March 31, 2008

Meet Frances Moore Lappé

Dear friends,

I am thrilled to announce an exciting opportunity for you to meet the mother of the eco-diet movement.

Frances Moore Lappé, author of Diet for a Small Planet and her new activist manifesto, Getting a Grip, is coming to Sidecar for Pigs Peace for a book signing.

Saturday, April 12th
4 - 6 pm

Frances Moore Lappé
Diet for a Small Planet

Diet for a Small Planet

With her groundbreaking book, Diet for a Small Planet, first published in 1971, Frances Moore Lappé introduced and popularized vegetarianism as a way to protect our environment and our health, and was clearly ahead of its time. Her ideas are the reason I went vegetarian as a budding environmentalist teenager, paving the way for my later veganism. I know I'm not the only vegan who can thank Ms. Moore Lappé for bringing clarity to my suspicions about the link between meat production and the environment. The Women's National Book Association named Diet for a Small Planet one of "75 Books by Women Whose Words Have Changed the World."

Getting a Grip

Carrying her "change the world" message to her newest book, Getting a Grip, Ms. Moore Lappé brings her keen insight to the often depressing state of "the world gone mad" - and then offers hope and courage to those of us who long for a better world but might feel overwhelmed; read the book's introduction, below. Learn more at the accompanying website, www.gettingagrip.org . Then head over to our website, www.sidecarforpigspeace.com , to reserve your books with a 10% discount!

   
Getting a Grip

Don't miss this terrific chance to talk to a remarkable visionary of our times.

See you here!

Doh
Manager, Sidecar for Pigs Peace

Introduction to Getting a Grip

by Frances Moore Lappé

I've finally figured it out. I am not overwhelmed, depressed, confused, or bewildered by our world gone mad. I'm ready. I'm past ready.

I just want to go for it.

Why can't we have a nation - why can't we have a world we're proud of? Why can't we stop wringing our hands over poverty, hunger, species decimation, genocide, and death from curable disease that we know is all needless? The truth is there is no reason we can't.

They say - whoever the "they" are - that as we age, we mellow. I don't think so. I'm getting less and less patient.

Why? Because I realize that humanity has no excuses anymore. In the span of my own lifetime, both historical evidence and breakthroughs in knowledge have wiped out all our excuses. We know that we know how to end this needless suffering, and we have all the resources to do it. From sociology and anthropology to economics, from education and ecology to systems analysis - the evidence is in. We know what works.

"Soft" psychology as well as "hard" neuroscience also confirm that we humans come equipped with a moral compass - with deep needs and sensibilities that make us yearn to end the suffering. Yet we deny these feelings every single day at huge cost to our society and to our world.

No physical obstacle is stopping us. Nothing. The barrier is in our heads. We are creating this world gone mad, not because we're compelled to by some deep flaws in our nature and not because Nature itself is stingy and unforgiving, but because of ideas we hold. Ideas?

Yes. This is one of the most startling discoveries - awakenings - of the last century: Human beings are in fact creatures of the mind. Our ideas about reality determine what we see, what we believe is possible, and therefore what we become. And we also now know that human beings can change our core, life-shaping ideas, even our ideas of democracy, of power, of fear, and - yes - of evil itself.

As we do, we no longer have to settle for grasping at straws - wild acts of protest, or tearful acts of charity, or any other short-term, feel-less-bad steps. We become open to the possibility of real change, And, when you think about it, how could we ever believe "the world" can change unless we experience ourselves changing?

So this little book is about learning to see the killer ideas that trap us and letting them go. It's about people in all walks of life interrupting the spiral of despair and reversing it with new ideas, ingenious innovation?and courage. It's about finding that mixture of anger and hope to energize us for this do-or-die effort. Why not go for it?

Frances Moore Lappé
Cambridge, May 2007