Until yesterday it had never occurred to me to eat raw meat. I've always assumed it could be dangerous. But yesterday I stumbled across this forum and read for several hours. Lex's journal made a particularly big impression.
I noticed that there are a lot of people here eating raw meat -- even rotten raw meat -- and very little sickness.
Reading about food made me hungry, so after a while I went to the refrigerator and took out a package of Northstar ground bison which had been defrosting overnight. I had been planning to cook it. I sliced off three narrow strips and ate it standing at the counter. It tasted good. It tasted like a kind of sashimi. Really, it tasted quite good.
A couple of hours went by and I didn't get sick, so I ate most of the rest of the package. In all, I ate about 14 ounces of raw bison yesterday. I ate half of it plain and the other half sandwiched on thin slices of cucumber with a little salt. It was a nice meal.
Just now I read some more and decided to try something more adventurous, so I defrosted a package of grass-fed beef liver. (I started buying this stuff from US Wellness two weeks ago.)
The thing is, I hate beef liver. I bought this piece as an experiment, expecting to throw it out after I cooked it.
I sliced off a tiny piece and tasted it cautiously. I tried to taste it as if for the first time. It wasn't bad. I ate the second piece. Really, not bad at all. But the liver was very cold, just barely defrosted, and that dulls the taste. For a full experiment a sliced off a fairly large piece and kept it in my mouth till it warmed up and chewed thoroughly. It really isn't bad.
I've been on a more-or-less paleo diet for about two years, but if I hadn't stumbled across this forum yesterday, I don't know if I would ever have tried raw meat.
Now I have, and I imagine I'll mostly eat it that way for the rest of my life. It seems obvious to me that it's a good idea to try to eat foods that evolution designed us to eat, and clearly raw foods come closer to that ideal than cooked ones.
I'd like to thank everybody here and especially Lex.