There's also solid evidence that eating pesticide sprayed vegetables are very bad for you, but I don't see you lot having a crusade against lettuce.
I've mentioned pesticides being bad many times. Again, the analogy is not accurate. There's nothing wrong with unsprayed lettuce per se, but there are some things wrong with eggs, as i pointed out. And where's the crusade? I posted an article that made interesting points. Neither the article writer nor I said anyone was an idiot or a monster for eating eggs. But because some people are so resistant to change, if you tell them something that they do is perhaps not good for them, they have a knee-jerk I'll-do-what-I-want reaction.
Comfort provides a sense of security. We work towards making our lives comfortable. But comfort also creates complacency. Complacency stops the growth process. It prevents us from asking questions that are critical to growth and improvement. Questions about what we eat, where we work, or even how we think.
How many times have you had an opportunity to do something, but decided not to do it because you prejudged that you wouldn't like it, or that you wouldn't fit in with the others there? Later, someone said, "You should have come. It was fun." And you made an excuse.
What are you willing to do that's different? Are you willing to wear your hair differently? To wear different types of clothes? How many things in your life are you willing to change? Or is your life just a routine, predictable pattern, where you look the same, dress the same, eat the same, act the same, think the same? All of us shortchange ourselves in some way with patterns of living we fall into.
"Hey, you should try this."
"Don't tell me how to live!"
I have friends who have never done one single thing differently for years. I can tell you what they're going to say, what they'll eat, how they will treat people, what their apartment looks like, and what they will do when they go on vacation. When people are that boring, they get old real fast. They stagnate. Joy is no longer there, and they don't see the happy side of life. They're only bitter and cynical. And who do they blame? Everyone else, or they blame circumstances.
When you're willing to act differently and try new things, before long, you will begin to feel comfortable doing something else differently. Soon you'll start looking forward to experiencing life and not being afraid. Suddenly, your tiny view of life expands, and your life is all the richer for it.