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Fed Up! : The Breakthrough Ten-Step, No-Diet Fitness Plan

Fed Up! : The Breakthrough Ten-Step, No-Diet Fitness Plan

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stop Dieting to Lose Weight
Review: "The only effective means of protecting yourself from developing an eating disorder is to avoid diets that push you, both psychologically and biologically, toward a destructive new level of food restriction and weight preoccupation." - Wendy Oliver-Pyatt, M.D.

In Fed Up! Wendy presents a back-to-basics approach to healthy living. First, she dispels the myths associated with dieting and boldly declares:

"Dieting wreaks havoc on the mind, body and soul."

Dieting has failed us. Dieting preys on our insecurities. Scientific research indicates that dieters only succeed in weight loss 2% of the time. Dieting also leads to a tense and uncomfortable relationship with food. In fact, Diets can in fact encourage eating disorders.

In reality, the less I eat, the more weight I seem to gain. Wendy explains why this occurs! I'm a big fan of the Suzanne Somers' approach because I'm now a believer that it is not really how much you eat, but more the combination of what you eat and when. The only time I've ever lost weight and kept it off was when I was eating more food! Imagine that.

Personally, I think dieting is depressing and I'm happy to see Wendy saying that diets don't work. I don't have time to count all those silly calories and I get so stressed out trying to figure out how much of this, how much of that. I give up in a day.

With a diet, you know that all the weight you are trying so hard to get rid of is going to come back as soon as you go back to your regular routine. So it seems you should try to find balance and a healthy lifestyle that includes foods that are good for you and will encourage a healthy approach to eating. There are foods you should be eating to encourage health. Those foods are not discussed in this book. This book deals with eating from a psychological perspective.

Wendy also deals with the following questions:

Why do we allow the diet industry to get rich while we become overweight?
Do you have an eating disorder?
Why do we accept our cultural myths about dieting?
Are you addicted to exercise?
Is your weight gain related to a medical condition?
What effect does cortisol have on your body? Can the stress of being on a diet actually make you gain weight?

So, we are still hungry, we crave foods we are told are bad for us and we want to have the perfect figure and the perfect life. Wendy gives us a dose of reality by stating the facts.

Our society has presented a pleasing view of an unpleasant situation. Models are unhealthy. The images we see flashing across our screens, in magazines and on every billboard scream "Be like me," "I'm attractive," I'm what you want to be." Yet have you ever heard that some models lay in bed all day because they feel so sick and depressed they have no life besides modeling? I've heard these stories.

The advertising industry is doing more harm than good all while filling their pockets with our money. They are feeding off our insecurity, our desire to belong and be loved. America is obsessed with beauty. As Wendy points out, "Perfectionism breeds low self-esteem." The harder we try to become "perfect," the more "imperfect" we feel.

"With the advent of the mass media, however, women now find themselves being compared not just to the girl down the street, but also to the most beautiful (and often surgically enhanced) women in the world. It's no longer good enough to look normal'; instead, you need to look like Calista Flockhart or Demi Moore." pg. 35

Wendy gives us back a calm sense of control. She encourages the reader to achieve a sense of balance in their life through maintaining a healthy view of life.

While she encourages us to evaluate our own lives, she also explains what didn't work for her and what isn't working for millions of Americans. She herself struggled with an eating disorder for ten years.

Her purpose in writing "Fed Up!" is to encourage a "nationwide rethinking about whether dieting and maintaining mental lists of so called good and bad foods actually leads to long term health and weight management." She wants her readers to think seriously about the impact of cultural pressures and the pursuit of unrealistic beauty standards.

Wendy's book provides steps you can take to achieve a healthy mind and body. You will become more relaxed in your relationship with food and consider the psychological barriers to health and fitness.

The steps are:

Step One: Recognize Your Exhaustion: Is Food Preoccupations Running Your Life?

In this chapter, you can take a "Are You Exhausted?" Self-Inventory test. The results may surprise you.

Step Two: Reject the Cultural Myths That Make You Diet and Gain Weight

In this chapter you will find information on how to calculate your BMI (Body Mass Index). This will help you figure out what weight you should be as opposed to how much you weigh now. With a few simple calculations you will find out if you are actually underweight, a healthy weight or overweight.

Step Three: Decide That You Are Good Enough Today to Love Yourself Today
Step Four: Learn to Experience, Trust and Enjoy Hunger and Satiation
Step Five: Straight Talk about Exercise
Step Six: Get Your Doctor on Your Weight-Loss Team
Step Seven: Learn to Wait to Lose Weight
Step Eight: Break Through the Secrecy
Step Nine: Redefine Your Life: What's More Important to You Than Dieting?
Step Ten: Give to the Next Generation: Preventing Eating Disorders and Obesity in Children

This is not a book about fancy meal plans, supplements, exercise equipment, foods you should and should not eat. There are no diets in this book!

This book is about taking control of your mind and body. Wendy offers advice on how to develop an enjoyable, effective and sustainable fitness program. She also discusses how parents can help prevent eating disorders in their children.

"Fed Up!" shows you how to enjoy the primordial pleasures of eating
while focusing on how to avoid the modern madness of diets.

If you are ready to break free from the prison of dieting, this ten-step plan will help
you to control your eating, lose excess pound and maintain your ideal weight.

Inspirational and Insightful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The "Gospel" (Good News) of Where do we go from here!
Review: Dr. Wendy Oliver-Pyatt has written a truly revolutionary book "FED UP!" for everyone who has ever been on or thought about being on a Diet! You'll never look at food or yourself the sameway again. Simply put she's written the "Gospel" (Good News) of where do we go from here. Whether your Young, Middle-Age, or a Senior "The Breakthrough 10 Step NO-Diet Fitness Plan" completely removes the Guilt. A must Read! Urgent: This book should be required reading for all teenage girls it could literally be a life saver!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dying to Be Thin - Dieting Industry Myths & New Solutions
Review: Fed Up! The Breakthrough Ten-Step, No-Diet Fitness Plan by Wendy Oliver-Pratt, MD. Review by Christine Hartline, MA. Dr. Oliver-Pratt's book offers important insights into the dieting industry, dieting myths and the psychological and physical dangers related to a life spent focused on diet and weight control. Fed Up! offers a comprehensive, well-defined plan on how one can free themselves from the enslavement of counting calories, self-starvation, binge eating, poor body image among other agonizing aspects of dieting. The books provides well-defined tools on how to develop a healthy relationship with food and your body. Dr. Oliver-Pratt share her own process of self-discovery and breaking free from the prison of dieting and an eating disorder and found her way to a healthy, fit lifestyle. Her techniques are based on her personal and professional understanding of the complex reasons people become caught up in an endless cycle of dieting and weight gain.

Christine Hartline, MA
Eating Disorder Referral and Information Center
...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: New hope for person experiencing frustration with weight
Review: Fed Up! was the first book I have read which addresses weight problems and food and body issues giving consideration to both genders. Dr.Oliver-Pyatt's approach and new concepts simplify what many authors tend to over analyze. She uses powerful techniques which draw on her own experiences in ways that verify for the reader that this author truly understands what we are experiencing. This book has made my relationship with food much more enjoyable and less stressful.

Dr. Oliver-Pyatt acknowledges her own past eating issues, and is also a medical and psychiatric professional with experience working with those who are dealing with food & body preoccupation. This combination has made her an extremely knowledgeable, sensitive writer who relates to the reader on a personal level. I will highly recommend this book to my eating disorder patients and anyone who is struggling with food issues.
Jim A. Lindsey
Licensed Clinical Social Worker
Oklahoma City, OK

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You Are Worth It
Review: Give up dieting? No way. That's what I used to think.

I suffered with anorexia/bulimia for over twenty years. Dieting was my life. It made me feel confident and in control. But the truth is that I had very low self-esteem, and food was in control - not me. I am now recovered from my eating disorder. A key element in my recovery was giving up on dieting completely. Today I am diet-free and living a life that I never thought was possible.

Wendy Oliver-Pyatt's book, Fed Up!, can lead you to a healthy, fit lifestyle, too. Her breakthrough ten-step, no-diet fitness plan is extremely practical and can easily be applied to your everyday life. It is so refreshing to read a book about health and fitness that does not give long lists of what you can and cannot eat. Dr. Oliver-Pyatt legalizes all food and simultaneously gives you the freedom to truly live your life.

If you hunger for a relaxed attitude toward food and are ready to throw away your diet books, read Fed-Up! You are worth it.

Jenni Schaefer, author of Life Without Ed: How One Woman Declared Independence from her Eating Disorder and How You Can Too(McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Books - Feb '04 release)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Standing Up To Society's Unrealistic Messages About Weight
Review: I first read a blurb about Dr. Pyatt's book in a fitness magazine. I was intrigued and, as a medical writer, wanted to learn more. So, with an editor's blessing, I arranged an interview with Dr. Pyatt and wrote a feature story about the work she has done throughout her life to help both men and women find their way back from the chaos created by dieting and disordered eating in response to the messages society bombards us with every day. We can never be thin enough. Thus, we are not "good enough." It's a vicious cycle, and difficult to break.

Dr. Pyatt's voice, in person and throughout her book, is encouraging, gentle, supportive, and wise. She does NOT ignore nutrition, potential medical problems, or the necessity for regular exercise. Neither does she leave readers feeling that if they DON'T exercise, they are "bad." In a world full of diet- and weight-related myths, "Fed Up" is a volume of common sense.

The method may be frightening at first to those of us who have been "brainwashed" from our youngest days--admonished for being overweight, perpetually dieting, falling prey to the promises of every new "program" that comes down the pike. It's hard to let go of the fear of NOT dieting, and Dr. Pyatt knows this. But by turning to her book again and again, readers will find that they gradually learn to accept their bodies, to set more realistic goals, and to stand up against the impossible expectations of a society obsessed with anorexic ideals.

As for myself, I have lost and gained weight time and again. I have re-read this book three times. Last night, I completed the questionnaire in Chapter 4 for the third time, and was extremely happy to see that my highly negative body image and damaging weight obsession has significantly decreased in intensity. I don't expect 40 years of brainwashing (and dieting from the age of 7) to go away overnight. I just want to live a life free from constant obsessing about food and weight and how I look. This is the peace of mind that Dr. Pyatt offers, through the process she outlines in "Fed Up."

I cannot recommend this book highly enough to any man or woman who 1)is tired of endless, futile dieting; 2)wants to lose (or gain) weight; and 3) wants to take a stand against the unrealistic messages and expectations of our weight-obsessed society.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: revolutionary yet so natural!
Review: This excellent book was a wake-up call that I sorely needed. I have been on Weight Watchers for a year and a half, and thought I had dealt with all my food demons. Yet I was living in fear of food - going to the extent of throwing it away and hiding it from myself! Wendy Oliver-Pyatt's book covers why many Americans have a love/hate relationship with food, and why diets do not work.

The first several chapters are about one's psychological relationship with food. Much of it stems in the way we are raised, and the way that our culture treats food. We have an abundance of food in America, and at the same time, thin bodies are the ideal. Both food and thinness are fetishized, leading many men and women into a quandary.

Wendy explains how diets do work in the short-term, but in the long-term they can cause depression, food cravings, and weight-gain. She struck a chord with me when she mentioned how many people are afraid to eat normally because they fear gaining weight.

I have already started to try Wendy's suggested mindset. She talks about honoring your hunger without overeating, and exercising to the extent that you still enjoy it. I have friends that can seemingly eat whatever they like without worrying about it like I do. Then I notice that they don't seem to obsess over food, and they naturally take as much as their body needs - no more no less. This is what the book's author suggests as the way to reach your optimum body weight.

Of course, I already eat fairly healthy and exercise regularly. I think this book is best for dietaholics, people who are tired of restricting themselves, but are concerned about maintaining a healthy weight if they stop. I already want to send copies to some of my friends and am planning on bringing this book to my Weight Watchers meeting.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: revolutionary yet so natural!
Review: This excellent book was a wake-up call that I sorely needed. I have been on Weight Watchers for a year and a half, and thought I had dealt with all my food demons. Yet I was living in fear of food - going to the extent of throwing it away and hiding it from myself! Wendy Oliver-Pyatt's book covers why many Americans have a love/hate relationship with food, and why diets do not work.

The first several chapters are about one's psychological relationship with food. Much of it stems in the way we are raised, and the way that our culture treats food. We have an abundance of food in America, and at the same time, thin bodies are the ideal. Both food and thinness are fetishized, leading many men and women into a quandary.

Wendy explains how diets do work in the short-term, but in the long-term they can cause depression, food cravings, and weight-gain. She struck a chord with me when she mentioned how many people are afraid to eat normally because they fear gaining weight.

I have already started to try Wendy's suggested mindset. She talks about honoring your hunger without overeating, and exercising to the extent that you still enjoy it. I have friends that can seemingly eat whatever they like without worrying about it like I do. Then I notice that they don't seem to obsess over food, and they naturally take as much as their body needs - no more no less. This is what the book's author suggests as the way to reach your optimum body weight.

Of course, I already eat fairly healthy and exercise regularly. I think this book is best for dietaholics, people who are tired of restricting themselves, but are concerned about maintaining a healthy weight if they stop. I already want to send copies to some of my friends and am planning on bringing this book to my Weight Watchers meeting.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Feel and look good with out the Yo Yo of dieting
Review: This is an awesome book that will teach you a way to live and not diet or be obsessed about your weight.This book will help you develop a healthy relationship to your own body, the food you eat and you will loose weight without dieting. Fed Up will help you develop a lifelong way of feeling and looking great without the crazy Yo Yo of diets. It is also a good read with lots of useful information that affects all of us that have had difficulties with food. I recommend this book strongly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If you are really FED UP, then this book is for you.
Review: We live in an eating disordered culture and Wendy Oliver-Pyatt understands that. More importantly, she can help us recover from it. Fed Up! is a practical, smart guide for anyone who really wants to break free of the lies we are told --- and continue to tell ourselves --- about food, exercise, and physical appearance.

As a psychotherapist, I have treated clients with eating disorders for the past 15 years. These clients are some of the most intelligent, delightful and creative people I have ever known. But in spite of such tremendous competence, they fall under the spell of the irrational beliefs and misaligned values of eating disordered thinking. It is not an easy thing to deprogram oneself from this insanity, but it can be done. And Dr. Oliver-Pyatt's book is one extremely valuable tool to help accomplish this important mission.

It is safe to say that everyone can learn something of value from this book. I recommend it without reservation.

- Thom Rutledge, author of Embracing Fear (HarperSanFrancisco)


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