I still think of Cedric
On the subject of food again, I don't often talk about the fact that I'm a vegetarian. When the subject does come up, I'm usually asked how I came to be a veggie, and my answer is always the same... 'I once murdered a chicken.'
The roots of my vegetarianism lie in the year 1972, in a village in southern Italy. I am half Italian (Calabrese to be exact), and my grandmother had a farm (like Old MacDonald). On that farm she had some goats... and chickens. She also had a granddaughter who, at the age of three, thought that chickens were cute and cuddly and handy during a game of cricket when no ball was available. Not realising my own strength, or that the heads of chickens are not made from reinforced concrete, I took a length of wood and swiped my new feathered friend (Cedric was her name) across the noggin with all my might. The sound of the wood making contact with that chicken's skull was followed by a cry from my grandmother. That cry was followed by half an hour of plucking, and the eventual appearance of that chicken on a large ceramic platter as dinner was served later that evening.
The connection was quickly made, in my young mind, between my activities with a makeshift bat that afternoon and the demise and subsequent consumption (not by me) of Cedric later in the day. The events of that day formed the basis for numerous storytelling sessions by various family members who thought me rather cute. I thought me rather murderous (and still do) and made a vow never to harm another living creature. 
I was the first vegetarian in my family, as far as I know. Thankfully, my mother, being prepared for my unusual eating habits by the fact that I had refused milk from the moment I was born and had always been a difficult bugger to feed, had learned to be rather creative in the kitchen. This was not the case with my extended family in Britain, who believed that vegetarians could exist on a diet of nothing but cheese and pickle sandwiches.
But anyway, there you have it... how I came to be a veggie. I still think of Cedric... very often in fact. I have much to thank her for... the rest of chicken-kind is safe from me. I do wonder, however, how much consolation that would provide.
- Login Or register To Post Comments
- Send To A Friend




Dale Estey says:
I could tell you stories
I could tell you stories about chickens which would curl your hair and make you cluck. I worked on a farm in northern Germany which had hundreds of chickens. But fewer when I was done with them.
I'm also of Italian ancestry - though hundreds of years ago when the d'Este family got into the wrong side of a quarrel with the Pope and fled to England. James II, I believe, married a d'Este. The town of Este is a couple hours drive from Florence.
Gina Collia-Suzuki says:
What do you want to bet that
What do you want to bet that if we traced our family histories we would find that you are my great great grandmother's husband's nephew's nephew's wife's brother's son?
You and I related... it would explain your charm, wit, and dashing good looks.
Elizabeth Eslami says:
Hi Gina
Though I hope I'm not denigrating the memory of poor Cedric in saying so, I found your blog hilarious. And a little disturbing --in all the right ways. :)
Gina Collia-Suzuki says:
"...a little disturbing --in
"...a little disturbing --in all the right ways."
Rather like me... I hope. :o)