eating a single one of these.  

I’m curious what you think about all this.

Can you be a spiritual vegan hippie vegetarian, and eat bugs?  Am I just totally stepping in it, besides referring to them as hippies, posing the insect question?  What’s your take on the offensiveness level on that one?

And then otherwise, health and bugs eating?  Clearly the environment would benefit … right?

Tell me in the comments below, or on the thread in Facebook.  (Or Endmyopia’s Twitter but honestly I haven’t quite made sense yet of how that whole Twitter thing functions).   Conversation does interesting things, and I know you, my audience.  You’re the quiet observer.  But … come on, let me know what you think! 

Cheers,

-Jake

Learn more at http://curemydisorder.com/links/improve-eyesight-tedmaser-site

Comment on Are Insect Protein Bars Vegetarian? by Jake Steiner

Get ready, kittehs.  We’re taking the bus off-(topic)-road.

The question today:  Is eating eating insects vegetarian?  

  1.  What if you’re spiritually opposed to eating meat, does eating a cockroach count as “meat”?   (I know, I know.  Trolling question.  But … does it?)
  2. Or, if you don’t eat meat because of environmental impact, would you eat bugs but maintain vegetarian status?  Rather than a long winded explanation that you don’t eat meat, except for little insects?  
  3. And lastly, if you don’t eat meat for healthy reasons … does eating bugs affect your health negatively?  Have you tried and compared?

This and more, in today’s musings …. 

You might know about my blood test news already, if you’re (one of the seven people) following me on the endmyopia Facebook.

This:

bloodtest32342

Image is a link to the FB thread.  Comment at will.

There’s a much longer story behind this, going back a few years.

Short version, I went on a little excursion to find out the relationship between blood sugar and eyesight.  This is a rather huge subject, about which there is a lot to be said.  A lot that isn’t being said.  Retinopathy, a recent example I briefly covered.  A major cause of adult blindness, even if you aren’t diabetic you’re at risk, affects millions of people.  Nobody. talks. about. it.

There are a lot of dots worth connecting for those in particular who are at risk for diabetes.

When I started with the sugar eye connection research, I was in Budapest for the summer.  I went for the first, baseline blood test.  That’s when things go off the rails a bit.  It turns out that there are other things that need attention.  Off the charts TSH (Thyroid stuff), bilirubin numbers with enough digits to resemble a winning lottery ticket.  Adventurous levels of cholesterol.  Apparently, I’m a mess.

I was a little shocked, to say the least.  And then, off to research all those topics.

It turns out that my little corner of the world, myopia, is pretty much exactly the same as any of those other health topics.  Available information is divided up into:

  1. Mainstream medicine (aka. how do we make the most possible profit by managing a symptom).  Arrogance paired with lots of prescription sales.  Yay.  Alternative to them?
  2. Coo-coo for cocopuffs pseudoscience Internet hippies.  They are the first thing I find once digging past the mainstream.  We know these guys already.  They who also turn off people to eyesight health talk, by being just … their hippie selves.  Then the
  3. Buy-my-ebook, health-back-in-a-weekend sites.  *sigh*  These range from accurate and helpful, to well intentioned but nuts (Ray Peat diet, anyone?), to just utter nonsense.  And lastly,
  4. Science minded alt-health explorers, professionally trained or otherwise.  Those always seem the hardest to find.  Why is that?

The science eventually lead to some usable tools, and I manage to fix the TSH problem.  Interesting adventure that, including fun details like ending up in some subway station in Bangkok, buying bottles of pig Thyroid hormone pills from some random guy I found online.  Ten bucks for a thousand pills of pig Thyroid, who can beat that?!  (Also, wow.  That stuff *works*.)

The various findings and experiments did eventually fix my TSH issue (at least till recently, but that’s another topic).

My approach as always, is to figure out which is the top level problem, and focus on troubleshooting just that, first.  Once you get that under control, you can start looking at the other issues, if they remain despite fixing the first issue.

Right now, long story short, I’m on to the triglycerides and cholesterol questions.  And yes, I know.  I’ve been reading all of the things online.  One interesting troubleshooting option, the one I’m exploring right now, is eating vegetarian for a while.

If this does the trick, I already have the next question lined up.

What about eating insects?

For one and just for fun, for those who are vegetarian, out of concern for the environment or the animals (rather than health reasons).  Is the principal based opposition to meat eating also opposed to eating insects?  In other words, can you be a hippie-type vegetarian, and eat crunchy grasshoppers?

One might reason that if a hippie-vegetarian-vegan uses insect sprays and kills ants and cockroaches, eating them wouldn’t seem to pose any additional contradictions to belief premises.

Yes?  No?

And for two, it’s worth exploring whether any possible cholesterol penalty created by questionably raised and fed animals also applies to insect critters.  For those like me, who aren’t spiritually opposed to eating the moo-cow, but may benefit from not eating it anyway.

Check out this crickets protein bar article, from Yahoo:

Bugs are the leanest, meanest, and most eco-friendly protein source out there, and they’re arriving in the mainstream kitchen — much sooner, even, than the early adopters of insect-laced foods could have anticipated.

It’s no secret that in many cultures around the world, bugs have been, and continue to be, a diet staple. Here in the U.S., it’s starting to become common knowledge that crickets pack a mega-protein punch (ounce by ounce, double that of beef, studies show) and have a complete amino acid profile. They’re also rich in magnesium, iron, and vitamin B12, and are perfectly balanced in terms of omega-3s and -6s.

“Eating insects can add protein, unsaturated fat and minerals, plus B vitamins and iron to your diet,” New York-based nutritionist Kerry Anne Bajaj confirms to Yahoo Health.

And so, we have entered the era of the cricket protein-based energy bar.

Pat Crowley, the founder of Chapul, is one of the pioneers in this food field. With TED talks, participation in a European Union food innovation summit, and a prestigious NEXTY award all under his belt, Crowley is getting ready for a mass distribution of his company’s cricket flour — the main ingredient in its energy bars — in retail stores across the country in June.

“The ‘yuck’ factor was two years ago,” he tells Yahoo Health. “Anyway, that only lasts the first, and maybe second, time someone tries cricket flour, and then it goes away.”

Cricket flour — which is simply made by slow-roasting the bugs and then grinding them into a fine powder — is particularly mild and blends smoothly into just about anything. “You wouldn’t even know it’s there in a blind test,” Crowley says. “The only way you’d feel it is that you’d be healthier.”

Being a complete protein, cricket flour is particularly valuable for people who don’t eat meat like chicken and beef — many of whom may find it challenging to get enough protein for optimal health. But really, cricket flour is a versatile and healthy option for everyone (except, perhaps, for the stricter vegetarians and vegans), and in addition to rolling it out en masse (“we are in 500 stores now and we expect to be in 5,000 by the end of the year,” Crowley says), Crowley and his team continue to experiment in their kitchens with different recipes.

“You can use

There are lots of insect food carts here in Bangkok.  It won’t be difficult to see what happens whenever I might add some cockroaches to the vegetarian diet.

insectfoods

Never.  I’ve never eating a single one of these.  

I’m curious what you think about all this.

Can you be a spiritual vegan hippie vegetarian, and eat bugs?  Am I just totally stepping in it, besides referring to them as hippies, posing the insect question?  What’s your take on the offensiveness level on that one?

And then otherwise, health and bugs eating?  Clearly the environment would benefit … right?

Tell me in the comments below, or on the thread in Facebook.  (Or Endmyopia’s Twitter but honestly I haven’t quite made sense yet of how that whole Twitter thing functions).   Conversation does interesting things, and I know you, my audience.  You’re the quiet observer.  But … come on, let me know what you think! 

Cheers,

-Jake

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