Tired as f*ck Burnout at the hands of diet, self-help, and hustle culture

Caroline Dooner

Book - 2022

Honest and hilarious, a humorist, in this cautionary tale, examines how treating ourselves with never-ending self-improvement projects is a recipe for burnout, and takes a good hard look at the dark side of self-help.

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : HarperWave, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Caroline Dooner (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 293 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-293).
ISBN
9780063052970
  • Introduction: How to Be Filled with Dread
  • How to Not Be a Psychopath
  • How to Be Cult Susceptible
  • How to Secure a Miracle Tooth
  • How to Email God
  • How to Become Obsessed with Food
  • How to Start Panicking about Your Face
  • How to Focus on the Wrong Cure
  • How to Let Everyone Know You Suck
  • How to Try Every Diet
  • How to Be Extremely Dramatic
  • How to Pray for a New Face
  • How to Be Obsessed with Beauty
  • How to Have a Horrible Time in France
  • How to Lose Feeling in Half of Your Face
  • How to Be an Actual Cheese Grater in a Musical
  • How to Not Know You Have an Eating Disorder
  • How to Have No Blood
  • How to Cope When Your Parent Has Cancer
  • How to Join the Cult of Raw Veganism
  • How to Make a Vision Tin
  • How to Think Positive Thoughts, or Else
  • How to Lose Your Ego for a Month
  • How to Lose Your Voice
  • How to Have a Nervous Breakdown
  • How to Get Another New Face
  • How to Become a French Woman
  • How to Become Rich on the Internet
  • How to Eat Like a Cavewoman
  • How to Stop Dieting
  • How to Rule Out Every Miracle Cure
  • How to Heal Your Creative Soul
  • How to Be a Receptionist Who's Afraid of the Phone
  • How to Feel
  • How to Be Extreme about Everything
  • How to Figure Out What's Depleting You
  • How to Figure Out if You're ALLOWED to Be Tired
  • How to Reconcile the Privilege of Rest
  • How to Claim Rest
  • How to Be OK Dying Alone
  • How to Be Addicted to Busyness
  • How to Sort of Do a Bad Job at Resting
  • How to Take Things Off Your (Figurative) Plate
  • How to Have Boundaries
  • How to Heal Chronic Exhaustion
  • How to Live
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Dooner continues her health journey after The F*ck It Diet (2019), this time tackling burnout and society's compulsion to always be "doing more." Exhausted from over a decade of trying to fit a specific version of herself, in her case a successful actor who looks like a Burberry model, Dooner decides to declutter her life à la Marie Kondo and purposefully rest for two years. She uses the bulk of the book detailing how she ended up totally exhausted by her life and the unrealistic expectations stemming from her performance anxiety coupled with the extensive dental work she underwent throughout her life. Both experiences traumatized her and started her unhealthy obsession with trying any means necessary to fix herself; cue the yo-yo, fad dieting leading to TFID. Throughout this book, Dooner uses articles, books, and studies to explain why it's so hard for anyone to just "be at peace" while also stressing why marginalized people harmed by systematic inequities experience these disadvantages the most. Dooner is a relatable and charming guide in examining and letting go of toxic expectations.

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

Blogger Dooner (The F*ck It Diet) returns with a snappy and empathetic guide to combating burnout by purging "the guilt." Dooner encourages readers to drop "the shoulds. The comparing ourselves to other people. The forcing ourselves to stay in jobs or relationships that we don't love, but that we don't think we deserve to leave." The "accidental" impetus of Dooner's revelations was her introduction to Marie Kondo's advice on decluttering her apartment; she determined she could extend the principle of chucking anything tangible that didn't "spark joy" to relationships and career paths. After a lifetime of trying to become a successful actor, Dooner declares she got "sick of everything," especially the heightened anxiety auditions caused, so she just quit going to them. She also stopped making any foods off-limits (and dropped dieting), allowed herself to rest, and stopped forcing herself to go on second dates with men she wasn't attracted to. As a result, she forged a better relationship with her body, learned she doesn't have to work 80 hours a week (after hiring a part-time assistant for her blog), and created space in her life to welcome new jobs, new friends and new ideas. By boldly sharing vulnerabilities, Dooner's account should go a long way in helping others accept their own. It's a brave and bracing manifesto that will be welcomed by any reader living in the aftermath of burnout--or trying to avoid it. Agent: Susan Raihofer, David Black Literary Agency. (Feb.)

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