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The Rich Roll Podcast

Lisa Lange’s Vision For a Better World & Why It’s Cool To Be Compassionate

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Education, Society & Culture, Self-improvement, Health & Fitness

4.713.3K Ratings

🗓️ 3 November 2014

⏱️ 126 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Confession time. I’m the first to admit that my initial reasons for adopting a plant-based lifestyle were selfish. I was overweight. I felt lousy. I looked lousy. I had a health scare. Basically, I just wanted to look and feel better. I wanted to enjoy my kids at their energy level. I wasn’t ready to succumb to middle age defeat. So I took the leap. A leap without much expectation I might add. Then the miracle. I dropped 50 pounds. My vitality returned. That long-gone youthful glow restored. I didn't just get my life back, I got an entirely new one. Today I am living the life beyond my wildest dreams. I could have never predicted the journey that would follow this simple decision. It has been long, at times hard, but ultimately extraordinary in every way imaginable. It's not an understatement that everything in my life has changed for the better. And for that I am extremely grateful. There is one thing I know with certainty. If you want a great life, give more than you receive. This is primary reason behind my decision to start this podcast — to share with you the people, information, tools and inspiration that have been so incredibly transformative in my life. But let's be honest. I didn't get into this plant-based lifestyle because I wanted to save the animals. Frankly, my concern for the health of the planet could be characterized as passive lip service at best. I was the furthest thing from a food activist. And when it came to environmental, ethical and political issues like GMO’s, the deleterious effects of factory farming, slaughterhouse conditions, carbon emissions, the deforestation of the rainforests, species extinction, the mistreatment of circus animals, the pollution and overfishing of our oceans and the moral implications of harvesting animals for food, the truth is that I didn't really give it much thought. That was then. But this is now. In the eight years since I began this journey, I have changed. I have grown. Ever so slowly, my eyes have started to open to a myriad of uncomfortable realities relating to how our world functions. Unpleasant and unnecessary realities that I can no longer in good conscience turn a blind eye to. I’ve been blessed with a platform. My book and this podcast have given me an audience. With this comes a certain responsibility that I take seriously. What is that responsibility? I can't say that I’m entirely sure. However, I do know that it entails a commitment to the truth. A commitment to shed light on and help raise awareness around issues that affect not just me, but all of us. Things that are not right. Things that need to change. The truth isn’t always comfortable. It's generally not convenient. And often not popular because it challenges us to think differently and in many cases modify behaviors we might not want to modify. To me, the truth also presents a growth opportunity. An opportunity to be bold. To do and be better. I know can do better. And if this podcast isn’t about that, then it's just wasted air. Our fast-paced, hyper-industrialized world lives in a comfortable haze of convenience priority. We go about our day happily and for the most part unconsciously disconnected from the process undertaken to bring consumer products into our homes. This includes the clothes we wear, the devices we use and of course the foods we enjoy. This is process I really don't want to look at. It's uncomfortable because it forces me to transcend denial and truly consider what actually goes on behind the shroud of obfuscation erected by giant conglomerates, powerful lobbying efforts and governmental forces that have a strong vested interest in maintaining the disconnect that cloaks the public from certain unpalatable realities. Dismantling the disconnect isn't fun.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Rich Royal Podcast Episode 111 with Lisa Lange.

0:11.7

But before we get into it, a couple quick announcements.

0:15.0

The first thing is you heard me talk about the documentary, Cowspiracy, if you've been listening

0:19.6

to the podcast.

0:20.6

No, you don't know what I'm talking about.

0:22.8

You're new to the podcast.

0:23.8

Well, maybe check out Episode 91.

0:26.2

This is my conversation with the filmmakers, Kip Anderson and Keegan Koon, very illuminating,

0:31.1

very entertaining, very educational.

0:34.1

What is Cowspiracy?

0:35.1

Well, it's a documentary.

0:36.6

It's an incredibly sobering and powerful and also entertaining film that takes a hard,

0:43.0

unflinching look at the deleterious impact of animal agriculture on the environment.

0:49.3

And more particularly, the reasons behind why this crucial issue fails to get the airtime

0:55.9

and attention it deserves in the global environmentalism conversation.

0:59.8

So imagine the famous documentary in inconvenient truth in a mashup with the more recent popular

1:06.1

documentary Blackfish and you start to get the picture.

1:10.9

The filmmakers have been crisscrossing the United States hosting screenings and there's

1:14.0

been a lot of independently hosted screenings, I think like a hundred overall.

1:18.4

And this has created tremendous grassroots awareness and excitement about this movie.

1:24.2

And that has led to questions.

1:25.7

How can I see the film?

...

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