First, we make the beast beautiful A new journey through anxiety

Sarah Wilson

Book - 2018

Challenges cultural beliefs about anxiety from the perspectives of medical and spiritual leaders to explore how the condition needs to be viewed less as a burdensome affliction and more as a source of divine growth.

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2nd Floor 616.8522/Wilson Due Aug 22, 2023
Subjects
Published
New York : Dey Street, an imprint of William Morrow 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Sarah Wilson (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
312 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780062836786
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Wilson, author of the best-selling I Quit Sugar (2014), now presents a compelling mix of cathartic memoir and advice. She describes how she has struggled all her life with insomnia, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder, autoimmune diseases, and, last but not least, anxiety. To some degree, we all suffer from anxiety. In fact, the Western world praises people with high-functioning anxiety; these are the people who make lists, who keep up a brisk pace, and are constantly on the go. But beneath this composed veneer, one in 13 struggles with the beast. Wilson approaches this deeply personal topic in a refreshing light. She makes it clear that she is not a medical professional and that this book is a creative representation of her journey. The result is a meandering and conversational narrative bordering on stream-of-consciousness. Raw and honest, Wilson's new story does provide self-help tips, but mostly it is meant to serve as a companion to help ease the plague of anxiety.--Smith, Patricia Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

Journalist Wilson (I Quit Sugar) borrows the title of this uplifting, earnest memoir from a Chinese proverb on the theme of acceptance: using one's anxiety to find purpose, she believes, can make life beautiful. Wilson, one of seven siblings who grew up poor in the Australian bush outside of Canberra, suffered from anxiety for years (as well as from OCD, bipolar disorder, and Hashimoto's, a disease of the thyroid) and here explores the condition from many angles, meandering, as she explains, "through disciplines and between polemic, didactic and memoir." In the opening chapter, Wilson asks the Dalai Lama how to stop the internal "fretty chatter that makes us so nervous" ("There's no use," he says. "Impossible"). Later, she observes that the "correlation between creative contribution... and anxiety is well documented." She offers simple tricks and practices throughout the book to reduce anxiety, including making one's bed every morning and learning to meditate. Wilson also points out that anxiety can have some benefits: anxious folks, for instance, tend to be good planners. Amusing, practical, and filled with delightful asides, this book will appeal to anxiety-prone readers, who will find much to calm them in these pages. Agent: Stacy Testa, Writers House. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An affecting memoir of coping with anxiety over a busy lifetime."I am anxious often," writes Australian TV journalist Wilson (I Quit Sugar: Your Complete 8-Week Detox Program and Cookbook, 2014). "But it's kept in check if I don't get anxious about being anxious." In a pleasantly meandering narrative that mixes what the author characterizes as "polemic, didactic and memoir," she ticks off a long list of the many afflictions that she's suffered: depression, hypomania, bipolar disorder, bulimia, insomnia, and, ever since childhood, anxiety. In response to them, she writes, she's tried about everything, from various chemical amelioratives to neurolinguistic programming, Freudian psychotherapy, and even "sand play." All of those illnesses, she avers, were variations on the same theme: anxiety, pure and simple. And she's not alone; even though anxiety wasn't classified as a mental disorder until 1980, as many as 1 in 6 people in the First World suffer from it, and men in particular suffer from anxiety in greater numbers than from depression. The developed-world part is important, since Wilson later wonders whether anxiety may not be a bourgeois sort of problem. In whatever instance, she observes, the whole business is a mess: "Anxiety…it's befuddling and clusterfucky for everyone involved." Having sorted through what she can, the author then looks into various things that she's tried to deploy in order to ward off anxiety, from taking a long walk to trying to declutter a mental lifestyle that, as she memorably puts it, requires us to "keep multiple tabs open in our brains, which sees us toggle back and forth between tasks and commitments and thoughts. And all of it competes. And it clusters. And down we go in a hyper-tabbed tangle." Small wonder that she quietly hints that it may be time to try a few psychedelics.Those who endure anxiety will find Wilson's thoughtful, often funny self-analysis to be just the right companion and affirmation.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.