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THE HAPPY VEGAN

All of my books, at their core, have been about the same thing.

How to be happy.

In fact, that mission has been at the heart of everything I’ve tried to do in my career.

When I wrote Do You!, Super Rich, and Success Through Stillness, it was only to help readers become happier.

Just as when I made records with Def Jam, clothes with Phat Farm, and videos with my latest company, All Def Digital (ADD), it’s only been to bring a little more joy into people’s lives.

I’m always thrilled when someone comes up to me on the street and says, “Russell, Do You! helped me get through a tough time” or “Hearing Run-D.M.C. changed my life!”

It feels great to know that I’ve contributed, even just a tiny bit, to a positive change in someone’s life. But as cool as it has been to get that sort of feedback, I’m expecting a different kind of reaction to this book.

No, The Happy Vegan won’t just change your life.

It can save your life. Not to mention save the world as well.

That’s a big claim, but it’s made with a confidence that can come only from experience. Becoming a vegan hasn’t only made me much happier but healthier too. It helped me disconnect from the lifestyle that was making me sick, a lifestyle that has put too many other middle-aged African American males in the ground.

Today, on the verge of my sixth decade, I feel content and centered, full of energy and appetite for all that life has to offer.

I’m in a wonderful space. And I credit much of it to my decision to stop consuming animal products.

It’s a space, however, that took a long time to arrive at. As those of you familiar with my story already know, I spent much of the first half of my life abusing my body with various toxins. From weed to coke to angel dust, there wasn’t a drug I didn’t get high off of. Just as there wasn’t a kind of meat or dairy I didn’t consume. Products that were, in many ways, just as bad for me as drugs.

I finally got sober at the age of thirty. In my late thirties I embraced the practice of yoga, which helped me leave my toxic lifestyle behind me for good. In literally my first class I experienced a sense of serenity and clarity I’d never felt before. Yoga helped me see that getting high had been nothing but a distraction. I found I preferred waking up sober to going to bed high.

Yoga in turn led me to meditation, which taught me how to further wipe the distractions out of my mind and focus on my best ideas. My personal relationships and business began to improve. Instead of walking around in a daze, I was looking at life through cleaner lenses. It was a great way to live.

Thanks to that clarity, for the first time in my life I also found myself starting to think about the food I was putting into my body. During my yoga classes, my teacher Sharon Gannon (or one of her disciples) would gently but firmly remind us not to put toxins in our bodies. Every day after class, it seemed, I’d meet someone who followed Sharon’s mantra and had removed animal products from their diet. Inevitably they were in great shape and smiled a lot. I was impressed. I was also inspired by my great friend (and current head of television development at ADD) Simone Reyes, who had been a vegan for many years. Another big influence was Glen E. Friedman, my senior executive in charge of television development at Def Pictures. Through their collective examples, I felt myself inching closer toward a healthier relationship with the world.

I finally took a great leap forward on New Year’s Day 1997. I was staying on the Caribbean island of St. Barts, where I loved (and still love) taking a monthlong vacation during the winter holidays. Glen, as he often does, was staying with me at a villa I’d rented by the island’s clear blue ocean.

I woke up New Year’s Day planning on hitting the beach, but a peek out the window at the overcast sky told me Mother Nature had other ideas. So Glen and I decided to watch a movie instead.

For months, Glen had been bugging me to watch a film called Diet for a New America. Once I watched it, he promised, I’d stop eating animal products and never look back. In my heart I knew he was probably right, just as in my heart I knew the yoga community was right too. I was primed to make a change.

Yet for some reason I’d been resisting watching the tape. Giving up drugs and taking up yoga and meditation had been a major transformation for me. Changing what I ate on top of all that seemed like just a little too much to think about.

Glen is nothing, however, if not determined (it’s probably one of the qualities that makes him such a great photographer). He’d brought the film with him to St. Barts in case such a moment would present itself, and now that it had, he wasn’t going to miss his chance.

“Russell, stop BSing and let’s watch this,” he said. “There’s nothing else to do today—nobody is going to be on the beach, the stores are closed, and all your friends are sleeping off hangovers. Enough with the excuses. Today’s the day.”

I knew he was right. “Let’s do it,” I said.

Glen popped in the VHS tape (remember those?), and I quickly learned that Diet for a New America was a PBS special hosted by John Robbins, named after the best-selling book he’d written a couple years earlier. John’s father had cofounded the Baskin-Robbins ice cream empire and John had grown up eating a “normal” American diet, heavy on meat and dairy. After a series of illnesses, Robbins took a closer look at his diet. After years of research he came to the conclusion that meat and dairy were actually responsible for many of his health problems. He then dedicated his life to spreading the word about the dangers of consuming animal products.

As the taped rolled, I was struck by Robbins’s profiles of men in their thirties and forties who were on the verge of death because of the damage meat and dairy had done to their cardiovascular systems. Men who frankly looked a lot like me. A doctor spoke about how one of his patients—a man in his early thirties—dropped dead one night after eating a burger and a milk shake. His body just couldn’t take the abuse anymore. That really affected me. I’d had a lot of burgers and milk shakes over the years.

I was also shocked to learn the degree to which the meat and dairy industries were responsible for polluting our nation’s waterways and contributing to global warming.

Equally powerful were the scenes showing the horrible conditions animals are raised in and the barbaric ways they’re slaughtered for their meat. I had always subscribed to the fairy tale that animals lived on farms, grazed in the sun, and ate grass. Watching chickens being thrown into grinders alive, cattle squirming on squalid floors after having their throats slit, and caged pigs desperately trying to reach their piglets, was the rudest of awakenings. After one such scene, Robbins said something that struck me to my core: “As a concerned citizen, as someone who wants my life to be a statement of compassion, when I see what’s done to the animals, it makes me look at my food choices in a whole new way. I have to question, is that what I want my contribution to the world to involve?”

The tape rolled on, but Robbins’s words had already led me to an epiphany:

No, I didn’t want to be involved in the torture and slaughter of animals anymore.

No, I didn’t want to drop dead in my forties from eating too many burgers and milk shakes.

No, I didn’t want to contribute to the destruction of the environment.

Yes, I did want my life to be a statement of compassion. Which would be impossible as long as I was complicit in the torture and murder of billions of animals.

“That’s it,” I told Glen the moment the tape was over. “I ain’t eating this shit anymore!”

Granted that’s not the most articulate way to announce a major life decision, but it was how I felt then and it’s how I still feel to this day:

I. Ain’t. Eating. This. Shit. Anymore!

I hadn’t woken up that morning planning on becoming a vegan, but from that moment on I was going to work at changing my life for the better. There was no turning back.

Before we go any further, however, I want to address a very simple but important question some of you might be asking: What exactly does being a vegan even mean?

The most basic definition of a vegan is someone who doesn’t eat any meat, dairy, or fish. That means avoiding obvious products like hamburgers, chicken wings, pork chops, and scrambled eggs, as well as some that might not be so obvious as first. For instance, a plain slice of pizza isn’t vegan, because cheese comes from cows (though you can get delicious vegan pizza—more on that later). Just as ice cream isn’t vegan because it contains dairy. Or marshmallows aren’t vegan because they contain gelatin, which is made out of the hooves and shins of horses.

This might sound like a New Age philosophy, but people have been warning against eating animals for thousands of years. The Lord Buddha said, “The eating of meat extinguishes the seed of great compassion.” The Greek philosopher Plato was a vegetarian who noted that the more meat a society eats, the more doctors it needs. Leonardo da Vinci rejected eating meat, as did the great Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, who wrote, “Flesh eating is simply immoral, as it involves the performance of an act, which is contrary to moral feeling: killing.” Gandhi didn’t eat meat either, telling his followers, “I do feel that spiritual progress does demand at some stage that we should cease to kill our fellow creatures for the satisfaction of our bodily wants.”

The concept that a fully compassionate and healthy lifestyle required removing not only meat but also dairy from one’s diet first gained traction in England shortly before World War II. At that time, 42 percent of Britain’s cows had been found to be carrying tuberculosis. A group of concerned vegetarians decided to form an organization alerting people to the dangers of dairy. The group’s founder, a woodcutter named Donald Watson, came up with the name the Vegan Society. “Vegan,” he said, was meant to refer to both “the beginning and end of vegetarian.”

Veganism picked up steam over the next few decades. Following the war, dairy production, as well as chicken, cow, and pig farms, became highly industrialized. Conditions became increasingly unsanitary and inhumane. There were more and more outbreaks of disease and mounting evidence that meat and dairy were bad for your health.

By the 1980s, groups like People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the Animal Liberation Front had been formed to help promote a cruelty-free lifestyle. In 1988, Diet for a New America hit the shelves. In 1990, Robbins was joined by Lisa Bonet, Raul Julia, and River Phoenix on a special edition of The Phil Donahue Show about veganism that was watched by millions. The vegan lifestyle was here to stay.

Today, the vegan lifestyle is more mainstream than ever. Famous vegans include Bill Clinton, Ellen DeGeneres, Alicia Silverstone, Samuel L. Jackson, Miley Cyrus, Woody Harrelson, Mike Tyson, Erykah Badu, and André 3000 of OutKast. Not to mention vegetarians like Deepak Chopra, Forest Whitaker, Prince, Angela Bassett, Omar Epps, and the author Jonathan Safran Foer. Many more celebrities, like Beyoncé, Jay Z, Jennifer Lopez, Venus Williams, and RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan have experimented with vegan diets in recent years. Oprah even had her entire staff (over three hundred people!) go on a weeklong vegan challenge.

Why are all these successful and famous people promoting what seems on the surface to be such a radical lifestyle change?

I believe it has to do with a dirty little secret about success and fame:

They don’t necessarily make you happy.

Sure, playing with toys that accompany success and fame can make you happy for a minute. I won’t lie, it feels great to drive a brand-new Rolls Royce off the lot. But after a few weeks of it, you realize that it’s just a car. That’s when you start asking yourself, “Now what?”

It’s the same with new houses, exotic vacations, expensive clothes, even sex. After you experience enough of those things, you’ll find yourself asking, “Now what?”

If you’re being honest with yourself, the answer isn’t “more of the same.” That’s because the truth is, the only things that are going to bring lasting happiness to your life are good health and knowledge of self, which lead to a compassionate relationship with the world.

That’s it.

If your health and connection to yourself (as well as the larger world) are out of alignment, there aren’t enough new cars, watches, or money in the world to make you happy.

I suspect most of the successful and famous people I just named experienced one of those “Now what?” moments, where they realized their toys weren’t enough. Achievement wasn’t enough. Fame wasn’t enough.

If they wanted to find real happiness, they had to improve their health and their relationship with the world. And whether it was through research, the advice of a friend, or the example of someone they respected, they decided giving up animal products was the best way to do that.

What I’m asking you to do with this book is basically skip several steps in that process. Don’t wait until you’re having a “Now what?” moment, or even worse, a sobering talk with your doctor, to start that transformation. Start that process today.

Trust me, you won’t be alone in making that move. When you go vegan, you will not be shutting yourself off from the world. Rather, you’ll be joining a growing community of happy, successful, compassionate, and healthy people—a community that will welcome you with open arms.

It’s also a community that grows stronger every year. In the last decade, searches for “vegan” on Google have doubled. Restaurant chains like Subway and Chipotle have introduced vegan options to their menus. Seemingly every month there’s a new vegan restaurant opening or a new vegan product being added to supermarket shelves. The other day I was in New York and decided to pop in on a vegan street fair, but when I got there they were turning people away at the gates. Despite expecting thousands, the fair was already at capacity after just a couple of hours.

It’s been amazing to watch this movement grow.

And now I want you to join me in it.

My argument is going to come down to three main points, the first of which is do it for health. As I’ll detail, eating meat is directly linked to heart disease, the number one killer in America. It’s also linked to cancer, our second-largest killer. Meat also increases your chances of developing deadly conditions like diabetes and Alzheimer’s, which are the sixth and seventh leading killers in this country. No wonder studies have shown that you can add thirteen years to your life by giving up animal products. As someone on the other side of fifty, that’s a very meaningful number.

Of course, giving up animal products isn’t just about living longer; it’s about getting the most out of your time here on earth too. When you go vegan you a...

Revue de presse :
Russell Simmons is . . . 


"[the symbol of] the hope shared by many that the vaunted American dream might be possible...In the same way he brought hip-hop to the public eye and shaped the cultural identity of a generation, he’s found a heartfelt desire to bring new concepts mainstream...Simmons’ desire to share the principles that have inspired him comes from a genuine desire to give back."
--Smart CEO


“a regular Midas man . . . He’s spreading the wealth by sharing his ideas.”

Seattle Post-Intelligencer 


“the original and eternal hip-hop mogul . . . one of the most innovative and influential figures in modern American business and culture."

New York Daily News


the “CEO of hip-hop”

Businessweek


Praise for SUCCESS THROUGH STILLNESS

"Whether a beginner or advanced meditator, this book aims to help readers find greater clarity and focus, and become healthier in mind and body."

-Elevated Existence


"A well-written, enjoyable read for anyone who is interested in meditation, but does not know where to start."

-VeggieFans.net 


"A sacred cookbook for cultivating a satisfying, stress-free life." 

-Kam Williams  (his review ran out as a wire piece to various outlets like Insightnews.com, AALBC.com, NewsBlaze.com, Afro.com) 


Praise for SUPER RICH

"In Super Rich: A Guide to Having It All, Russell defines true affluence as a higher state of consciousness. Read this book, and tap into the infinite supply of abundance in your own being."

— Deepak Chopra, author of The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success and The Third Jesus
 

"In Super Rich, the Philosophy is sound--articulated in simple prose with assistance from journalist Chris Morrow, but filled with anecdotes, humor, and raw language that are unmistakeably Simmons's...like yogic philosophy, hip-hop is all about the power of vibration, the power of the word. Simmons emerges as the first influential voifce to make that connection for a new generation."

— The Washington Post 
 

"Simmons employs many examples from his career and personal struggles to create a platform based on sensible guidance and responsible, timeless ethics. Readers will find lots of positive, heartfelt encouragement."

Kirkus Reviews 
 

"With personal stories [Simmons] offers insight into his personal striving for peace and posterity, and offers those willing to put in the effort an opportunity to acheive that same abundance."

— Publisher's Weekly 
 

"Simmons provides readers with the tools to schieve not only success but an enlightened state of mind."

New York Daily News


Praise for DO YOU!

"This book is Russell's truth and if you listen to what he's saying, you'll find the inspiration and the knowledge to start the journey you want to ttake in life, too."

— Nas 
 

"Russell Simmons, the original and eternal Hip-Hop Mogul, is one of the most innovative and influential figures in modern American business and culture"

The New York Times 
 

"With elegant simplicity, Russell offers practical steps to living a life that is joyful, creative, and fulfilling. He ingeniously presents a way of making us remember our truth. And that is our main goal in life."

— Deepak Chopra, author of The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success and The Third Jesus
 

"Russell Simmons, who rose from the hard-scrabble streets of New York to become one of the biggest names in entertainment and fashion, is a modern-day Renaissance man."

— EbonyJet.com 
 

"Russell Simmons is bank, a regular Midas man...He's spreading the wealth by sharing his ideas."

Seattle Post-Intelligencer 
 

"Russell is the architect of what we do."

— Jay-Z 
 

"The book communicates Mr. Simmons's ideas earnestly and without condescension. One suspects he may have produced another hit."

The Wall Street Journal 
 

"Teaches a very simple lesson--by tapping into the power inside you, you can not only get all the things you want in life, but most importantly, you can enjoy them, too."

The Jacksonville Free Fress

praise for Russell Simmons

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  • ÉditeurAvery
  • Date d'édition2015
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  • ISBN 13 9781592409327
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