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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 1950s books, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Confessions of a fatty.

cupcakes

Read fast, because I have the feeling I’ll be deleting this in a few days. It’s not usually the kind of thing I enjoy talking about in public. But I’m doing it for the same reason I posted about my experience of having horrible acne when I was in high school and college: I actually think I can help people. So here goes:

I have, at various times in my life, been merely overweight, then obese, then heavy, then down to slim and trim, then up a little to what I considered “sturdy,” rather than fat, then down a little, up … a lot of you can relate to the pattern.

And right now, coming off multiple months in a row of writing for sometimes 18 hours a day, not getting as much exercise as I usually love, and powering my books and screenplays with WAY too much sugar, I feel pretty gross. I still love myself and want to be nothing but kind to myself no matter what, but I know my “kindness” of feeding myself a whole bunch of chocolate to keep up my energy and creativity during this time of intense work has actually not been a kindness at all.

Sometimes information comes to you at just the right time. Or maybe it’s always out there, but you’re not ready for it until you are.

A week or so ago, a friend of mine sent me a link to an interview with Dr. Susan Peirce Thompson. She’s both a psychology professor and a formerly obese woman. And I just loved her energy. I loved her sincerity and her passion for teaching what she knows about finally breaking free of food addictions and finding our individual bodies’  own natural weight. It was a theme I explored in my novel FAT CAT, and it’s definitely something that speaks to me personally.

(And by the way, when I was researching and writing FAT CAT, I completely gave up sugar. Weight melted off me. I felt great. My brain was clear, I had incredible energy … and yet here I am again.)

What drew me in was Susan’s own story about appearing to be very accomplished in some respects — highly educated, very successful in her career as a professor — but at the same time feeling like a failure because she was always overweight. How could she be so smart in other areas of her life —  how could she know so much about science and psychology — and yet still look like  … that?

Then one day she was finally ready to turn her years of research and knowledge on herself and figure this out once and for all. And to her utter delight, she discovered it wasn’t an issue of willpower or weakness or laziness, it was actually just a matter of brain chemistry. Some people are more susceptible to certain foods than others are. It’s not a moral issue, it’s just biology. And we can work with biology.

For some of us, sugar is as addictive as cocaine or heroine. If you’ve felt as enslaved by sugar as I have at times, you know it absolutely feels like a drug.

By the end of watching that interview, I knew I wanted to hear more of what Susan could teach. So I actually contacted her to find out when her next course was. Turns out it starts in just a few weeks. PERFECT.

A lot of you have written to me over the years after reading FAT CAT to share with me your own struggles or journeys about food and weight loss. I’ve read them all, I’ve answered them all, because I know what you’re going through and I want to try to help where I can. I’ve passed along resources I relied on in writing the novel, such as websites and books and cookbooks. I hope all of you who have written to me have gotten great value out of that information.

So now I’m passing along Susan’s free video series, too. I’m also including a link to her Susceptibility Quiz, which will evaluate how high or low you are on the scale of being susceptible to certain foods. I’m a 7 out of 10. Just saying.

The first video is out now, and the second and third will be released over the next few days. I’ll add those links then.

Good luck, fellow foodies! Hope this information helps. Pass it along to other foodies if you think they’ll like it, too.

And here’s to freedom. ‘Bout time!

xoxo
Robin

6 Comments on Confessions of a fatty., last added: 9/27/2015
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2. FAT CAT named Michigan Library Association Honor Book!

THANK YOU, MICHIGAN LIBRARIANS!!! I just found out that FAT CAT was named one of the Honor Books for this year’s Michigan Library Association’s Thumbs Up Award for Best Young Adult Fiction. How thrilled am I?? I NEED BIGGER CAPS!!!!!!! Thank you, Thumbs Up Committee Members. I am so very honored!!! Technorati Tags: Fat Cat, Fiction Awards, [...]

3 Comments on FAT CAT named Michigan Library Association Honor Book!, last added: 6/20/2010
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3. The fifty pounds Meg Cabot & I have in common

Wow, you never know what you’re going to find out about an author–especially one you admire as much as I do Meg Cabot. Those of you who have followed this blog long enough know that I’m a huge fan of both her books and her blog. And now, in one of those strange loop-de-loops, I [...]

11 Comments on The fifty pounds Meg Cabot & I have in common, last added: 2/9/2010
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4. Animal Wednesday : She's not fat, she's FLUFFY!


This is my cat Bliss. All 20 pounds of her. Now let me explain why she's carrying so much weight before you comment! She's allergic to most cat foods on the planet. If there's a bit of grain in it she itches until she's bloody. It's a sad way to live. Foods without grains give her bloody diarrhea because she has colitis. Cleaning a fluffy butt a few times a day is an awful chore, and worse if I'm not here to do it and she goes on the bed. You get my drift.

If she eats the diet food that makes her itchy, she has to get depo medrol shots which is a long-acting cortisone with many bad side effects ( ravenous appetite, excessive thirst and worse, diabetes.)

I recently read this wonderful article on feeding cats written by a veterinarian. So now I'm slowly trying the changes she recommends which has shot Bliss's weight up to 20 pounds even though I measure her food! So, what I've chosen to do is pick my battles. The bottom line is I want the most comfort for my cat with the least harmful side-effects. Even though it now takes a crane to lift her, we never make her feel bad about her weight :) HAW!!!!

18 Comments on Animal Wednesday : She's not fat, she's FLUFFY!, last added: 2/13/2009
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5. Fat Cats

Monsters! More stuff here.

0 Comments on Fat Cats as of 5/28/2008 3:13:00 PM
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6. Flabby Tabby

Our neighbor’s orange tabby,

was quite big and flabby,
because he did nothing but eat.

He'd gobble and nibble
on tuna and kibble,
‘till soon he could not see his feet.

.........................................................

This was my submission to Illustration Friday's theme "Heavy."

Sketched Out

2 Comments on Flabby Tabby, last added: 3/26/2008
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7. 1951 Ukelele, Little Golden Book + Puzzle

Several years ago a dear friend gave me a copy of the 1951 Little Golden Book, Ukelele and Her New Doll (#102). The book tells the story of Ukelele of the South Seas who loves the wooden doll her father made her. When British sailors land on her tiny island, one sailor gives her a fancy-dress porcelain doll. Ukelele abandons her wooden doll, but soon learns she can't have the same fun with the

0 Comments on 1951 Ukelele, Little Golden Book + Puzzle as of 1/1/1990
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