Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Review of "The Beck"!

[OMG! I finally posted something more interesting that a weekly update! :-D]

I finished listening to The Beck Diet Solution audio CD. I wasn't sure if I'd be able to finish it, because--as I noted in a previous blog entry--the reader's voice really bothered me at first. (Interestingly enough, I'm not alone: several of the Amazon.com reviewers also preferred the author's voice to the narrator's, saying that Dr. Beck's voice was more "real" and "personable" and that the narrator sounded too "peppy and Hollywood.")

As I kept listening, though, I found that I didn't mind so much. I'm thinking that one of the following happened:
A. The narrator warmed up to the material as the book progressed.
B. I felt ashamed of my intense reaction and got over it.
C. I realized that the narrator's voice sounded a lot like the narrator in the children's TV show Miffy, and that was somewhat less threatening. (The Miffy narrator sounds like she may have been Martha Stewart's preschool teacher....)

Oh yes! The content:

Likes:
  • The book talks a lot about hunger vs. cravings vs. just feeling like eating, and it coaches you on how to develop mindfulness of and resistance to all three. I don't really like the idea of not eating when you're hungry, but it is something I had to do at first: I always felt hungry, because I was used to eating a larger volume of food than I needed and because hunger can be one of the signs of blood glucose levels that are *too high*. Anyhow, the way she talked about learning to distinguish the three and deal with them made me think that mindfulness training would be very helpful for dealing with the habit and craving part. (Especially if you're having a hard time distracting yourself: sometimes you just need to sit with a feeling.) I was reminded of Pema Chodron's works--a lot of her teaching has to do with addictive behavior--especially Getting Unstuck.
  • Similarly to the Life is Hard, Food is Easy book that Juice is reading, Dr. Beck talks very sensibly about deprivation. There are some areas of our life in which we have "must do" and "must not do" behaviors, and we often don't give them much thought at all. What's the deal with food???
  • I don't know why, but I liked the "oh well" as a catch phrase for accepting unpleasant circumstances. "I don't like this, but I accept that it's what I have to do, and I move on."
  • Some of the sabotaging throughts/helpful responses were kind of hokey, but I think it's a useful technique to talk oneself down from a sabotage situation.
  • Negative emotions are not an emergency. How often I forget that simple fact!
  • I liked her maintenance advice. I've read it elsewhere (Hi Miz!), and it seems very sound. I like that she emphasizes going for a realistic healthy weight than an impossible-to-maintain goal weight, and that it might take some time for a person to figure out what that range is going to be.
Dislikes (very few!)
  • Word choice. "Diet" and "skinny" and "thin," mainly. I suspect that Dr. Beck uses those terms, because "being thin" really does motivate a lot of people, and she's offering a more sensible way of "dieting" than crash diets and the like. This time around, I am much more motivated to be healthy than to be thin, and my end result may not be my goal weight.
  • The "you can't have this" advice. I guess in some ways, I use it, but I tend to not make "always" or "never" type of rules. (Which, as I've noted before, don't work for me: they set up "forbidden fruits.")
  • Contradictory, or common sense? There's advice later on to be flexible and to avoid the "always or "never" type of thinking...the context is that being too rigid can put too much stress on a person, and too much stress is unhealthy.
Book vs. CD
Aside from "the voice," I think the audio CD would be better as a companion piece to the book. There's a lot that didn't stick with me, and were I following the plan, I'd want to have the book around for reference and refreshing. I don't think I'd find the book alone as useful, either: I often have a hard time staying engaged with non-fiction material. And I liked the way that bits and pieces stuck around in my memory later, as sabotaging thoughts and behavior came up, "helpful responses" would pop into my mind. Which is undoubtedly why the program calls for people making response cards and reading them repeatedly. Kind of nice to have the CD do that for me. ;-)

Becking and Blogging
I found that very little of the material was completely new to me, especially since I've been reading numerous health and fitness blogs for nearly a year now and had been a Weight Watchers member in years past. Blogging really complements "Becking," because the online community is like having a whole bunch of diet coaches, and blog writing and commenting provide ways of working through the sabotaging thoughts & behaviors and figuring out helpful responses.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Weekly update, 4/21/09 and thoughts on "The Beck"

I'm back on track this week, and I'm feeling very good about it: I kept my log filled in, and while things didn't go perfectly, they went good enough.

I've also been listening to The Beck Diet Solution. (Got the older version on a book on CD from the library, after seeing it mentioned on several blogs.) My reaction? Hmmm. I'm really trying to keep an open mind with this one and listen for the valuable nuggets. So far, a lot of it has been tips I learned ages ago in Weight Watchers (which, *cough*, were floating back in my subconscious for a long time and not being applied). I don't really like the word choices: much emphasis on the wonder of being "skinny" or "thin" (as opposed to "healthy"), although the practical advice is very sound and healthy. I think this would probably also be my reaction in reading the text of the book, but I have to admit: the voice of the woman who reads the book really raises my hackles. (It's not the author. She read the forward, and I preferred her voice.) With a book like this, I'd really prefer a warm, empathetic voice. The voice that was cast alternates between infomercialish enthusiasm and a rather snotty, condescending tone. (Can you picture a real or fictional person, who has never had a problem in maintaining a stable weight and can't for the life of her imagine how others could be such losers at it? That's her. Reading this book! Yeah, I know! Come to think of it, though, the person reading the book is probably a lovely person, and my karma is tanking as I type this.) Anyway, I'm on disk 2 at the moment, and it's at a point where I'm amused enough at my reaction to the voice to be a bit less bothered by it and more receptive of the message.

Progress last week

7-day blood glucose average: 94 (met goal of less than 120)
7-day fasting average: 95 (met goal of less than 120, 100% of days)
Weight goal: -2.6 lbs (met goal)

Food goals:
- Consumed 5 meatless, low-fat meals and 1 fish meals. (met meatless meal goal; did not meet fish meal goal)
- Got over 50 grams fiber 1 day last week; >=40 grams of fiber 3 days, >=30 grams 2 days, and <20>=30 minutes, but missed one of my workout days. Did 1 run and 2 half-runs, and one spin class. Only 1 day strength training, but it was BodyPump and I felt good-sore this week.

Misc. goals: Got adequate sleep all but one night. I didn't always brush and floss right after dinner, but will leave that on the goal list.

Goals for this week

7-day blood glucose average goal and fasting numbers: below 120.
Weight goal: Maintain or lose.

Food goals:
- 4 or more meatless, low-fat meals and 2 or more fish meals.
- Keep the good coffee habit going on week days: 1 coffee/day, with 2T fat-free half-and-half and 1/4-1/2 cup almond milk. Switch to tea and plain water after that first cup.
- Take the sugar-free candy out of the car. Use gum instead.
- Track fiber. Minimum 30 grams fiber/day and work up to consuming 50 grams fiber/day. (Include both insoluble and soluble sources.)

Exercise goals:
Minimum of 30 minutes of workout 5 days/week. Workout to include at least 1 bike, 1 run, and 1 swim per week, plus 2 strength training per week. (I'll probably be focusing more on the running with the 5K coming up at the end of May; during the summer, I'll be switching to triathlon training for September.)

Misc. goals:
- 7 or more hours sleep/night.
- Brush and floss teeth right after dinner!

Monday, January 5, 2009

How I Spent My New Year's Eve (And Several Days After)

(NOTE - I left a similar version of this as a comment on MizFit Online, which is the very appropriate kickoff point for a virtual book tour, via blogs, celebrating the US publication of The Amazing Adventures of Dietgirl.)

I started following the Dietgirl blog a few months ago, and I've read through a number of the archives. "Dang!" I thought to myself. "This girl is *funny*!" I preordered the US book awhile back, felt anxious when it did NOT arrive on 12/30 as Amazon.com predicted, happily received it on New Year's Eve, and spent the evening (and a few days after...only because of family/job demands, otherwise it would have been devoured in one sitting) reading this book. Totally missed tuning in for the 9 p.m. (PST) dropping of the ball in Times Square, which usually marks the high point of our personal festivities. We're such the party animals at Casa de la Pubsgal.

I wanted to write a compelling review for my own blog...but I wouldn't be able to do it justice. I'd just gush and those people who hadn't already heard from more credible witnesses (such as The Miz) would probably think, "Yeah, right, she probably says that about every book she actually has time to read these days, she's so desperate for a read at all." Imagine my delight that The Miz also gushed and said pretty much everything I was going to say (laughter/tears/preference to Cats). But darned if I wasn't going to post about it anyhow. :-) So here goes:

No, I'm not just gushing. I really am particular, and this book is BRILLIANT! Like MizFit, I was smitten.

Remarkably insightful observations of things I loved about the book:
- Numerous laugh-out-loud funny parts
- Parts that made me feel sympathetic, that I could relate to, and that made me ponder my own quest
- The themes: Fitness is not *only* about the scale or a pant size. Don't wait until you're at the "ideal" weight to do the things you really want to do. Don't let fear stop you. It's stuff I've learned from my blogging sisters and brothers during the quest...but this is stuff that so many others offline need to hear and grok. (Like Oprah, for example. Girlfriend, pull your head out of Hollywood and plunk it into this book!)

The only drawbacks?
- Being irritated at what or whom ever pulled me away during reading
- Potential financial ruin from buying copies for family (especially the nieces) and friends (Kidding, Mr. Handsome-and-Handy-and-Frugal!)
- Having to *wait* until Shauna Reid (hope! hope! hope!) publishes another book! (Don't wait as long as that OTHER Edinburgh author, please!)