Introduction

Essays

Aminals and "Aminals"
For the Times; they are a Changing

Mystical Transformation
Peace In Our Lifetime
Redefining and Elevating our Veganism

Reflections on What I'm Thankful For
To Be A Feminist Is To Be A Vegan
Vegan Evolution
Virgil Butler - Bio

A Vision of a Vegan World
You Are Not Alone

Poems

$
At a Hunter's Hang-Out
The Animals' Saint
A Baby's Story
Dark and Evil Days
"Do they care?"
Eating Babies
Eyes Of An Elephant
An Enigma
The Fawn Story
Forest Friends
Humanity and its Vanity

In The Name Of Tradition
Letter To My Unborn Child
Let's Not Forget 
Little Red Riding Hood

Man May be Mad
Meat
My Love should be more ‘Dog-like’
Thanksgiving Wish
To My Daughter
Truly Beautiful

We Will

Stories

Downed Cow
The Happy Child
A Lemming Named Choice
Three Pigs and A Wolf

Songs

Antilullaby

Companion Animal

Farmer Boy

Fight We Shall

Go Vegan

The Greatest Gift

Here

How Can We Do It?

The Last Slaughterhouse

Listen to Chief Seattle

My God Says

Osteoporosis

Our Evolution

The Racist

Sweat-Free Carols

 

Letter To My Unborn Child

You’ll never watch an elephant standing on her head
You will see amazing acrobats and painted clowns instead.

You’ll never color Easter eggs or eat a “Happy” Meal
Instead you’ll give pigs belly rubs – You’ll know chickens dream and feel.

The clamor from the ice cream truck won’t be music to your ears
You will know your Soy Delicious caused no suffering or tears.

You may hear a gentle gobble as you softly stroke a turkey
And give thanks that she’s alive as you’re eating your Tofurky.

While other kids buy leather shoes and eat at Chucky Cheese
You’ll be kissing cows and feeding goats and saying “soy please!”

Being different can be hard I know - This world is often cruel
Maybe you’ll be laughed at by the other kids at school.

But compassion is a vital gift that too few share with others
And your heart will not be filled with guilt the way it plagues your mother’s.

So don’t ever be embarrassed or ashamed because you care
You’ll be uniquely beautiful with an empathy that’s rare.

And when you see a rescued lamb and touch his thick warm fleece
You’ll feel no sadness or remorse– You can look at him in peace.

What took so long for me to learn, I’ll start teaching you from birth
And your footprint will be much tinier on this fragile earth.

 

By Heather Leughmyer.

 

Copyright © 2007 by Wanda Embar. All Rights Reserved.
Legal
/contact Me/Home