Book Reviews
Book Reviews
BOOK REVIEWS
by Marilyn Helton
Building Bridges to Better Health
OK, folks, Here we are... We made it! We've
crossed the bridge into the next century. What are your plans? What will you do with this
new opportunity for a fresh start on your overall health and diabetes control?
I don't know about you, but I've made the journey
into the new millennium by walking very softly, one step at a time, and I'm carrying a
very big stick: My new and improved attitude about taking better care of myself!
How many of you type 2s make the same resolve
each New Year, say, to do a better job of controlling your weight? Since this is a very
special New Year, make a new commitment and make it count. Resolve to get a better grip on
your diabetes control and your weight management! You can start as I have done, by reading
one of the most interesting and intriguing books I've read recently: "Intuitive
Eating--A Recovery Book for the Chronic Dieter," written by Evelyn Tribole, M.S.,
R.D., and Elyse Resch, M.S., R.D.
I call this a "thinker's" book. It
makes sense as you really dig in and give a lot of thought to what the authors have to
say. Its thesis is wrapped around 10 basic principles, following chapters on Hitting Diet
Bottom and Discovering What Kind of Eater You Are. You'll learn how to reject the diet
mentality, make peace with food, cope with your emotions without using food, respect your
body, exercise so you feel the difference and honor your health with gentle nutrition.
One of the best sections in the book comes from
two paragraphs in the Epilogue: "...becoming an Intuitive Eater requires a highly
conscious decision and commitment. It means letting go of the old way of surviving and
opening up to a new way of viewing life... There are many tradeoffs in the Eating World.
Having the 'willpower' to stay on a diet can give you a temporary sense of power and
control, but being an Intuitive Eater gives you a lifelong sense of self-empowerment. The
acts of dieting and rebound binging can offer excitement. So does eating forbidden foods.
But when excitement no longer comes from food or dieting, other aspects of life are free
to be experienced. When you are using food or the obsession that dieting creates to numb
yourself or to distract yourself from your feelings the majority of time, you might feel
calmer and less stressed, but your life can seem like a blurred, out-of-focus home movie.
You know you're alive and racing through life, but you rarely experience its highs, lows,
and nuances of sensation. Once you peel off the layers of dieting and overeating numbness,
you'll discover a richness in life that for some has been buried for decades."
As diabetics, we certainly know how vital good
nutrition is for our health and diabetes control. Consider this book as an excellent
introduction to your attitude toward weight loss and maintenance. It's definitely a
worthwhile investment and highly recommended. Intuitive Eating, by Evelyn Tribole &
Elyse Resch, published 1995, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0-312-13097-X.
As long as we're talking about attitude, here's a
book that comes at exactly the right time for most who get a midlife diagnosis of
diabetes.
Suzanne Willis Zoglio, Ph.D., has written a book
about making the "next half" of your life the "best half."
"Create A Life That Tickles Your Soul--Finding Peace, Passion and Purpose at
Midlife" provides powerful insights on how to reinvent your life in the second half.
Since the majority of type 2 diabetics are
diagnosed at midlife, it's possible to apply some of the strategies described in Dr.
Zoglio's book to dealing with chronic illness. After going through the grieving process
for life as we knew it (before diabetes), some who receive the diagnosis are able to look
inward.
In using the suggestions in Dr. Zoglio's book,
for example, you can use your diagnosis as a turning point by letting go of the past and
taking charge of your present; you can learn how to shift negative mindsets and change
self-sabotaging behaviors; you can even learn how to pay more attention to your life by
embracing it and even celebrating it! According to Dr. Zoglio, "...the need to
accumulate material things becomes less significant than the need for time to enjoy what
we have... the need to be seen is superseded by the need to really see ourselves...,"
and both are vital elements of being able to live successfully with a chronic illness.
"Create A Life That Tickles Your Soul"
is not a diabetes-recovery book. It's a book about how to achieve and enjoy emotional
well-being, and a wonderful guide for helping you to recognize purpose in your life and
the motivation for achieving it. You'll really learn how to live from the inside out! A
truly inspirational book. "Create A Life That Tickles Your Soul," by Suzanne
Willis Zoglio, Ph.D., published 1999, Tower Hill Press, ISBN 0-941668-09-6.
Fifty-five percent of our adult population (97
million Americans) are overweight. As a result, type 2 diabetes is considered to be an
epidemic. A combination information system and personal workbook, "The Diabetes
Weight Loss System" is a very thorough book for a very specific
population--overweight people who have diabetes. Presented in consecutive stages which
precede behavioral change: The Contemplation Stage; The Preparation Stage; The Action
Stage and The Maintenance Stage, there are good subsections in each area. These include
Diabetes and Overweight, Changing Behavior Patterns, Stress and Eating, Understanding and
Using Food Labels, Controlling Your Food Intake, Beginning to Increase Your Daily
Activity, Getting Ready for Aerobic Exercise, Implementation of Your Personal Exercise and
Diet Plans, Relapse Prevention and Lifetime Weight Maintenance.
There are two main types of diabetes: type 1 and
type 2. Approximately 90% of the diabetic population in the U.S. has type 2 diabetes. The
most powerful risk factor for type 2 diabetes is overweight. And, although overweight is
not an initial causative factor in type 1 diabetes, as people with type 1 advance in age,
they may become overweight, and have greater difficulty controlling the disease.
"The Diabetes Weight Loss System," by
Walter Bortz, MD, Sharon Bortz, MS, RD and Patricia Mathis, RN, CDE of the Diabetes
Research and Wellness Foundation, is the most complete, step-by-step publication I have
ever seen which builds such a justifiable foundation for weight loss and maintenance for
ALL diabetics. It's insightful, clearly written, and teaches the reader that he doesn't
have to go through life feeing that who he is, is beyond his control. It's made abundantly
clear that if you have diabetes and miss the message for taking the best possible care of
yourself and your health, it's your life that's at stake.
As stated in the introduction, "There are no
magic bullets, potions, or pills that can produce desirable health outcomes. There is only
you, your courage, and your determination to do the required work... (and) the required
work includes taking a penetrating look at yourself, not just in the mirror, but through
your mind and spirit as well. This is a workbook."
I will be using this workbook as my
"bible" for the coming year; giving it ample time, thought and effort in my
determination to resolve my on again-off again, diabetes control. I highly recommend this
book; treat it as your friend and guide in your quest for better health and diabetes
control in the new millennium. "Diabetes Weight Loss System," by W. Bortz, S.
Bortz, and P. Mathis, published 1999 by Diabetes Research and Wellness Foundation, ISBN
0-9670465-0-5.
NOTE: Marilyn Helton is the editor of Cinnamon
Hearts--The Art of Living A Winning Diabetic Lifestyle, a positive-power newsletter for
diabetics and their families. Visit the Cinnamon Hearts website at
http://members.xoom.com/cinnhearts for timely articles, resources and diabetic recipes.
Share a Comment