Think this is my third time back here I first signed up I think a year ago (I was still on processed food then and a pescaterian) signed up again in may I think once I got my high speed blender and had given up processed food (finally stuck to that) still didn't manage to stick to it as the recipes needed me to purchase things I didn't have nuts/hemp seeds/coconut oil etc.
Fast forward 7 months now I'm still cooking from scratch no processed food. And cupboards full of 90 percent of what I need for recipes :) raw breakfast every day try to have raw lunch having have a cooked vegan meal for dinner.
I also take a b12 methylcobalmin sublingual tablet once a day as it turned out I had definite b12 deficiency.
The pluses for me of having a 75 percent raw diet are great skin, no more depression, pretty much cured me of my absence seizures (still get the odd one if under stress for any reason) saying that my general daily anxiety pretty much non existent I sleep well wake up early (I've never been a morning person before) and have even started thinking about starting up plant based catering in the future.
Anyway bit of a longer introduction then I'd planned ;)
Just wanted to say hello :)

Comments
Welcome back! It's great to have you here. It sounds like you have come a long way to get to a wonderful place.
It's awesome that you have made a break from processed foods! Welcome back
A good blender can make a world of difference.
An airing cupboard is a storage space, sometimes of walk-in dimensions, containing a water heater; either an immersion heater for hot running water or a boiler for central heating water. Shelves, usually slatted to allow for circulation of heat, are positioned above or around the heater to provide storage for clothing, typically linen and towelling. The purpose is to allow air to circulate around the stored fabrics to prevent damp forming. A shelf can also be used to fully remove traces of damp from dried clothing before it is put away in drawers and wardrobes. Other names include "boiler cupboard", or (in Ireland) "hot press". Airing cupboards are mostly built-in. A drying cabinet is an electrical version.