My name is
 Christine Vardaros, 
and I am a professional 
cyclocross racer. 
Cyclocross is 
the fast growing cycling 
discipline right now. 
You ride what looks like 
a road bike, 
but it actually has like 
knobby mountain bike 
wheels on it, 
and you ride it off-road.
And it’s just the hardest 
thing in the world. 
From the first moment 
to the last moment 
you cross the finish line, 
it’s just absolutely agony. 
And that’s what I do. 
Sporty viewers, in today’s 
Vegetarian Elite 
we will meet 
professional US cyclist 
Christine Vardaros, 
who is also 
a freelance journalist, 
advocate for animals 
and the environment, 
and a dedicated vegan. 
A vegetarian for 21 years 
and vegan for 11, 
Ms. Vardaros is a veteran 
in health-conscious living. 
She began her cycling 
career in 1995 
in New York City, where 
she quickly achieved 
professional status 
as a mountain bike rider 
in 1998. 
One year later 
she switched her focus 
to cyclocross, 
a grueling form of cycling 
that involves 
rugged terrain, obstacles, 
and cyclists carrying 
their bicycles 
up steep slopes. 
Sometimes you’re racing 
five, six days a week 
and it gets really tough 
mentally. 
Just to stand 
at the start line, 
get yourself ready to 
go again, and especially 
when the races don’t 
go well as you planned; 
yeah, you really take 
a mental blow. 
And that’s where 
you kind of have to
put a foot down and say, 
“Okay, I can do this,” 
and you start pulling 
energy from places 
you never even thought 
you could, just to make it 
on the start line again 
and get the morale 
high enough. 
And for the physical part, 
I mean, cyclocross is the 
hardest cycling discipline, 
and it just demands 
so much of your body. 
You have to be good at 
running and you have to 
be good at biking. 
And every few seconds 
in the race, you’re 
sprinting out of a turn. 
So if you’re not careful, 
you can really 
wear yourself down 
into the ground. 
Is there sometimes a way 
that you can 
get your energy up? 
Well, I do it spiritually. 
I do feel that there’s 
a higher energy out there. 
I also believe that 
everything, everything 
in this planet 
and the universe 
is attached by energy. 
And to be able to 
pull from that energy,
it’s like the ocean. 
If the ocean is energy, 
for instance, there’s 
always enough energy 
for me. 
So if I pull from that, 
there’s still enough 
for everything else 
in the universe 
to have energy as well. 
So I do things like that 
mentally. 
Mental visualization. 
Christine is currently 
competing in the 2011 
summer season 
in Belgium, where 
cyclocross has gained 
increased popularity 
over the years.
Throughout her career 
she has enjoyed 
numerous achievements 
and successes, 
including running 
her own professional 
mountain biking and 
pro cyclocross teams. 
But her gratifying 
moments have come 
when representing 
her country 
on the world stage. 
I’m proud to 
have been named to 
the US national team, 
to race a bunch of 
World Cups and even 
World Championships 
a few times. 
There is something 
special about not only 
competing against 
the best in the world, 
but representing 
your country. 
And I’ve also won 
quite a few races that 
I didn’t think that 
I could have won. 
One time was 
after I broke my ankle. 
And yeah, three weeks 
later like magic, it was 
completely healed. 
And I just went in 
the race thinking, 
“Ah, what the heck, 
I’ll just do it for fun.” 
And I won. 
I couldn’t believe it. 
Christine Vardaros 
has always been 
a heroic advocate of 
a drug-free lifestyle, 
especially when 
it comes to sports. 
Her strength and stamina 
are shining examples 
of living a pure life free 
from the many dangers 
and downfalls of drugs. 
I’ve never, never 
taken drugs. 
In fact, I’m part of 
Bike Pure, 
it’s an international 
organization supporting 
riding your bike 
without drugs. 
It’s based in Ireland. 
And the reason why 
I support groups like that 
is because riding your bike, 
even without drugs, 
just the sport alone, tears 
up your body up so much. 
But at least I could say 
that my insides 
will be good, that 
my health will be good. 
At least I won’t have 
that internal damage. 
And I believe if you do it 
drug-free and if you 
never get in the habit 
when you’re younger, 
that you’ll be surprised 
how far you can go 
on just your own energy. 
And then also your wins, 
your accomplishments, 
you’ll feel so much better 
about it. 
And to live clean 
in your mind is 
also really important 
for an athlete. 
Christine’s daily routine 
certainly involves 
clean vegan fuel to sustain 
her intense training.
I have my big bowl 
of oats or Muesli or 
something and with 
an apple and a banana 
and sometimes flaxseed 
when I can remember. 
And then check my emails, 
get on the bike, go maybe 
for one-hour ride, 
three-hour ride. 
On the off season 
I go to the fitness center 
about three times a week. 
If it’s a hard training 
then I’ll lie on the floor 
with my legs against 
the wall, 
like completely upright 
for about 20 minute 
to let the legs drain. 
Oh, and before that 
take my recovery shake.
To keep up the mental 
and physical strength 
required from such 
a demanding sport, 
Christine has a special 
recipe for success. 
She follows 
a health-conscious 
vegan diet. 
Actually before 
I made the decision to be 
a vegetarian, I actually 
already gave up pork. 
I gave up pork 
about 26 years ago. 
And I did that because 
my sister had just died 
and she was only 
three years old. 
And after that like 
maybe two weeks later, 
we had to dissect a pig 
in school. 
We all had 
our own little pig and
it just broke my heart. 
It was like a dead baby. 
I didn’t see that it was 
a human or an animal, 
it was a dead baby. 
And from that day, 
I never ate pigs again, 
absolutely never, 
nothing with pigs in it. 
And then 21 years ago 
on a whim, my girlfriend
and I were sitting at dinner
at a restaurant, 
and she turns to me 
and she said, “Well, 
let’s be vegetarian. 
We could feed the world 
four times over, 
save the planet, 
and what do you say?” 
And I said, “Yeah, 
that’s great, let’s do it!” 
Five years later 
I got into cycling and I 
was pretty darn thankful 
for being a vegetarian 
because I noticed that 
I was able to recover faster.
I had no problems 
losing weight, yeah and 
it was just a dream. 
Christine found that 
her new diet gave her 
an edge over 
her competitors, and 
she then decided to take 
her diet to the next level.
I thought, “Ah okay, if 
being a vegetarian gives 
me such an advantage, 
gives me 
a few health benefits, 
maybe if I went vegan, 
who knows? 
If I cut out more things 
from animals…” 
And I did all my research, 
hundreds of hours of 
research, and finally 
I decided, “I’m going 
to be a vegan.” 
And soon enough, all 
my symptoms went away, 
I was able to breathe better.
I just felt fresh, 
I felt recovered. 
Everything was just 
it was magical. 
I was able to do 
hard races and then 
the next day 
feel recovered again, 
which is a real dream 
because that also means 
I can do a hard trainings 
and the next day 
I can do a hard training, 
but my meat-eating 
co-workers, they can’t. 
It’s harder for them. 
And another benefit of 
a vegan diet is 
I’m almost never sick. 
That means 
more days training, 
more days racing; 
I can be a better athlete. 
I can get more done 
in a day. 
I also have just 
as much energy as I had 
when I was in my teens. 
That’s 20 years ago. 
It’s like how can that be? 
And yeah it can on the diet.
The results of 
the vegan diet were 
speaking for themselves, 
and were soon being 
noticed by others, 
including her doctor. 
I broke my ankle, well, 
broke my leg actually. 
And the doctor told me, 
“Six weeks. 
Yours is a bad crack, 
six weeks.” 
Three weeks later 
it was completely healed, 
100% healed. 
He pulled my coach aside 
who was 
at the appointment 
and he said, 
“What did she do?” 
And he says, “Yeah well 
she’s on a vegan diet 
and she kept 
her protein count low 
and that’s the secret.” 
And he was just 
absolutely shocked. 
My coach is actually 
vegan too and he usually 
has about 50 or 70 
clients or something, and 
he actually talks most 
of them into going vegan, 
so there quite a few 
vegan cyclists out there. 
Quite a few of 
my cycling friends have 
actually turned vegan 
or cut their meat 
because of what they’ve 
seen the diet have on me, 
the effect it’s had on me. 
A true vegan hero, 
Christine is 
a tireless campaigner 
for promoting awareness 
in health and 
the protection of animals. 
She is a spokesperson for 
In Defense of Animals, 
the Physicians 
Committee for 
Responsible Medicine, 
and Organic Athlete – 
a group of athletes 
who live an organic 
vegan lifestyle.
Christine is also 
a freelance journalist, 
contributing to 
various publications 
and magazines including 
Cyclocross Magazine 
and Cyclingnews.com. 
Actually when 
I became vegan was 
where I really put my fist 
on the table and said, 
“I’m going to be a writer!”
And I’m going to be 
a writer so that way, 
I can share the real truth 
with people, 
the truth about protein, 
the truth about your body, 
the truth about exercise, 
the truth about anything. 
Like for instance, 
one trick that I shared 
with the readers 
is beet juice. 
That’s something that 
people are just now 
starting to pick up 
in the athletic world. 
If you drink 500 
milliliters of beet juice 
every day, it actually 
helps your endurance by, 
some say 16%, 
some say 20. 
Organic beet juice, actually.
A common misconception 
that people are always 
approaching me about
is the old question, 
“How do you get 
your protein?” 
I find that just 
so, so pitiful that 
this misconception is 
out there that, that you 
need so much protein. 
In fact, in my diet
I get 6 to 10% protein 
at most. 
And in fact 
when I’m going through 
a hard training period 
or having an injury, 
I actually try to keep it 
on the lower end 
for health reasons. 
So in that way I can 
I can recover faster, 
so I can heal faster.
If people knew the truth 
that when you drink milk, 
it actually gives you 
osteoporosis, 
and as an athlete, 
it dehydrates you. 
It puts a real strain 
on your body to 
try to process that. 
I just think 
it’s so unfortunate that 
even athletes still think
 to this day that they need 
to drink their glass of 
milk to be healthy, when 
it’s doing everything 
against all the work that 
they’ve done to make 
themselves stronger.
One person can 
make a difference. 
So I’m happy to be 
a part of this growing 
generation of people 
who want to take care of 
their bodies, want to 
take care of the planet, 
and want to take care of 
the animals and be kind. 
A lot of the people
in the vegan world 
are all making an effort. 
Eventually we’ll all make 
the world a better place. 
You know, 
we’ll save the planet, like 
I thought 21 years ago. 
And we’ll also save lives, 
save people so that they 
can live a healthier life, 
they can live 
a longer life, and 
live life to its fullest.
Thank you, 
Christine Vardaros, 
for being a true hero 
and notable example of 
the outstanding physical 
benefits of the vegan diet. 
We wish you 
continued success 
in your cycling and all 
your future endeavors. 
To stay up to date with 
Christine Vardaros and 
her vegan adventures 
in cyclocross, 
please visit: 
ChristineVardaros.blogspot.com
Health-conscious viewers, 
it was a pleasure to 
have your company today 
on Vegetarian Elite. 
Please keep your dials 
tuned to 
Supreme Master Television
for Between Master 
and Disciples. 
May peace and 
good health be graced 
upon you and 
all your loved ones.