Cloppy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 11:29 pm
I looked online and yeah it's pretty expensive but last long so I guess in the end it would be cheaper,
My meaning was more cost per day was not high, yes.
Cloppy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 11:29 pm
but like eggs and dairy, fish is not something that is simple to quit for me.
The right thing isn't always easy. In some ways it means a lot more
because it's hard. And it says a lot about your moral character to achieve such a hard won victory over a vice.
Compare somebody who quits smoking (a great act of will power to do the right thing) vs. somebody who quits using candles (which took like no effort at all, and even saved trouble of lighting them). Both are harmful (smoking and candles), but one was a more heroic act against a powerful craving, the other trivial.
And not everybody can do it over night. If you enjoy those things and have strong cravings, it may take time to reduce them and to search for alternatives. Step by step you can make it. We're glad to help with any advice or suggestions you want.
Cloppy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 11:29 pm
As for source of free fish, if I'm fishing, the cost is very low but still not totally free.
If you are only eating fish that you catch yourself, then there's a potentially powerful economic argument for eating fish.
Although it still takes time to catch fish, and "time is money" if you have the potential to get a job (if the economy is OK where you live) and earn income in those hours instead of fishing.
Anyway, I'm glad to help. I hope you'll work on reducing. Every little bit helps.