Teenagers are very impressionable and tend to become more left-wing than their parents, because they are under the influence of their teachers, who tend to be more left-wing too. This tends to make teenagers more in touch with environmental issues and other world concerns. This can send teenagers off in many directions, and one of the most well-liked, especially among teenage girls, is vegetarianism.
This phase frequently passes for one reason or another. Sometimes the parents cannot be bothered to cater to their new diet and sometimes the teenager simply misses bacon sandwiches as well much to keep up the diet. However, many do stick to their principles or come back to them later on in life.
Their children going vegetarian is frequently a cause for anxiety for parents, but it should not be. If your teenagers adopt vegetarianism you will almost certainly be anxious that they get enough protein, but that can be taken care of. Instead, be thankful that they will be missing out on all the junk food that most teenagers eat in these, their most formative years.
If your teenager wants to become a vegetarian, you ought to encourage it, even though it will cost you more time particularly if you do not know much about vegetarianism yourself. It will be a steep learning curve for you and your children in the starting.
One of the first things that a parent has to judge is to what level does their child want to go. Does he or she just want to give up meat or also give up fish or go the whole hog (!) and give up milk, dairy and eggs as well. These three levels make vegetarianism progressively harder.
One of the foremost worries about going vegetarian (particularly for growing teenagers) is vitamin deficiency. Meat is concentrated vegetable food and is our main source of vitamins such as calcium, vitamin B12 and iron.
You cannot do without these vitamins and several others besides, so if you give up meat, you will have to take them in tablet form until you find or take up a means of re-introducing them into your diet in food form.
There will be many new foods for your teenager to try in their task to replace meat and some of these alternatives may be unpalatable, depending on your child’s outlook on eating new foods.
Tofu is one. Some people love it and some people can’t stand it, and yet it is a very convenient alternative to meat. There are others, but it could be a long process of trial and error and your teen may just give up.
If your teenager wants to give up, it is almost certainly a good idea to make it easy for them to do so without them losing face or feeling that they have failed. It is difficult to undertake lifestyle alterations even at that relatively young age and who knows, perhaps they will return to (a level of) vegetarianism when they leave home and begin cooking for themselves.
Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on numerous subjects, and is now concerned with low fat low cholesterol diets. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at http://vegetariancasserolerecipes.com