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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: smoking, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 31 of 31
26. NO THANKS BUT I'D LOVE TO DANCE!



WE ARE ENJOYING BOOKS ON HEALTH AND SAFETY THIS WEEK ON MY BLOG

NO THANKS BUT I'D LOVE TO DANCE!
by Jackie Reimer

REVIEW
No Thanks, But I'd Love To Dance! is a charming little story with a subtle message. The delightful Belle and her Grandma Bee are memorable characters built around a serious real-life situation - how Belle comes to make the decision that she is never going to smoke and the humorous way in which she is going to respond to any boy who tries to get her to.

While the book is aimed at the younger reader, older readers will also no doubt find it enjoyable because of the witty pictures and narrative. It is a lot easier to decide not to smoke in the first place than to try to quit. This book has more than just the potential to become a favorite bedtime read. It may also result in a happier, healthier life for its young reader. ....Allie Anders


SYNPOSIS
Belle is a six-year-old girl who is best friends forever with her Grandma Bee. One of the things they share is a love for dancing. They love, love, love, love, love to dance. Belle's Grandma Bee is faced with having to use oxygen because of her choice to smoke when she was younger. Belle finds humor and fun as she makes the choice to dance instead of smoke.

4 Comments on NO THANKS BUT I'D LOVE TO DANCE!, last added: 2/5/2009
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27. Books Vs Cigarettes

If you had told me a week ago that reading a book would cure me of my ten year smoking habit, I would have laughed in your face. Then I would have lit a cigarette. Just to console myself. But a week ago, I picked up Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Quit Smoking and four days ago, I smoked my last cigarette. Miraculously, I haven’t wanted to smoke since. I know what you’re thinking – that I probably was one of those smokers who could take it or leave it. Not true. I smoked about half a pack a day, which isn’t much to some, but I had been known to scale the school walls to get out of school property to get that nicotine hit. Though ultimately I did well on my exams because of the number of detentions I was given for getting caught smoking (in the end my head teacher gave up giving me detentions and begged me not to set fire to school property), I couldn’t shake off the guilt about doing something that was bad for me. I consoled myself that Gabriel Garcia Marquez smoked six packs a day while writing Love in the Time of Cholera. (He is still alive today at 81.)

Post_itAs much as I loved smoking, the reason I couldn’t give up was because of my experiences of trauma in attempting to quit before: tears, tyranny, insomnia, weight gain, grey clouds, misery, misery, misery. Several people had mentioned that they had quit without experiencing any nasty withdrawal symptoms using the Allen Carr book.  I treated these comments with cynicism and caution, but I thought I would give it a try. It was cheaper than hypnotherapy.

It turned out to be a bit of a page turner – I had to know what the secret formula was and was desperate to know if it would work for me.

Since finishing the book, not only have I kicked the habit, I’ve also been unusually cheerful and hyperactive. What I didn’t expect was the boredom. Having recently moved house, I have not yet installed broadband, got a phone line or a TV and I found myself pacing my living room.

We in the publishing industry are always worried about our competitors – the internet, TV, video games which vie for our readers’ attention. But had we missed something? Perhaps cigarettes have been a silent competitor for years. George Orwell wrote in 1946 that contrary to belief, people in the forties didn’t choose not to read because they couldn’t afford it, they just preferred to spend money on other things (cigarettes included) instead. I get it. Cigarettes sedate us, we can happily sit without doing anything other than smoking for hours. It is a form of entertainment in and of itself.
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But following my miraculous feat, I’ve been reflecting on the relationship between books and cigarettes. Maybe we give our competitors too much credit. It is easy to forget that throughout history it has been ideas and not technology that have moved the world forward. After all, if a book can change this wall-scaling, self-deceiving, emotionally unstable addict into a happy, confident non-smoker then we in publishing should spend less time worrying and try to carry on buying, editing, marketing and selling great books. Maybe, as Allen Carr promised, this optimism and happiness is the real side effect of giving up smoking. In any case, I have renewed faith that publishers are definitely in it for the long haul.

Hannah Michell, Online Marketing Executive

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28. 182. A Popular New Year's Resolution-Quit Smoking

Quitting smoking (along with improved diet and more exercise and losing weight) is a very popular New Year's resolution. For all of you who've added this one to your list, I say-good luck, go for it, great!

I don't smoke, but for all of you out there who do, and who have made a New Year's Resolution to quit, I pass along this information.

CGC has a program that starts tomorrow, January 10, 2008. You "register" for the program by calling 323-QUIT (323-7848).

The program is FREE, and provides FREE nicotine-replacement gum, FREE nic-patches, FREE meds to ease the craving (Chantix). Research shows that these things work best in conjunction with counseling. So CGC has this set-up: To get this free help, you go to meetings. The first one is Thursday, 1/10/2008 at 1PM until 2:30 PM at Conference Room 3, new wing of CHC. The program lasts 9 weeks and ends approximately 3/6/2008.


It's not a perfect offer--I asked how could people who work go to these meetings? Doctors, lawyers, teachers--people with any job, really--are needed on the job typically during the day.

CGC recognizes that its first program schedule isn't user-friendly for these possible hopefuls. They do want to add another program (after this first 9 week one?) that will be in evenings.

But if you're interested in finding solutions to make this New Year's Resolution happen, you can contact CGC. They want to help.

0 Comments on 182. A Popular New Year's Resolution-Quit Smoking as of 1/1/1900
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29. Son of a Preacher Man

I'm spending Richard Peck's summer vacation editing his Sutherland Lecture for publication in the November HB. It's a great speech--Peck has always been among the best of our writer-speakers--and his epigrammatic style can be pure poetry. I'm working directly from the speech manuscript, and I've never seen one quite like it, with the paragraphs carefully subdivided into clauses, giving it the cadences of a well-wrought sermon and the rhythm of a verse novel. Peck has an instinct for formal shape, in his poetry and short stories as well as his novels, so I guess it's no surprise his speeches have the same discipline.

Cathy Mercier swears I once gave a one hour talk at Simmons from three words written on an index card but I know I'll never be that good (or nervy) again. I find in my twilight years that I really need to have the whole damn thing in front of me. What methods do you-all use? Full text, cards, outline? Do you wing it? And how do we feel about PowerPoint?

21 Comments on Son of a Preacher Man, last added: 10/11/2007
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30. Free Speech

Yup, tomorrow night Richard Peck will be giving the Zena Sutherland Lecture at the Chicago Public Library. 7:30 PM, Harold Washington Library Center, tickets are free but must be reserved in advance: 312-747-4780. It's filling up so hurry up, and I hope to see you there.

1 Comments on Free Speech, last added: 5/3/2007
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31. Feeling Peckish?

3 Comments on Feeling Peckish?, last added: 3/29/2007
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