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12 Must-Read Books For Anyone Who’s Had An Eating Disorder

February 25, 2021 by www.buzzfeednews.com Leave a Comment

It’s Eating Disorder Awareness Week — or as some of us call it, “Every Week (Trust Me I’m Well Aware)”. When you have an eating disorder (ED) — or, really, any kind of complicated relationship with food — repetitive thought patterns and habits are very hard to escape. I’ve come to realize the ED control tactic might just be with me, in some form, for most of my life. But that doesn’t mean I can’t still try to move away from habits that work against my own liberation. Whatever we practice — self-love, self-loathing — grows stronger.

One of the best medicines, for me, has been reading. The shame of having an eating disorder tends to create a negative cycle where we further punish/reward ourselves using the very behaviors we know cause us suffering. (And then, of course, many of us are also well aware of this, and add a “second arrow” of shame by beating ourselves up for beating ourselves up.) By reading a wide range of books about and featuring this very trap, I’ve felt far less alone and ashamed. While this is by no means a definitive list of books about eating disorders — and not a substitution for professional treatments — these are the books that have, so far, helped me most. I’m sure there are so many I’ve yet to discover, so please let me know your favorites too!


Sick Enough: A Guide to the Medical Complications of Eating Disorders by Dr. Jennifer Gaudiani

This nonfiction read made me question my own excuses for why I “didn’t really have a problem,” answering so many of my questions with data resulting from Dr. Gaudiani’s decades of expertise. She makes the well sourced argument that one doesn’t need to be obviously anorexic or dramatically binging/purging in order to be physically suffering. Eating disorders often don’t look like the ones we picture; in truth, it is much more common that an eating disorder might not make a person’s body appear outwardly sick at all. I’m not usually easily absorbed by something so packed with information, but this was a surprisingly compelling read. Dr. Gaudiani lays out the myriad ways even “less extreme” caloric deprivation harms the body, and it was excellent motivation for me to consider myself “sick enough” to make a change.

Quote : “Practically no one with an eating disorder stops eating and drinking altogether; that is a popular misconception […] patients who restrict calories can have many medical problems that do not cause the blood tests to become abnormal. It turns out that nearly every patient who purely restricts — that is, does not purge — has normal labs.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

The Body Is Not An Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love by Sonya Renee Taylor

This book is as inspiring and kind as its title. I really appreciated the loving and mindful perspective Taylor comes from. I felt seen, understood, and able to believe there is a path forward to radically accepting my body. Taylor also acknowledges the aforementioned vicious cycle of blaming ourselves for disliking ourselves: We scold our bodies, and then we scold ourselves for being caught in beliefs we know aren’t serving us, and which are often directly in opposition to our morals. It’s one thing to preach body positivity; Taylor goes far beyond by delving into why self-love is often much easier said than practiced.

Quote: “Splattered before us like bugs on the windshield of life are all the ways we have shrunk the full expression of ourselves because we have been convinced that our bodies and therefore our very beings are deficient. We can also see how our inability to get out of our shame story amplifies our feelings of inadequacy.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

Thin Girls by Diana Clarke

Not only is this a really smart, funny novel, but it’s also one of the most nuanced books about eating disorders I’ve come across. Set mostly in a darkly funny treatment center, it focuses on the connection between sexuality (in this case the protagonist’s repressed queerness) with anorexia. I learned a surprising amount from this novel. Though it’s fiction, there are plenty of facts peppered throughout, such as that queer women are twice as likely to suffer from eating disorders as straight women. I also appreciated the depiction of a male anorexic character, since male eating disorders are rarely explored overtly .

Quote: “She’s an abusive lover, anorexia is. She stands next to you before the mirror, combs your hair into silk, and points at your reflection with a manicured finger. Fat, she whispers into your ear. She takes the apple you’ve picked from the bowl, presses her lips to your mouth in its place, tangles her tongue with yours. You don’t need that. She winks and drops the fruit to the floor.”

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How To Eat by Thich Nhat Hanh

I love this little book by Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, which features over 100 simple teachings, roughly one per page. Yes it’s about the broader concept of mindful eating (“don’t chew your suffering; just chew the string bean”), but it’s also surprisingly specific. Here you can find easy meditations, secular prayers, and other contemplations to help you appreciate your food on a new level; to take eating out of the realm of the self-centered and more into the interconnected-universal.

Quote: “To enjoy our tea, we have to be fully present and know clearly and deeply that we are drinking tea. When you lift your cup, you may like to breathe in the aroma. Looking deeply into your tea, you see that you are drinking fragrant plants that are the gift of Mother Earth. You see the labor of the tea pickers; you see the luscious tea fields and plantations in Sri Lanka, China, and Vietnam. You know that you are drinking a cloud; you are drinking the rain. The tea contains the whole universe.”

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Empty by Susan Burton

I loved this memoir. I admired not just Burton’s beautiful writing but also her extremely raw honesty. She leaves very little of herself protected here: This book is her “renunciation of empty.” She knows she’ll write things that she’ll end up finding imperfect, but this is why she must tell her story anyway — to confront the fact that she will never be perfect. This book riveted me and made me hungry for all the right reasons. I fixed myself a delicious treat each night I read it —not because Burton is explaining how she’s “all better now,” but rather because her fearless candor inspired me to enjoy and embody my own aliveness, to keep myself nourished so that I might also live to help others dismantle shame.

Quote: “I still believed that thinness strengthened, protected, made me receptive. I did not see it as dangerous or restrictive. I truly did not believe it was possible to be the person I wanted to be, or to feel the things I wanted to feel, without it.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

Eating In The Light of the Moon: How Women Can Transform Their Relationship with Food Through Myths, Metaphors, and Storytelling by Dr. Anita Johnston

This is a healing book, and one that focuses on the power of narrative. It is addressed to a female audience, but I think that anyone with issues around eating and body image (so, most of us) could find something useful here. Dr. Johnston draws on her decades of experience leading workshops and treating eating disorder patients. Most useful, for me, was the idea that in order to move past controlling tendencies with food, one has to understand how those tendencies have “worked” as coping mechanisms. Rather than viewing the eating disorder as the enemy (and therefore feeling even worse when you can’t vanquish it), you might honor it like an old friend you’re ready to leave back in high school. You can form a new narrative around your relationship, and grow in different directions.

Quote: “A woman who seeks recovery needs to understand clearly the ways in which her disordered eating has served her so that she can stop viewing it as simply an impediment to her happiness. Only then can she know precisely which skills she needs to develop in order to live a life free from bingeing, dieting, and food obsessions.”

Get it from Bookshop or Amazon .

Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay

I appreciated this memoir for Gay’s refusal to sugarcoat anything or claim she’s healed. Gay makes no apologies for her insecurities, her body, her fear, or her struggles. In doing so she gives others permission to feel less shame for their imperfect or even destructive relationship with eating. “[M]ost women know this, that we are supposed to disappear, but it’s something that needs to be said, loudly, over and over again, so that we can resist surrendering to what is expected of us,” Gay writes, at the same time acknowledging she can’t fully overcome this internalized oppression. She takes up space, but makes no claims to being heroic, or not wishing to lose weight, or never hating her body. “This isn’t bragging. This is an atlas.”

Quote: “To be clear, the fat acceptance movement is important, affirming, and profoundly necessary, but I also believe that part of fat acceptance is accepting that some of us struggle with body image and haven’t reached a place of peace and unconditional self-acceptance.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

Milk Fed by Melissa Broder

Broder’s protagonist, Rachel, is a queer, Jewish woman who has a tendency towards obsessive food rituals and exercise bulimia. This gripping, funny, and sexy book (as I’ve experienced all of Broder’s books ) is about the connection between sex, food, and spirituality. Not unlike the story in Thin Girls, Rachel’s coming into her queerness greatly alters her relationship to food. This book also made me hungry —to feed myself in a loving, sensual way.

Quote: “I wanted him to absorb my portrayal of ease. Yes, I was performing a one-woman show about a person who could simply take or leave a burrito, no biggie, just coolly have a burrito at rest on her desk, no obsession, no fear, a sane food woman, a woman to whom food was only one facet of a very expansive life, the burrito simply a prop, a trifle to be toyed with, a second thought, a third thought, even.”

Get it from Bookshop or Amazon .

The Vegetarian by Han Kang

Ooof , this book is brutal — but let’s be real, so are eating disorders. You might say the story is kind of like Kafka’s The Metamorphosis in its surreal transformation of the protagonist, but it is truly its own horror. As an ethical vegan, I was a little afraid it would come to a simplistic conclusion, like, “ Hey, look, vegetarians all have eating disorders! ” But it’s way more complex than that, and is at times rather sexy in its sadness. You really just have to read it to get it. And maybe even then, you won’t get it all right away. The pain you feel watching the protagonist slowly sink might just make you want to learn to swim.

Quote: “It’s your body, you can treat it however you please. The only area where you’re free to do just as you like. And even that doesn’t turn out how you wanted.”

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Radical Compassion: Learning to Love Yourself and Your World with the Practice of RAIN by Tara Brach

Meditation teacher and psychologist Tara Brach speaks openly about her own history with disordered eating. Few people have done more to help me sit with whatever is arising in my life; her podcast is wonderful, and you might want to check out her video episodes about eating in particular). Her latest book, Radical Compassion, focuses on the practice of RAIN — Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture. The practice is invaluable for working with eating disorders, but can also be applied to other emotional and behavioral struggles. I helped myself emerge from a particularly challenging place a few years ago by listening to Brach’s teachings as I ate. She made great company, like a wise aunt or therapist urging me onwards.

Quote: “The phrase that sums this up is this: ‘Neurons that fire together, wire together.’ Our habits are sustained by repeating patterns of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that have created and reinforced neural networks in our brain. By changing our patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving, we can change these neural networks.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

Cheat Day by Liv Stratman (forthcoming May 25)

I believe it’s also important to read lighter depictions of the harm caused by eating disorders — for these harms to figure heavily in the story, but not be the whole story, since that is often the truth of our lives. This novel is a smart escape — the kind of book you devour in a day or two, but not because it’s literary cotton candy. This book is sexy and funny, but also very perceptive. It’s about a woman who obsessively diets and is super hungry, but is hooked by the allure of “clean eating” nonetheless. When she meets an intriguing man, some very hot scenes ensue, and the connection between desire and food is again explored. The twist is she’s having an affair, and we totally root for her and feel the pull of both men and the lives she caught between. This book is especially great for serial dieters, “clean eaters,” and others who might not be seen as “having a problem” by most, but who are often suffering from food obsession that infringes upon their lives.

Quote: “But for some reason, in the company of Matt Larsson, I felt my unhappiness — and my constant hunger — subside, and so I followed those moments, chased time alone with him, pressed his words and then his body closer and closer to the center of who I was until, eventually, I had a real problem.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

The Intuitive Eating Workbook: Ten Principles for Nourishing a Healthy Relationship with Food by Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch

Not going to lie, this workbook is so good I haven’t finished it all yet. That’s a compliment, in this case, because this workbook asks you to do real work — to practice relearning your hunger cues, to follow and record your own emotional patterns and triggers, and much more. This is an anti-diet, health-at-any-size workbook for people who want to regain a sense of when they are hungry or full. The longer you’ve been ignoring these signals, the harder work that can be. While therapy is the best treatment, this guide makes a great (and more affordable) companion.

Quote: “Keep your body biologically fed with adequate energy and carbohydrates. Otherwise you can trigger a primal drive to overeat. Once you reach the moment of excessive hunger, all intentions of moderate, conscious eating are fleeting and irrelevant. Learning to honor this first biological signal sets the stage for rebuilding trust with yourself and food.”

Get it from Bookshop , Target , or Amazon .

Rachel Krantz is a journalist and author of a forthcoming reported memoir about non-monogamy. ●

Filed Under: WorldNews book eat stop eat, National Eating Disorders Association, national eating disorder association, Eating Disorders and Body Image, Men Get Eating Disorders Too, eating disorder, Recovering From Binge Eating Disorder, National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, national eating disorder awareness, eating disorders

Howl, Hungry and reading

October 13, 2013 by www.thehindu.com Leave a Comment

The way a bookshop stocks its books says a lot about its temperament. At City Lights, a landmark San Francisco independent bookstore-publisher, some of the sections are called Commodity Aesthetics, Stolen Continents, Green Politics, Muckraking, Topographies & Somalogistics, representing a bookselling ethic that is fast eroding, or has already eroded. As its principal bookbuyer, Paul Yamazaki curates the collection.

Yamazaki is a member of the jury for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2014, which will announce its longlist shortly. Antara Dev Sen, editor, writer and literary critic, chairs the jury, while Arshia Sattar, translator, writer and teacher, Ameena Saiyid, the MD of Oxford University Press in Pakistan and Rosie Boycott, British journalist and editor, are the other members.

“Reading for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature is identical to reading for City Lights. I am looking for stories wrought with exacting language that transport me to an understanding of the world that I would not arrive at on my own,” he says. In an e-mail interview, Yamazaki speaks about City Lights, its connection with India, and the role of an independent bookstore. Excerpts:

Can you give us a brief history of City Lights and how you came to be associated with it?

City Lights Pocketbook Shop opened in June 1953. Lawrence Ferlinghetti had the chance encounter that would set so much else in motion: on day when he was driving north on Columbus Ave to his home on Chestnut Street in North Beach, he was approaching the intersection at Broadway when he saw “this guy putting up a sign about a pocket bookshop.” That guy was Peter Martin, son of Carlo Tresca, the legendary Anarchist and editor of a little literary magazine named after the Charlie Chaplin film, “City Lights.” Martin was opening a small pocket bookshop to provide financial support for his magazine. After a short conversation, Ferlinghetti and Martin agreed to become partners in the bookshop and to invest $500, each. They sealed their partnership with a handshake. On June 24, 1953, Martin and Ferlinghetti opened City Lights Bookshop. With it’s opening, City Lights immediately became a gathering spot for poets who had been drawn to San Francisco in the early ‘50s. Among them, Gary Snyder, Lew Welch, Philip Whalen, Michael McClure and Philip Lamantia. Allen Ginsberg who arrived from New York in 1954. Jack Kerouac, Neil Cassady, Gregory Corso would drop in to City Lights on their cross-country road trips. In October of 1955 Allen Ginsberg read at the Six Gallery his poem “Howl” in public for the first time. Ferlinghetti recalled, “I went home afterward and sent a Western Union telegram to Ginsberg. I said, ‘I greet you at the beginning of a great career. When do we get the manuscript?’” City Lights published, “Howl” in 1956. Ferlinghetti and Shigeyoshi Murao the manager of City Lights Booksellers were arrested for selling copies of “Howl”.

Ferlinghetti’s Western Union message to Allen Ginsberg and his subsequent publication of Howl stands out as one of the great editorial and publishing moves of the 20th Century. In this, Ferlinghetti recognized Howl as a groundbreaking work of American literature and immediately saw Ginsberg’s significance as a poet and cultural figure. In their Howl trial, at whatever personal cost to themselves, Ferlinghetti and Murao put on a strategic and steadfast defense that furthered the rights of authors to be published and readers to read. In doing so, they tested the strictures of society, and in winning, they extended the bounds of what was permitted if not universally accepted. Howl, the book and the trial, made literary history and brought City Lights, as bookseller and publisher, to a national and international prominence, which continues to this day.

City Lights is currently celebrating its 60th year of existence.

What does it mean to be an “independent bookshop”? What do you think is the role they play?

The independent bookshop in the U.S. has its roots in a post second world war internationalism. City Lights, Keplers, Cody’s in the San Francisco Bay Area and the 8th Street Bookshop in New York City were established in the decade after the end of the second world war. The 8th Street Bookshop and City Lights were also publishers of radical poets often called the Beats. Roy Kepler was a pacifist war resister who was in imprisoned by the United States Government during the Second World War. After the war Kepler became a major cultural and political figure in the San Francisco Bay Area. Kepler not only founded the bookstore but also was one of the founders of the 1st public radio station in the United States. Many of the bookstores and that emerged in the sixties and seventies were influenced by the spirit of the radical stores. Over the past decades the number of books being published annually has increased dramatically. Independent booksellers are able to put the right book in the right reader’s hands. Readers are appreciative of this service that we provide. In the second decade of the 21st Century the role of the independent bookshop is more crucial than ever.

As the principal book buyer, can you tell us a about the process by which books get selected?

Acquiring books is a craft and in my 43 years in the business many things have changed, but the essentials of bookselling have remained the same: reading, curiosity and conversation. These lie at the heart of what I do. And to the question, how do you select books for City Lights, I would say, I look for the answer reading as much as possible and having conversations with independent booksellers around the country, with editors at publishing houses, large and small, with publisher sales representatives and with my colleagues at City Lights. Here, the conversation about what books to read and what books will be represented on our shelves begins with the staff. Each member of the City Lights crew participates in the decision over what front list and backlist titles we will offer.

An ongoing dialogue with editors is another key element. We talk to editors to learn about new writers and books, and this, in turn, allows our staff to be early readers and champions of authors and books that have modest announced print runs and marketing and publicity budgets. We see this kind of engagement and conversation as essential to what we do, presenting books often not found elsewhere.

Every decade, it seems, has featured a major challenge to the independent bookseller. We manage by being very selective. The craft of bookselling lies, not so much in reacting to the marketplace as in developing it by representing, on our shelves, a point of view that sets us apart. As independent booksellers, we build the final plank in the bridge that connects the writer to the reader.

Globally, there are arguments being made for both the decline as well as the resurgence of independent bookshops.

There has been a resurgence of the independent bookstore in diverse communities throughout the United States. A new generation of booksellers is establishing new bookstores or is taking over currently existing stores. The independent bookstore has become important not just for the curatorial practices described previously but also for the central role it plays as a communal gathering spot.

City Lights published poets of the Hungryalist Movement ( Shakti Chattopadhyay, Malay Roy Choudhury, Samir Roychoudhury and Debi Roy, among others ) from India in the 1960s. Would you know how this happened?

It is my belief that the poets of the Hungryalist Movement were part of a wave of global insurrectionary poetry that swept around the globe during the 20th Century. The spirit of insurrection in poetry appeared in different parts of the globe under a variety of names, Negritude, Surrealism, Hungryalist, and Beat. Lawrence Ferlinghetti felt he and City Lights were part of that insurrectionary wave of poetry. Ferlinghetti most likely felt a profound sense of solidarity with the Hungryalist poets.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Paul Yamazaki, DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2014, Hungry generation, bookstore-publisher, South Asian Literature, City Lights, Yamazaki interview, Paul..., read when rabbit howls online free

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