Warning: This post and the accompanying pictures are graphic. If you’re a vegetarian or someone who doesn’t like the sight of meat, you might like to look away now…
BY MADELEINE PARRY
A mixture of hot fat, flesh and guts mixed with that clean, sanitised smell of a butchershop. That’s what I noticed first. Second, that this slaughterhouse was small – nothing like the super-abattoirs that dominate the Australian industry and operate 24 hours creating meat. On that first morning, as I pulled up to start work at a country abattoir I thought, ‘how did I get here?’
I was raised on meat. But food has done more than turn me into a woman. I’m half-Greek, and in my family a lamb roast is a sign of love.
Two years ago I calculated roughly how many animals had died to feed me. Averaging 3 meat meals a week for 21 years, I’d eaten a part of 3,276 creatures.
But I’d never killed anything bigger than a spider.
In primary school I was quite possibly a pacifist. At recess I was professing non-violent philosophy and mediating disputes between friends. I went through that stage, probably in Year 3, of protecting ants from the feet of careless school kids (likely whilst eating a ham sandwich) and in Year 12 was awarded ‘Most Likely To Win A Nobel Peace Prize’ at the Formal.
I’ve always thought of myself as compassionate. But the more I ruminated on my lunch, the less sure I was about what eating meat meant. So I decided if I couldn’t kill it, I wouldn’t eat it. I worked my way up the food chain; picking broccoli, fishing, making chicken soup with my Grandma and slaughtering a lamb for dinner.
It was a conflicting experience. On a basic level, it was violent – there is no non- violent way to break a chicken’s neck – and that flew in the face of my identity. I didn’t eat meat for weeks.
Top Comments
We should be executing the worst of us humans guilty of heinous crimes with far less compunction than that given to the poor innocent animals who died only to satisfy our palate
I'm a 20 year old female and have been working in abattoirs since I was 15. Left school and whatnot. I started out working in pet food and have moved up the ranks and stopped at slaughterman 3 years ago. Sure it's tough at first but it's not hard. The smell and sights, you desensitise. It becomes part of you. That and it's easy money. Those animals are just a number. A dollar sign. They're bred to die. Don't think too much into it because it's not hard to understand for a meatworker. We supply a demand and that demand is dead animal.
Deal with it.