Food freedom forever Letting go of bad habits, guilt, and anxiety around food

Melissa Hartwig

Book - 2016

Shares advice on how to improve energy and health while letting go of negative food habits, outlining a three-part plan for long-term control and recovery from restriction breaks taken during the holidays, vacations, and times of stress.

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Melissa Hartwig (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xx, 249 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780544838291
  • Acknowledgments
  • Author's Note
  • Preface
  • Section 1. Welcome to Food Freedom
  • Chapter 1. The Food Freedom Plan
  • The Food Freedom 3-Step Plan
  • Your Food Freedom Journey
  • Chapter 2. My Story
  • We All Have Our Baggage
  • Pizza, Heroin, Sugar, Cigarettes
  • Chapter 3. Diets Don't Work
  • Dieting: Just (Don't) Do It
  • Reset vs. Diet
  • Chapter 4. The Reset (Elimination)
  • Step 1. The Reset
  • The Whole 30
  • Design Your Own Reset
  • Planning Your Elimination
  • Sample Resets
  • Tips for a Successful Reset
  • Chapter 5. The Reset (Reintroduction)
  • We're Mot Dieting
  • Reintroduction Reinforcement
  • Reintroduction Guidelines
  • Evaluating Your Reset
  • Building a Life of Food Freedom
  • Section 2.
  • Chapter 6. Food Freedom, Defined
  • Step 2. Enjoying Food Freedom
  • Is It Worth It?
  • Conscious and Deliberate
  • Chapter 7. In-The-Moment Success Strategies
  • When You Indulge
  • The Language of Food
  • Regret Is Inevitable
  • We Now Return to Your Regularly Scheduled Diet
  • Chapter 8. Big-Picture Food Freedom Success Strategies
  • Growth Mind-set
  • Develop Routines
  • Boosting Your Willpower
  • More on Willpower (the Power of Meditation)
  • Manage Stress
  • Control the Things You Can Control
  • Happier Ever After
  • Section 3.
  • Chapter 9. Spot Your Triggers
  • Step 3. Acknowledge When You're Starting to Slip
  • Trigger #1. The Slow Slide
  • Trigger #2. Vacations
  • Trigger #3. Holidays
  • Trigger #4. Stress
  • Trigger #5. Home Alone
  • It's Okay to Slip
  • Section 4.
  • Chapter 10. Back to the Start
  • Returning to the Reset
  • When It's Not Easy
  • The Role of a Mini Reset
  • Wash, Rinse, Repeat
  • My Reset Recommendations
  • Second Time's a Charm?
  • Every Reset Is Different
  • Section 5.
  • Chapter 11. Talking About Your Reset
  • Phase 1. Have a Positive Interaction
  • Sample Conversations
  • Phase 2. Ask for Their Support
  • Sample Conversations
  • Significant Others
  • Care to Join Me?
  • Chapter 12. Dealing with Pushback
  • Expect the Best
  • Common Criticisms
  • Just Say No (to Peer Pressure)
  • Threat Level: Orange
  • Sample Conversations
  • How Not to Win Friends and Influence People
  • To Be Continued... in Life After
  • Chapter 13. Post-Reset Predicaments
  • Three Little Words
  • To Eat or Not to Eat
  • Chapter 14. In Closing: Go Be Free
  • Out of Nowhere... CUPCAKE
  • Your Food Freedom
  • Food Freedom Forever
  • Resources
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Hartwig is a co-creator of Whole30, a program based on the elimination and reintroduction of potentially troublesome foods. This is not a diet, according to the author, but a lifetime plan aimed at stopping cravings, healing inflammation, and allowing eaters to savor and enjoy food without guilt. There are three parts to the plan: resetting (eliminating potentially troublesome foods, then reintroducing them systematically after 30 days), enjoying food freedom, and acknowledging slip-ups. Hartwig, a certified sports nutritionist, expands the original Whole30 structure by offering customizing options while still insisting on strict adherence to the chosen program. Hartwig supports her approach by citing scientific studies she interprets as demonstrating that the brain thrives on limited options. Promised results include less stress, better sleep, improved digestion, and more energy. What make this book particularly valuable are Hartwig's emphasis on non-scale-oriented victories and her practical strategies for handling inevitable backslides, naysayers, and stubborn old habits. The prospect of food freedom is appealing, and Hartwig's conversational style and no-nonsense stance make her plan seem doable. This is sure to be a popular purchase.--Smith, Candace Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Nutritionist Hartwig (The Whole 30) presents dieters with a guide to developing a healthier relationship with food. Organized into 14 easy-to-follow chapters with titles such as "Diets Don't Work" and "Spot Your Triggers," and written in a highly conversational and candid fashion, the book lays out a doable program designed to allow readers to gain a sense of control over their eating. The crux of the program, and where it begins, is with the process of eliminating troublesome foods linked to overeating and cravings. Upon completion of this strict 30-day period, dieters will reintroduce certain foods, one at a time, in order to identify which are most problematic. Though elimination diets are not new, Hartwig's approach differs from others, such as J.J. Virgin's Virgin Diet, in being primarily focused on psychological well-being rather than weight loss. Refreshingly, readers are assured that falling off the wagon is not failure, but just part of the process. Hartwig succeeds in making the case that seemingly uncontrollable desires for food truly can be conquered with hard work. Agent: Christy Fletcher, Fletcher and Company. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved