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The Intrinsic Exerciser: Discovering the Joy of Exercise

The Intrinsic Exerciser: Discovering the Joy of Exercise

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: great information
Review: I have read about 30 book on fitness and nutrition and saw this in an article in Shape magazine. This book is not like the typical book about why you need to lose and all the benefits of exercise.This book talks about a new way of finding more joy and interest on exercise it's not about sweating for 30 minutes and hating it's about using different techniches with your mind how to make fitness more enjoyable.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A few good ideas, lost in a cookie-cutter self-help book
Review: The psychological issues that help and hinder aspiring exercisers deserve more attention. Almost all exercise books offer a few superficial remarks, and some offer a few real insights, but this is the first book I've found that focuses entirely on psychology. I hoped that "The Intrinsic Exerciser" might be something larger and more coherent than the piecemeal wisdom that has been haphazardly accumulated through the years. Instead, when I read the book from cover to cover, I found the whole to be less, not more. The book's insights, while good, are lost in the cynical formulas and cliches that give self-help books a bad name. All the major shortcomings of "The Intrinsic Exerciser" are stereotypical self-help imperatives:

1. It promotes a complete, one-size-fits-all system and vilifies alternatives.

First and most appallingly, the author presents his system as an exclusive and unrivalled solution. He condemns all "extrinsic" motivations for exercise - health, longevity, attractiveness, etc. - as useless and even psychologically harmful. Yet there are many people who exercise regularly and love it, despite thinking hard and often about extrinsics. The author's advice is to "Expunge the extrinsic. Avoid any information or products that are primarily Outside-In or extrinsic-oriented." Given that many people have succeeded at their exercise goals using "Outside-In" methods, the author's unqualified insistence that every individual should abandon those methods and adopt his philosophy goes too far.

2. It revels in unnecessary neologisms.

"Inergy." "Exerimaging." "Feelization."

Quiz: The author uses these words because:

a) The concepts can't be explained concisely in standard English.
b) Having its own word makes a concept seem legitimate and important.
c) Using made-up words makes old ideas sound new.
d) b & c.

If you answered d), congratulations.

3. It cites many authorities and studies, for no good reason.

"The Intrinsic Exerciser" is chock-full of mentions of scientists, studies, and universities. Twenty pages of this slim volume are consumed by notes and a bibliography, even though it's a pop treatment aimed at people who are unlikely to take advantage of them. "The Intrinsic Exerciser" does not pretend to be a serious examination of ideas; it contains no acknowledgment of incompleteness or difficulties, no examination of alternatives. Why dress it up with citations? In fact, since the author's advice is to "expunge the extrinsic," why cite so many studies showing the extrinsic benefits of exercise? The citations are only there to create a sense of authority and scientific validity.

4. It makes difficult changes sound miraculously easy.

Certain facts of life are unavoidable, such as how much one weighs and how other people evaluate one's body. For many would-be exercisers, emotions related to these facts are the biggest obstacles to fitness. The author's prescription is to become unaware or unconcerned about these facts, a mental trick he offers no help in achieving. This dodging of difficult issues is the most disappointing aspect of "The Intrinsic Exerciser," and its breezy, shallow optimism makes the elisions rankle. This is another hallmark of a cookie-cutter self-help book: warn against attempting the difficult, and in its place prescribe the impossible.

I give "The Intrinsic Exerciser" two stars because it's encouraging to see a book dedicated to this topic and because it contains some sound insights. I hope that better books are on the way. Instead of a road map to a generic psyche, a better book would provide tips on learning to navigate one's own psyche. A better book might even offer practical suggestions on how to grapple with social issues such as embarrassment, instead of telling the reader to just think of something else. Above all, I am looking forward to the book that rejects the dystopian ideal of an inner life free of variegation and dissent and talks about how to play politics in the society of mind.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Refreshing approach to health and wellness
Review: This is a great book to take and read on the plane. It's a quick, easy read and shares the secret of those of us who've been avid exercisers for years and years...and that's the joy that you experience in the moment, while you're exercising. This book teaches you how to connect with your thoughts, feelings and perceptions as you exercise, which ultimately will lead to your becoming a person who exercises for the fun of it, not because of health, weight or appearance issues, and that's the key to life-long exercising success :-)

This is a book I recommend so highly, I actually have link to it on my website.


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