How meat turned Jordan Peterson into a vegetable

Marc Westley
4 min readJul 8, 2020

By Marc Westley, M.Phil

Professor Jordan Peterson has been described by The Guardian as ‘the closest academia has to a rock star’ and in true rocknroll style, his meteoric rise to fame and notoriety is now counterbalanced by a breakdown free-fall that bears many of the archetypal hallmarks of rocknroll burn out: a punishing tour routine, drug abuse and addiction, bizarre diva-like eating disorders overlapping into self-harm and near death rehab meltdowns. While in rehab, late 2019 — in Moscow of all places — Peterson, after multiple seizures threatened his life, was placed for 9 days in an intubated coma. His daughter Mikhaila reported that post-coma he could neither speak nor write for a significant period of time. The once garrulous guru of taking responsibility for your own destiny had conspired to forge for himself a karmic path to vegetative muteness.

On July 1, Peterson emerged from his 10 month long muteness. Speaking on his daughter Mikhaila’s Lion Diet podcast, Peterson detailed his ‘worse than death’ experiences over the last year. Father and daughter both pointed the finger of blame firmly at one cause for the devastating collapse of Peterson’s health: his addiction to Benzodiazepine. Now I’m not saying the benzos and Peterson’s calamitous withdrawal from the benzos didn’t play their role in screwing the professor, but I’d like to briefly explore another mitigating factor in Peterson’s miseries that he and his daughter failed to mention in the hour long podcast: their bizarre, shared…

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Marc Westley

Advocate in legal practice. Master of Philosophy from the University of Glasgow. Mantra: the pen is mightier than the sausage